+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 07.16.64

07.16.64

Date post: 07-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: the-anchor
View: 228 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
~issio~ who will work out A Retreat for the Handi­ capped, first such event to be sponsored by the Fall River Diocese, will be held fruitful in that concrete results may be reached in the many debates and proposals. All this is due to the concen­ trated work-under the prodding guidance of Pope Paul­ - during the intersession per­ iod. Commissions have met Turn to Page Eighteen experts assigned them and­ to check on the contents of Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page ThirteeD PRICE 10c v:
Popular Tags:
20
•• v: The ANCHOR PRICE 10c Vol. 8, No. 29 © 1964 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 16, 1964 Ordinary Announces Three Assignments Transfer of two priests the first assignment for • recently ordained priest, are announced today by the Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese. Effective date i'8 tom9rrow, July 17.· Reverend Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan He remains as Diocesan Director Director of the Confrater- of CCD. Ility of Christian Doctrine· Reverend Patrick O'Neill, and chaplain at Bishop Stang . Superintendent of Diocesan Hig.h School, No. Dartmouth, is Schools, will become chaplain tmnsferred to Bishop Feehan and instructor in Religion at High School, Attleboro, as chap- Bishop Stang High School. He .... aDIi iDstnlctor JA Beli&ioa. Turn to Page Twelve lntersession Period· Over; Commissions Finish Work By Rev. John R. FoIster St. Anthony Church - New Bedford The next council session promises to be the most fruitful in that concrete results may be reached in the many debates and proposals. All this is due to the concen- trated work-under the prodding guidance of Pope Paul- POWERS FATHER O'NEILL during the intersession per- iod. Commissions have met in Rome together with the experts assigned them and- what has borne much fruit-they· have held joint meetings thus avoiding much repetition and teeming contradictions. The council's unfinished busi- Iless has thus been reductld to 13 topics, each condensed-with- out any substantial modification. '!'he joint meetings brought much of this about anti the pre- sentation of "program direc- tives", statements of fundamen- tal principles and policy also aided. These matters, once ap- proved by the Fathers, will then be turned over to post-conciliar who will work out the details and put them into action. Monsignor Fausto Vallainc, head of the Oouncil Press Office, explained the fruitful work of the intersession and pointed to the promising Signs of Vatican II; Session 3. Coordinating Commission This group .of Cardinals met not to re-examine new drafts or to check on the contents of schemata. The Pope had given real directives at the closing of the last session, thIs commission resolved to put such directives into action. It also studied pro- cedural problems "to facilitate the discussions of individual subjects and to streamline the Turn fQ PaUl Six - BRIEFING SESSION: Rev."James W. Clark, Diocesan Director of PAVLA and Ex- tension Volunteer programs, briefs young women who have volunteered as teachers in foreign, home missions for one or three year periods. From left, Arlene Schreiner, See- konk; Jeanne Olsen, Harwich; Mary Jane Collins, Fall' River; Judith Perry, Provincetown; Marguerite Desjardins, Central Village. Five Girls Volunteer For Lay' Apostolate A clutch of pretty Young girls will be representing the Fan River Diocese next school year in places as widely separated as Colombia, British Honduras, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. They will be participating in two of the most adventurous programs open to lay apostles: Papal Volunteers for Latin America and Extension Lay Volunteers. The girls met for the first time this month at St. Joseph's Rec- tory, Fall River, for a brief- ing by Rey. James W. Clark, in charge of both programs for the Dioctlse. Pre tty Arlene Schreiner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schreiner, Our Lady of Mt. Car- el parish, Seekonk, leaves Sept. 2 for a year in British Honduras . under the PAVLA program. Or- dinarily PAVLA volunteers plan a three year stay in countries of Latin America, but because there is nQ Language barrier in British Honduras, one year stays are possible. Arlene, a 1963 graduate of Rhode Island College, taught last year at St. Margaret's School, . ,Rumford, R.I. She expects to Set First Retreat For Handicapped Sunday, July 26 A Retreat for the Handi- capped, first such event to be sponsored by the Fall River Diocese, will be held . Sunday afternoon, July 26 at the Catholic Memorial Home, Fall River. 'Dhe program will begin at 12:30, continuing until about 6. Supervised by Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, the retreat will be given by Rev. Anthony Rocha. The program will include a con- ference, confessions and private conferences with the retreat master, a social !hour, and ques- tion period. It will conclude with a dialogue Mass and re- freshments. Miss Eugenia FarynlaTZ. iD. Turn to Page ThirteeD tea<lh English or history in a tion fur her ·year abroad she British Honduras high school. attended a Lay 'Apostolate She learned of the PAVLA pro- 'School conducted yearly at Bos- gram through Maryknoll mag- ton College for potential lay azine, she said, and in prepara- Turn to Page Thirteen Prelate Explains Apparent Biblical Contradictions ROME (NC)-Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., has giVeh some rules of thumb for reconciling apparent contradictions in the Biblical accounts of Christ's life. The head of the Church's Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, who has devoted most of his 83 years to the study of the Scriptures, listed "some prin- cipa,l rules" to bear in mind: That the Gospels are not,sten- ographic records of Christ's words; That Christ probably repeated the same idea in different words; That each sacred writer has his own· distinctive style and that the Orientals of the ancient La Salette Order Announces Major Changes in Personnel Following the general chapter of the Missionaries of of Our Lady of La Salette in Rome, the Very Rev. Alphonse Doutil, out-going superior general, announced two major changes. Father Doutil will be succeeded as superior gen- eral by the Rev. Conrad Blanchet, M.S., and the Very Rev. Lionel LeMay, M. S., will become secretary gen- eral of the O'rder and director of the International La Salette Scholasticate. A native of New Bedford, Father Blanchet is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blanchet ol Southbridge. Born July 25, 1915, the new general was educated at the minor Seminary, Enfield, at the Gregorian Institute in Rome, and in Three Rivers, Quebec. ,Ordained in 1942, Father Blanchet was the first La Salette Missionary to land on Philip- pine soil and he became its first Turn to Page Eighteen world had a manner of express- ing themselves quite different from the manner of westerners of the modern world; . That every account of an event is shaped by the purpose the author has in writing about the event. - Cardinal Bea styled this pur- pose of the author "the funda- mental ,question." He pointed Turn to Page Eighteen
Transcript
Page 1: 07.16.64

bullbull

v The

ANCHOR PRICE 10c

Vol 8 No 29 copy 1964 The Anchor $400 per Year

bull Fall River Mass Thursday July 16 1964

Ordinary Announces Three Assignments

Transfer of two priests an~ the first assignment for bull recently ordained priest are announced today by the Most Reverend James L Connolly DD Bishop of the Diocese Effective date i8 tom9rrow July 17middot Reverend Joseph L Powers Diocesan

He remains as Diocesan DirectorDirector of the Confratershy of CCDIlity of Christian Doctrinemiddot Reverend Patrick ~ ONeilland chaplain at Bishop Stang Superintendent of Diocesan High School No Dartmouth is Schools will become chaplain tmnsferred to Bishop Feehan and instructor in Religion at High School Attleboro as chapshy Bishop Stang High School He aDIi iDstnlctor JA Beliampioa Turn to Page Twelve

lntersession Periodmiddot Over Commissions Finish Work

By Rev John R FoIster St Anthony Church - New Bedford

The next council session promises to be the most fruitful in that concrete results may be reached in the many debates and proposals All this is due to the concenshytrated work-under the prodding guidance of Pope Paulshy

~ATHEB POWERS FATHER ONEILL

during the intersession pershyiod Commissions have met in Rome together with the experts assigned them andshywhat has borne much fruit-theymiddot have held joint meetings thus avoiding much repetition and teeming contradictions

The councils unfinished busishyIless has thus been reductld to 13 topics each condensed-withshyout any substantial modification he joint meetings brought much of this about anti the preshysentation of program direcshytives statements of fundamenshytal principles and policy also aided These matters once apshyproved by the Fathers will then be turned over to post-conciliar ~issio~ who will work out

the details and put them into action

Monsignor Fausto Vallainc head of the Oouncil Press Office explained the fruitful work of the intersession and pointed to the promising Signs of Vatican II Session 3

Coordinating Commission This group of Cardinals met

not to re-examine new drafts or to check on the contents of schemata The Pope had given real directives at the closing of the last session thIs commission resolved to put such directives into action It also studied proshycedural problems to facilitate the discussions of individual subjects and to streamline the

Turn fQ PaUl Six

-BRIEFING SESSION RevJames W Clark Diocesan Director of PAVLA and Exshy

tension Volunteer programs briefs young women who have volunteered as teachers in foreign home missions for one or three year periods From left Arlene Schreiner Seeshykonk Jeanne Olsen Harwich Mary Jane Collins Fall River Judith Perry Provincetown Marguerite Desjardins Central Village

Five Girls Volunteer For Lay Apostolate

A clutch of pretty Young girls will be representing the Fan River Diocese next school year in places as widely separated as Colombia British Honduras Oklahoma and New Mexico They will be participating in two of the most adventurous programs open to lay apostles Papal Volunteers for Latin America and Extension Lay Volunteers The girls met for the first time this month at St Josephs Recshytory Fall River for a briefshying by Rey James W Clark in charge of both programs for the Dioctlse

Pre tty Arlene Schreiner daughter of Mr and Mrs Arthur Schreiner Our Lady of Mt Carshyel parish Seekonk leaves Sept 2 for a year in British Honduras

under the P AVLA program Orshydinarily P AVLA volunteers plan a three year stay in countries of Latin America but because there is nQ Language barrier in British Honduras one year stays are possible

Arlene a 1963 graduate of Rhode Island College taught last year at St Margarets School

Rumford RI She expects to

Set First Retreat For Handicapped Sunday July 26

A Retreat for the Handishycapped first such event to be sponsored by the Fall River Diocese will be held

Sunday afternoon July 26 at the Catholic Memorial Home Fall River Dhe program will begin at 1230 continuing until about 6

Supervised by Msgr Raymond T Considine the retreat will be given by Rev Anthony Rocha The program will include a conshyference confessions and private conferences with the retreat master a social hour and quesshytion period It will conclude with a dialogue Mass and reshyfreshments

Miss Eugenia FarynlaTZ iD Turn to Page ThirteeD

tealtlh English or history in a tion fur her middotyear abroad she British Honduras high school attended a Lay Apostolate She learned of the P AVLA proshy School conducted yearly at Bosshygram through Maryknoll magshy ton College for potential lay azine she said and in prepara- Turn to Page Thirteen

Prelate Explains Apparent Biblical Contradictions

ROME (NC)-Augustin Cardinal Bea SJ has giVeh some rules of thumb for reconciling apparent contradictions in the Biblical accounts of Christs life The head of the Churchs Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity who has devoted most of his 83 years to the study of the Scriptures listed some prinshycipal rules to bear in mind

That the Gospels are notstenshyographic records of Christs words

That Christ probably repeated the same idea in different words

That each sacred writer has his ownmiddot distinctive style and that the Orientals of the ancient

La Salette Order Announces Major Changes in Personnel

Following the general chapter of the Missionaries of of Our Lady of La Salette in Rome the Very Rev Alphonse Doutil out-going superior general announced two major changes Father Doutil will be succeeded as superior genshyeral by the Rev Conrad Blanchet MS and the Very Rev Lionel LeMay M S will become secretary genshyeral of the Order and director of the International La Salette Scholasticate

A native of New Bedford Father Blanchet is the son of Mr and Mrs Joseph Blanchet ol

Southbridge Born July 25 1915 the new general was educated at the minor Seminary Enfield at the Gregorian Institute in Rome and in Three Rivers Quebec Ordained in 1942 Father

Blanchet was the first La Salette Missionary to land on Philipshypine soil and he became its first

Turn to Page Eighteen

world had a manner of expressshying themselves quite different from the manner of westerners of the modern world

That every account of an event is shaped by the purpose the author has in writing about the event -

Cardinal Bea styled this purshypose of the author the fundashymental question He pointed

Turn to Page Eighteen

2

bull

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan liver-Thurs July 16 1964

Diocese of FaII River

OFFICIAL

lRANSFERS

Rev Joseph L Pcwoenr cohaplain and instructor of Religion lit Bishop Stang High School No Dartmouth to chaplain and klstruetor of Religion at Bishop Feehan High ScnooI Attleboro Be retains tile office of Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctr~

Rev Patrick J OmiddotNeill in residence at st ThomQS More Somerset to chaplain and instructor of Religion at Bishop Stang High School No Dartmouth He remains Superinshytendent of Dioeesan SChools

TEMPORARY APPOINTMErrr

Rev Peter J Mullen newly ordained to SaBed Heart ChUldl Fall River as assistant

Appointments effective Frklay July 17 1964

~ tpound-5 -Bishop of Fall River

Morally UnobjectionQble for Everyone Battle Hymn Brass Bottle Bridge on River Kwal Circus World Day Mars Invaided Dream Maker Drum Beat Fall of Roman Empire Gladiators Gotd Rusft

Great Escape Incredible Mr limpet

Unobiectionable for Adults Adolescents middotAct Hamlet Shock Treatment Advance tG Rear Horror of It All 633 Squadron Black Zoo King of Sun South Pacific

Blue Hawaii lawrence of Arabia Surf Party Captain Newman MD Man From Gafvestolt Twenty Plus Twa

Chalk Garden Mary Mary Twice Told Tales Children of Damned Miracle Worker Unsinkable Molly Brown Charade Muscle Beach Party Voice of Hurricane Citizen Kane Point of Order Walk Tighbope Come Fly With Me Ring of TreasolJ War is Hell Distant Trumpet Sanjuro Weekend With lulu

Donovans Reef 7 Days in MaJ Wheeler Dealers Evil Eye Secret Door World of Henry Orient Fort Dobbs Secret InvasiOll Young Doctors The

Morally Unobiectionable for Adults All Nighfs Work Hypnotic Eye Prize

America America Loneliness of Long Term of Trial Becket Distance Runner Thin Red line

Bedtime Stol Mafioso Third Secret Bye Bye- Birdie Mail Order Bride Thunder of Drums Cardina~ Mans Favorite Sport To Bed or Not to Bed

Darbys Rangers No My Darling Daughter Town Without Pity Flight frol Ashiya Operation Petticoat Two Ale Guilty FUR in Acapulco Paris When It Sizzle$ 0 West Side StoryGlobal Affair Pilfow falk Woman of Straw Mud Pink Panther bull Zulu -

I For Adults (With Reserv~tions)~ This classifieation is given to certain f i1rns whicli while not morally offensive

in themselves require atution andsQme anplysis and explanati~nas a protection ~to the uninformed against wrong Interpre~~ions and false conclusions f ~ bull

I Best Man Martin luther This Sporting life Black like Me Organizer Tom Jones

Divorce Italian Style Pressure Point Under Yum Yum Tree coor World Servant Victim Dr Strangeove Sky Above amp Mud Below Walk on Wild Side 81h Strangers in the City Young amp Willing

Girl With the Green Eyes Suddenly last Summer

Morally Obiectionable in Part for Everyone Black Sabbatfl

Cleopatra Comedy of Terrors Conjugal Bed Curse of living Cor~se Female Jungle4 for Texltis Frightenad City From Russia With lne GI Blues Honeymoon Hatel Horror of Party Beacb Jessica

Empty Canvas

Kissin Cousins S~lendor in Grass Kittan With AWhip StranglerLlttiy in Cage Sunday in New York long Ships The Devil and tre Man in Middle 10 Corrnandments Masque of the Red Death Tftree Fables Qf love

fiight Must Fall Tiara Tahiti (BrJ Psyche 59 Viva las Vegas Racing Fever Wtat A Way To Go Srock Corridor Wtere Boys Are Small World of Sammy lee Yesterday Today and Soldier in the Rain Tomorrow Some Came Running

Condemned Silence Weekend

Its Mad Mad Mad World Romeo amp Juliet lillies of Field Sampson amp Slave Queen longest Day Sergeants 3 Modern Times Summer Holiday tImse on Moon Whan the Clock Strikes Never Put it in Writing Whos Minding Store Ona Mans Way Wild amp Wonderful Papas Delicate Condition Windjammer Patsy The Yank in Viet Nam A Pepe You Have to Run Fast Ready for the People Young Swingers The

MgDAL FOR POPE Pope Paul VI receives the Thomas More Association Medal on the 25th anniversary of that organi2ation Presenting the medal are from left Msgr Edward Berr principal of Central Catholic High School Lima Ohio his brother Dan Herr president of the Thomas More Association Chicago and John Drahos sales manager The A~sociation was founded tq promote Catholic reading and reading among Catholics NC Photo

Difficult Course Lenrning Language First Stage in Life

Of Missioner in ~apan

middotTOKYO (NC)-The first stage characters they use for reading of missimary life in Japan is instead of letters as we do There the Frarlciscan language school are thousands of these but durshyhere I here the missionary ing the occupation following spends the first two years of his the war a committee of scholars (~areer ir the Japanese missions reduced these to 1850 basic

--and it is a course that might characters They were to be the make some of his previous basic language of the press and school work seem ligM indeed general publicati0S Th~ all

The basic purpose of the lan- have to be memorIZed guage school is to enable the 3000 Meanings Preface of Trinity missionary to speak fluently As In addition one chaiaeterma MONDAY-St Jerome Ae~ one student said We comemiddot into haveseveral meanings-so t4ese ian Confessor m Cll a highly -developed- culture To IS5G characters may have a total White MaJ~i~oper Gloria

the extent that we can meet of 3~OO or mo~ readingS or second Collectst Margaret thesepecple on their ownlevel meanmgsmiddot VlrgiD and Martyr no Creect are we likely to be effective in Needless to say this does notmiddot Common Preface~ reaching them with our simplify the problem of the mis- TUESDAY - St Lawlenlte at thoughts our teachings sionarymiddotmiddot Brlndisi ConfesSor and D~

B t J t 1 - The FranCIscan Language of the Church m CIaBa u apanese IS no aS11llp e School- here is used by all the White M Pr bull Gl

lmguage to learn J~st ~ one incoming missionaries except Second C~~ect ~Prax= example take the kan11 the

Necrology JULY 17

Rev William J Smith 1960 Pastor S James TauntolL

JULY 19 Most J1lev Daniel P Feehan

DO 1934 second Bishop of Fan River 1907-34

JULY 23 Rev George B McNamee

)1138 Pastor middotmiddotHolymiddot Namegt Fall River

FOFlTY1iOURS DEVOTION

ruIy 19--St Pius X South Yamlouth St Stephen Dodgeville

~ruly 2~-St Francis of Assisi New Bedford

HoI Redeemer Chatham Aug 2-8t George Westport

Sacr ~d Hearts Fairhaven St Iheresa So Attleboro

Aug 9---8t Theresa lew BI~dford

OUl~ Lady opound Victory Clmterville

THE ANCHOR

lleclnd Clms Postage PalO at Fall River Mass Pul1lished every Thursday at 41ct

~~~~rg p~~IU~j ~~ D~~e ~s~aIlD~lv~ SulJSCrlptfoa IIrlca ~ lUll DOitllakl $400 YIIL

the Jesuits who have a school Virgin no Creed Commoa of their own for their scholastics Prefa~

The teachers are all Japan- wEDNESDAY-st Mary ~ag-ese-except for Japanese writ- dahme Penitent III Class i~g which is ta~ghtmiddotby a for- White Mass Proper Gloiia eIgneI That foreIgner ismiddot Father no Creed Common Preface Beatus Theunissen and he says THURSDAY - st Apollinaris with a smile I always tell BiShop and Martyi III Chisa

them stories For every little sign I write on the blackboard Itellthem a big story

Antique Pqtade

In coj~nctionwith the 65th anniversary celebration of St staniSlaus parish Fall River an

old-fashioned parade will be held at 13G Saturday afternoon July 18~- Starting from the church the pirade will go to downtown Fall River and reshyturnmiddot Included in the line of march will be antique carS bi shycycles built fortwo and old fire-engines The anniverSary

will be further celebrated Saturshyday and Sunday July 25 and 26 at Urbans Grove Tiverton

BROOKLAWN fUNERAL HOME INC

R Marcel Roy - G Lllrralne R1ly Roger laFrance

FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Irvington Ct

WY 7-7830 New Bedfordmiddot

Asks All Citizens To Welcome Law

CINCINNATI (NC) - Cincmshynatis Karl J Alter called on aU ~tizens to welcome the civil

rights legislation With a spirit of gracious cooperation

The archbishop expressed the hope that the overwhelming reshysponse to the law would be based on motives of a high order of nobility on Christian eharit and justice and on a genuine desire to promote the hue welfare of our eountry

All men of good will can now rejoice that the equal personal dignity of our Negro fellow Citi shyzens has been reeognized and guaranteed by the public law of our eountry the Archbishop said

For Nations Welfare Great obstacles have beetl

overcome but much still reshymains to be done The new civft rights bill can be either grudgshyingly accepted its implementashytion resisted and its promise of peace and reconciliation retardshyed or else it can be welcomed with a spirit of gracious coopshyeration and with the desire to

make it effective he declared We sincerely hope and pra

that the overwhelming response will be based on motives of a high order of nobility on Chriampshytian Charity and justice and Oft a genuine desire to promote the true welfare of our eountrvmiddot the prelate declared

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sunshy

day IV Class Green Mass Proper No Glorfa or Creed second Collect st AlexiUB

Confessor Common Preface SATURDAY-St Camillus De

Lellis Confessor ill Class White Mass Proper Gloria

second Collect SS Symphorshyosa and her Seven Sons Marshytyrs no Creed Common Prefshyace

SUNDAY - IX Sunday Aft el Pentecost II ~lass Gr~eD

Mass Proper qloria Creed

Red Mass Proper G~oria second Collect $tmiddot middotLiborlur

Bishopan4 Confessor ~ CoImDori ~refa~~

AUBERTINE Funeral Home Inc Helen Aubertine Braugh

William H Aubertine Brian J Aubertine

Spacious Parking Area WY2-2957

129 Allen St New Bedford

A AMILY TREAT

BAR-B-Q CHICKENS

ROSELAWN FARMS

145 Washin~on St~ Fairhaven Just off Route 6

WY ]-9336

Watch for Signs While out for a Drive

StoP at this delightful SpOt

3 Anglican Church Seeks to Extend Use of latin

LONDON (NC) - White the Roman Catholic Church in England is preparing to use English in part of the Mass the state Ohurch of Engshyland is seeking to extend its use of Latin

This move is included in one of two Anglican Ohuroh measshyures submitted-as the EstabshyHshed Church must by law-to Parliament for approval They seek to obtain legal recognition of some current Anglioan Ohurch practices already in use

And these two small requests lQt sufficiently important to merit the title of parliamentary bills are expected by some p0shy

litical observers to arouse a storm in the House of Commons as further signs of the Anglican Ohurchs alleged drift to Rome

One is called in official legal jargon the Vesture of Ministers Measure and is about vestmeruts and rubrics The other is the Pl1ayer Book (Miscellaneous Provisions) Measure and also deals with rubrics and liturgy In general these measures would simply recognize practices which have long been common in AnshygUcan churches bull

Die-bards Protest nle little gloup of die--hard

Protestant Members of Parliashyment is planning according to reports to fight them tooth and nail One sucb M P was said to have declared that some of their intended provisions such as leshygalizing stone altars and mass vestments the use of unleavened bread for communion and exshytensions in the use of Latin were attempts to legalize the Roman Gatholic forms

One clause in the Prayer Book Measure would extend the use of Latin The Act of Uniformity establishing the State Church allows Latin in the colleges and halls of Oxford and Cambridge universities and in the three big Anglican colleges of Westrninshy1Itler WinCibester and Eton Now it is proposed that it should be allowed in other universities and such other places of religious and sound leMlling as custom doth allow Ol ordinary may pershyit

Prelate Has Reunion With Paratroopers

WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxshyitiary Bishop Philip M Hannan of Washington had a reunion with some of his World War II buddies at the annual oonvenshytiQll of the 82nd Airborne Divishyion Association here

The bishop who served as a cmaplain with the paratroopers gave the invocation at the conshyyention banquet The convention elected as president John (Spike) Lynchpresident of the Chicago Fire Fighters Union and a member of St Killians parish there

Approves Sainthood For 22 Martyrs

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Vaticans Congregation of Rites has approved the canonization of 22 African Negroes who were slain in Uganada in the 19th century for refusing to renounce their Faith

Vatican sources indicated the new saints would be canonized on Mission Sunday Oct 18 dur_ ing the third session of the Vatshyican council

It was also expected that some note would be taken in the canshyonization ceremonies of 12 Anshyglicans who died during the same persecutions rather than deny Christ

Bishop of Arecibo Puerto Rico Addresses Sacred Heart Parishioners Fall River

A zealous shepherd and a many-sized fascinating man-thafs Bishop Alfred Francis Mendez CSC Ordinary and first Bishop of the Diocese of Arecibo Puerto Rico estabshylished in 1960 Bishop Mendez preached Sunday at Sacred Heart Church Fall River under auspices of the Missionary Cooperative Plan He outlined to parishioners the needs of his Diocese comprising 1100 square miles but served by only 72 priests for 600000 Catholics Although born in Chicago the Bishop is from an old Puerto Rican family His grandfather was the last Spanshyish governor of the island and when it was ceded to the United States in 1898 his youngest son the Bishops father became an American citizen

As a youth Bishop Mendez led a cosmopolitan life He studshyied in Spain and embarked from there to enter Annapolis But on the boat I met a handsome man who talked me into entershying the seminary At the end of the voyage when he put on his Roman collar I was astounded

At any rate the young man entered the Holy Cross commushynity and was ordained in 1935 He did administrative work at the University of Natre Dame and then served in various Texas Dioceses for 13 years before his consecration as Bishop of Areshycibo in 1960

His pectoral cross he reshycounts with pride belonged to Bishop Lamy fanloUS missionshyary of old New Mexico immorshytalized in Willa Cathers novel Death Comes for the Archshybishop

Many Activities In Arecibo says the Bishop

he confirms between one and two thousand youngsters each Sunday he is there He has his own version of the Papal VolshyunteelS for Latin America sevshyeral young women from New York who have volunteered as teachers in schools of the Dioshy~se

His hope is to send mission- aries from Puerto Rico to Latin American countries far the l

South We have never sent out missionaries he says and this would be a wonderful thing for the Church in Puerto Rico

The prelate has organized the Serna Club and Christian Family Movement in his DioceSe and notes that be was in on the ground floor of the CFM beshying instrumental in securing the Notre Dame campus as a conshyvention site for the organization

Also aiding the Bishop in his works of mercy is a secular inshystitute for young women he has organized in Arecibo Members live in a community and have rendered the infant Diocese much assistance

Bishop Mende~ highest praise oowever is reserved for the Cursillo movement which he feels is the instrument that will change the Church inLatia America

Cursillos are literallYlittle courses in Christianity and the Bishop says the three day proshygram can and often does comshypletely change mens lives It is primarily for men and Bishop Mendez says it is important for Latin America that it remain 90

Women have plenty of spirshyitual exercises be says and the Church fails in Latin Amershyica because it is too feminine Men want something viriie and masculine of their own The Cursillo fills this need and if women take it over the men will abandon it

Women he concludes are strong in piety in Latin America but the men are becoming strong in knowledge

League of Prayer Another project close to the

episcopal heart is the League of Prayer for Captured Peoples which he organized two years ago following a suggestion from a convert Its mode of operation

is shnple A parish adopts a parish in an iron curtain counshytry and once monthly offers a special Mass for it and for cap- tive peoples in general

National headquarters of the league are at Post Office Box 248 Menomonee Falls Wisc from which complete informashytion may be obtained Bishop Mendez recently turned over operation of the league to a zealous group of Wisconsin lay people but he remains as honshyorary chairman

He explains that the captive parish adopted by an American parish is notified of its adopshytion and that parishioners strive to attend their own church at the time Mass is being offered for them in the United States In most cases they have no priests or services but the knowledge of the prayers of their brothers in Christ is a real source of com- fOlt and inspiration for them

HUlamper for Justice

One parish Queen of Martyrs Ft Lauderdale Florida has adopted one of the most perseshycuted parishes in Castros Cuba Havanas Our Lady of Charity Both churches are full at the time of the monthly Mass in Florida said Bishop Mendez

Shrine Prayer Vigil Tommorrow Night

WASHINGTON (NC)-An all night vigil of prayer iii response to President Johnsons proclashymation urging t~Americans ma-k Captive Nations Week will be held in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart tomorrow night

President Johrnlon in a June 20 proclamation called for anshynually by a 1959 Congressional resolution named July 12 to 18 as a time to show U S support for the just aspirations of the people of Eastern Europes Redshycontrolled nations

BARBEROS PIZZAmiddotPATIO

ROUTE 6 HUTTLESON AVE Near Fairhaven Drive-In

Itcilian Dinners Our Specialty Service OD Patio

Bishop Mendez and Monsignor Childs

The project is under the pashytronage of Our Lady of Guadashylupe and Bishop Mendez intershyested iron curtain Bishops in it in the course of the Ecumenical Council

The prelltlte quoted a prayer recited by Auxiliary Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvidal at a large banquet The auxiliary exiled from Havana is also acshytive in the League of Prayer

May those who are hungry have bread and may those of us who have bread have ever a hunger for justice and peace

Today said Bishop Mendez those words are inscribed on the shywall of that banquet room

The prelate is now visiting Chicago and will return to Puer to Rico for ordinations Satu-shyday July 25

rtfl ANCHOR-Thurs July 16 1964

British Consider Overseas Family Planning Advice

LONDON (NC) - Lord Dundee British minister of state for foreign affairs has declared that the J3ritish government was prepared to give technical assistance in family planning projects overshyseas

He told the House of Lords rt would be wrong for the British government to take the initiashytive to help any country whose own government was not purshysuing a family planning polshyicy and had not requested help and advice

The government recognizes the seriousness of the world population problem We are preshypared to give technical assistance to family planning projects on the same terms as we give it in other fields he added

Lord McCorquodale w h ~

raised the matter suggested that the United Nations should use its agencies to spread contracepshytive knowledge throughout the underdeveloped countries and conduct family planning reshysearch to find methods satisfyshying religious and cultural obshyjections

Food Production Solution But Lord Dundee told him the

trouble with the United Nations was that it was dominated by Catholic communist and African states none of whom are in favor of birth control He said Britain would do what it could to change the climate of opinion but he was pessimistic of the chances

Lady Su~merski1l who is a doctor criticized this attitude and said the real solution to the war on want was food producshytion ~althus WWl an economic peasant she said Publicizel9 of unproved contraceptives were preying on ignorant women

The pill and other methodll could well prove harmful and to argue that the birth rate would decline if the United Nations distributed contraceptives Wall to over-simplify the issue

OretEllI Idea 21~day Priceless tour of Europe-from $695

Including Jet hotels sightseeing

Aufaina That the time to visit Europe Superh weather bullbull theatres new shows sports eventa bullbull fairs bullbull festivals And no crowds of tourists It the time to enjoy a Priceles tour of Europe Seven different itineraries oach with many departures

Where you got by jot oc sea to England then HoImiddot land Belgium Luxembourg Germany Lucerne Venice Florence Rome Home via Paris

What you geh price includes jet (or ship) motoc coach hotels most meals sightseeing multilingual escorts

Free brochure Get all the facts in a big 24-pago full-color brochure Phone the number below oc drop in No obligation of course

Fall Klver Travel Bureau Henry J Feiteberg Pres

~29~qrth Main 8t - TeL 08 5-7408 ~i Established 1906

NEWPORT PROVIDENCE NEW BEDFORD 1l0MERSET

683middot1515 UN 1middot6168 WY 4middot2413 OS 4middot8844 OFFICIAL DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE

~

- - ---

4

Come Visit

St Annes Shrine in

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs July 16 1964

Maryknolls First Lady Inspiring Story of Nun

By Rt Rev lUsgr John S Kennedy The sister in charge was vexed with the clumsy novice

who had somehow succeeded in breaking the sturdy chain en her medal To impress on the miscreant the full extent ef this enormity the mistress directed her to show the chain

to the reverend mother of an American mission society a the entire community The hody that is of American command was carried out p~iests brothers and sisten who blt in a way hardly intend- woald go ou~ into the mission ed by the giver The novice put fieta 1he chain in an envelope and Tiis came into being with tle with it a note American bishops approval in

ISH of his scheme for a foreignto the reverend mission society and seminary mother reading which was to be known asI have broken

Maryknoll my chain Please Its first headquarters were in fix it Thank a farmhouse and other buildings you Shortly at Hawthorne New York near 15ereafter she tle tome for incurable cancer was given an patients headed by Mother e n vel 0 p e Alphonsa who had been Rose addressed to her Hawthorne Lathrop the daughshyin the reverend te~ of Nathaniel Hawthorne and mothers hand the subject of Katherine Bur-In it was the She tons extremely popular book chain neatly repaired Sc-cw Built a Bridgereally does fix them thought the novice And good lfother Alphonsa Aids

This is one of the many stories c Hawthorne went the other in a biography published a few yc-mg ladies of Boston who had months ago but until now un- bee helping Father Walsh with fortunately and unaccountably his correspondence and bookshyoverlooked by your reviewer keeping his publications and Maryknolls First Lady by Sis- mailing Mollie whose family ter Jeanne Marie (Dodd Mead had suffered reverses could not $95) The reverend mother in leave her job and go to Hawshyquestion is the books subject thorne much as she wanted to Mother Mary Joseph foundress But during vacations and whenshyof the Maryknoll Sisters and an e~er else she had free time she eI~raordinary person in the his- hurried there to work on what tc~ of the Church in America was nearest her heart

She was born in Jamaica Plain It was Mother Alphonsa who in 1882 the eldest daughter in made it possibe for Mollie to be a Catholic family of eight chil- ampt Maryknoll full time That exshydren Her name was Mollie ceptional w 0 men discerned Rogers and she grew up in a something of Mollies importance household that was comfortable to the project and its imporshyand happy She attended West teflCe to her and raised and gave Roxbury High School and at her $2000 which turned over the graduation ceremony held to the Rogers family freed in a Congregational church she MoHie of the necessity of earnshyread an essay on Toleration ing a living and helping support

Highly Popular her parents By this time Maryknoll had

She went to Smith College moved from Hawthorne to Osshywhere because of her good sining which was to be its pershylooks her fine mind and her manent home And Father Walsh delightful disposition she was was glad to be able to put Molshyhighly popular She was one of lie aged 29 in charge of the the small Catholic minority group of young women whom there and it may well be said he styled the secretaries Alshythat it was at Smith that bel ready there was the stirring noshy1ocation took root tion that they should and would

There was a Smith College organize as a community of reshyAssociation for Christian Work ligious But this was rather slow This was strictly Protestant in realization and it fostered interest in and assistance to Protestant mis- Receive Recognition sions Some of the members First they became Dominican pledged themselves to work in tertiaries Then they had a year the missions for a term of years and a half of supposedly canonshyafter graduation Mollie wonder- ical formation in a sort of novishye( why there wasnt a Catholic tiate It was then discovered mission group too however that the procedure had

When after a graduate course not been canonical at all at the Boston Normal School Permission had to be sought she returned to Smith as a dem- through proper and not especial_ onstrator in zoology she formed ly rapid channels eventually a Catholic Ilissior study club they were granted It was only For guidance in this undertak- ir 1920 that recognition as a ing she wrote to Father James religious community was accordshyAnthony Walsh director of the ed and the first professions could Society for the Propagation of finally take place the Faith in the Boston arch- But when this came Mother diocese Mary Joseph (as she was now

Having outlined the project known) was more than ready for his consideration she asked for it More and more young Who knows but that the little women had joined her group work we do here may be the and Maryknoll priests were al shybeginning of greater efforts in ready at their first spots in later life She could not have China realized how prophetic that It was in 1921 when the Maryshythought was knoll Sisters numbered between

Bishops Approve 75 and 100 that the first among them was assigned to foreign

Father Walsh not only assisted parts In that year six set out ber with the study group He on a pioneering assignment in also pressed her into service China part time at his dingy clutte~ed Boston office He had a gemus Work Expands for planning organization and Tne sequel is a glorious chapshypublicity and he was busily enshy teo in American Catholic anshy

---~--~

CLERGYMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD Auxiliary Bishop Philip 11 Hannan of Washington the nationaHy Imown prelCher and writer presents to Rev Dr Norman Vineent Peale right of New York the Religious Heritage of America Award for his significant contributions to reshyigit)n The organization is composed of Protestants Cathshyoks and Jews and it emphasizes the spiritual basis of American democracy NC Photo

IFairbullbullaven Fiesta to Aid School St Joseph Midway Fiesta Asshy night and on July 25th six grand

sociation of Tairhaven will preshy prizes will be awarded plus one sent its annual fiesta on July gigantic main prize 22 23 24 and 25 on the fair

On Friday July 17 a dinnergoltnds located at Spring of fish chowder scallops and aUAdams and Jefferson Streets the the fixings will be served for a

sS~e of St Josephs Church d-cnation of $150

Proceeds wiII be used to deshyfray the exgtenses of the new On Thursday July 24 the paish school now being comshy Ladies group of the Fiesta Assoshypleted ciation will serve a chicken

Booths of l~very type midway dinner rides and a food section are there to satsfy the desires of everyone attmding

Prizes will be awarded eacl1

seorkmiddothed by war persecution expulsion The community numshybers confeSS(lrS and martyrs in GOODits ranks

But whe never one door slammed shut another seemed to open And the work has gone on ever expnding ever imbued with the pristine spirit of Mother Mar~r Joseph

She was a big woman and her girth was the subject of jokes which none enjoyed more than she But this did not prevent her venturing to the most distant missimiddotan under the most difficult ci-cumstancel

Sorrow Joy

Sne had to overcome not merely the crises which saw promising missions stamped out but also the rigors of the depresshysion at home and many another majoI trial material and human But she endured them all with serenity and always the comshymunity survived strengthened and increased

In 1947 she stepped down from its cllmmand and death came to her in 1955 In the interval in Come Pray to Saint Anne1950 she went back to Smith to fECeive a1l honorary degree of Doctor 0 Humane Letters MASSES (Upper Church) The influence and inspiration 6 7 8 930 and 11 AM and 5 PM of Protestallt students and teachers at Smith had led her to MASSES (Shrine) 930 and 11 AM FathE~r Walsh and Father Walsh had led her fO Maryknoll DEVOTION SERVICE

----------__------

Solemn Requiem For Foundress Of Carmelites

NEW YORK (NC)~So1shy

emn Requiem Mass for ~Ioth-er M Teresa one of the seven founders of the Carshymelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm was offered in S1 Patshyricks Home here by her brother Father Raphael Schoof OSB Burial was in Gate of HeaveB Cemetery

Cannelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm staff the Cathshyelic Memorial Home in FaD River and Our Ladys Haven Fairhaven

Iother Teresa died of a COl shy

onary occlusion at CarmellVIanor Home Fort Thomas Ky which she founded Bishop Richard H Ackerman CSSp of Covington Ky offered a Pontifical Reshyquiem Mass for her ir the Ca- shythedral Basilica of the Assumpshytion in Covington

Nun 54 Years A native of Richmond Va the

daughter of Mr and Mrs Joseph Sdoof joined the Carmelites in uno She and six other Carmelshyi~e nuns founded the ron-co~sshytered Carmelite Sisters of the Aged and Infirm in 1929 in New lfc-k under the direction of Patrick Cardinal Hayes

Of the founders only Moth~ M Angeline Teresa superior general of the community which new has some 350 members sur_ vives MothermiddotM Teresa founded Carmel Manor Home here in 949 She also helped found homes of the community in St et Miami and S1 Petersburg Fla

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER bull TEEV1SION bull fURNITURE bull APPLIANCES bull GROCERY

104 Allen St New Bedford YVman ]-9354

ANNE

River Mass

gaged in stirring interest in nals To Japan to Korea to the Her inspiring story with its and PROCESSION 2 3 4 and 730 PM and contributions for the misshy Philippines to Latin Am~rica moments of drama and of fun sions tc Africa the Maryknoll SIsters of sonow and of joy full of acshy

SAINT ANNES SHRINE But he wanted to do much have gone by the hundreds In complishmen- for the Lord is more He was bent on founding many ~es initial success was en~(ssingly told here 818 Middle street fall River Mass 027221

J

5 THE ANCHORshyInclude Private Immaculate Conception Church in Fall River Thurs July 16 1964

School Teachers In House Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) fhe House special sub com- lIlittee on education has sent to the full Education Comshymittee a bill to revise and exshytend the National Defense Edushycation Actmiddot for two years over its expiration kite of 1965

Sponsored by Rep Edith Green of Oregon subcommittee

chairman the bill would end inshyequities for private school and eollege personnel in some secshyCions of the original 1958 law

Chief among these is the proshyrision that a college student who borrows Federal funds to finance his education can get 50 per cent of his debt forgiven if he teaches five years in a public grade or high school

Private school supporters and spokesman for the college comshymunity have argued that this forgiveness provision should exshytend also to those who choose 00 teach in colleges or in parochial or other private schools Mrs Greens bill would permit this

A second major amendment would permit every individual who attends special Federally sponsored institutes for teachers or guidance personnel to receive a stipend of $75 a week plus $15 weekly for dependents

Loan Program At present only public school

personnel receive this stipend Private school supporters have testified that 1lhis limitation bas prevented thousands of teachers and guidance experts poundrom atshy6ending the institutes usually held during the Summer months

The bill (HR 11904) increases from $135 million to $200 million Ute total of Federal funds bB be lent by colleges to needy stushydents Public and private collegshyiate associate degree or diploma aclwols of nursing would be iashyduded in the loan program

In addition to extending part shyial forgiveness of debt to private IliJChool personnel it would do llhe same for borrowers who become social workers or who become teachers nurses or counselors in projects related to President Jobnsons proposed wac on poverty

Family Planning Private Matter

TRENTON (NC)-New Jersey tov Richard J Hughes has deshydined to act on a suggestion Chat the state take the initiative in providing birth control inshyformation to welfare recipients as part of a drive on poverty

The suggestion came from Dr Aurdeymiddot Reiger of Teaneck ehairman of the Community Advisory Council of the Bergen County Planned Parenthood Center

In a letter to Dr Reiger the eovernor said Family planning bull essentially a private matter bull determination to be made en CIte basis of personal and reli shygious convictions It is not in my opinion the proper function ef the state either to encourage or discourage such decisions in tile private lives of our people

Private Ageneles Private agencies should be

CIte principal sources of inforshymation and guidance in this area the governor said He DOted that State Department of Health regulations permit pubshylk health personnel if reshyquested to refer an inquirer to a proper source of family planshyning information

He also noted that medicallly prescribed contraceptives are paid for by public assistazwe agencies

Marks 82 Years Serving FlilJt Catholics By Marion Unsworth

A century ago the five or six hundred English-speaking Catholics in the Flint section of Fall River attended Notre Dame Church By the 1880s Rev Owen Kiernan was conductshying English services at Notre Dame and boarding in a nearby home to be available to the faithful in the area In 1882 Father Kiernanpurchased a large section of the Hall farm and in the Spring the parishshyiontrs began preparing the foundation for the church a Gothic structure funt entireshyly of wood By October Immacshyulate Conception Church was completed and -the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence pershyformed the dedication ceremoshyniess Two years later a rectory was erected near the church

Father Kiernan was s~cceeded by Rev Cornelius McSweeney who served several years at Imshymaculate Conception during which time the parish grew rapshyidly From 1919 until 1925 Msgr Edward J Carr served as pastor working steadily toward erecshytion of of a new and more subshystantial church His plans were realized under the pastorship of Rev George Flanagan who came to Immaculate Conception in 1925 and by 1929 saw the completion of the present brick structure and the dedication of it by Most Rev James E Casshysidy then Vicar-General of the Diocese

In 1938 Rev John McNamara was named pastor at Immaculate Conception and during his three years there further enhanced the appearance of the church by the installation of stained glass windows

Father Smith Rev Charles R Smith was asshy

signed as pastor on May 1 1941 and remained at Immaculate Conception until his death in 1955 During his tenure he comshypleted renovation of the interior of the church and paid off the parish debt Rev Felix Childs succeeded Father Smith

Father Childs added to the church property which included church and rectory a large parkshying area and adjacent land to

Archdiocese Loses State Court Case

TRENTON (NC) -The New JelSey Supreme CoUlt on techshynical grounds has upheld a zonshying ordinance which barred the Newark archdiocese from buildshying a schOOl in Hohokus Borshyough

The 6-to-l decision was given in a major test case which the archdiocese had pursued to proshyteet itself in conjunction witb future building plans The arch_ diocese some time ago abanshydoned its plan to build the school in Hohokus Borough and now is constructing it in Montshyvale

The high court ruling upset a 1963 decision given by Superior Court Judge Charles W Broadshyhurst in Hackensack who held that the Hohokus Borough ordishynance did not apply to public sehools but prohibited building of private schools and was a yiolation of state law

Rename Bethlehem Street for Pope

BETHLEHEM (NC) - T b e main street of Bethlehem has been renamed for Pope Paul VI who made a historic visit here last January The unveiling of the memorial plaque bearing the Popes name was done by the apostolic delegate Archbishop Lino Zanini

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro archbishop of Bologna noted the 50th anniversary of his ordinashytion while on pilgrimage here with 20 of his priests and aQ other pilgrimi from Italy

~- -~__

t~middot fV _ I I

[I

ilI

[ JLt jbull bull i [ Lchc bull bull

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH

provide for future expansion In 1960 Rev Edward F

Dowling then assigned to Our Lady of the Isle Parish in Nan-

Planning Service For Catholics

DETROIT (NC) - Plans are under way for a family planning service to be conducted under Catholics auspices here

Father Kenneth P MacKinnon of Detroit natiQnal moderator of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds said it will be centrally located and will be a referral service for Catholic couples who for ecoshynomic physical or emotional reasons wish to limit their famshyilies by the use of the rhythm method

Doctors will readily admit their inability to take the time during an office- visit to instruct couples properly in the use of the rhythm method of family planning Father MacKinnon said

Also counseling is necessary not only on the physical aspects of the rhythm method where a priest is not qualified but on the spiritual and psychological aspects where he can be of most help A cooperative base of edushycation is the advantage of such a family planning referral ser shy

vice he said

No Dighton Barbeque The chicken barbeque planned

for Saturday Aug 1 will be followed by an open house in the rectory in order that the parishioners may view the renshyovations that have been made and at the same timemiddot have the opportunity of meeting the new curate Rev Martin L Buote

St Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-2892

tucket was named new pastor of the Fall River parish which now includes some 1200 families He is assisted in his task by Rev Paul Connolly and Rev Robert L Stanton A Womens Guild Holy Name Society st Vincent de Paul Society and Catholic Youth Organization are in opershyation in the parish and use the church hall for their activities

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes directed by Sisshyters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and lay teachers also meet in the parish hall Alshythough there is no parish school 240 pupils are transported on three busses to neighboring parochial schools

Heads Clergy Union WORTHINGTON (NC-Msgr

John P Kleinz professor at Ponshytifical College Josephinum here in Ohio has been elected nationshyal director of the Apostolic Unshyion of the Clergy at a meeting of the organizations national council at the college Msgr Kleinz said it was the filst truly national meeting of the organshyization to foster 1he spiritual lives and a sense of command among diocesan priests

LEMIEUX

~ PlUMBING amp HEATING INC

for Oomestic and Industrial

Sales and Service Oil BUfoIIers

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD

Mark Centennial Of Three Kings In Cologne

COLOGNE (NC) - The cathedral city of Cologne which hasnt been ruled by a monarch in nearly 50 years will pay homage to three of them this month when it marks the 800th anniversary of the arrival of the relics of the Three Kings in Germany

Hallowed legend states that St Helena discovered the bodies of the Three Kings the famous Magi of St Matthews Gospel in Persia while she was returning from her expedition to find the True Cross in Jerusalem

Taken to Constantinople the relics were transferred to Milan in the fifth century Then in 1164 during a campaign of the German Emperor Frederick Barberosso into Italy the holy relics were spirited away by the Archbishop of Cologne Rainald von Dassel

Despite the protests of Pope Alexander III the relics were transported over the Alps Everywhere the caravan halted inns were renamed in honor of the Three Kings Some of them still exist by that name today

Symbol of Unity Once in Cologne the relics of

the kings became the symbol of a unified German monarchy Coins( flags and official seals were decorated with three crows

During the Middle Ages thoushysands of pilgrims flocked to the city to see the gold sarcophagus studded with jewels donated by German emperors and a second reliquary in the shaPe of bull golden basilica

This month the citizens of Cologne will give vent to their lebenskraft by commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings Besides a Solemn Pontifical Mass at famous Cologne catheshydral there will be pilgrimages exhibits and civil celebratioRs for the people of this city beshylieve the Three Kings followed a distant star to their cathedral and they take this asmiddota proof that the Child Jesus is sleeping ia their midst

BRUNOS Business Supply Co

SUPPLIES bull MACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford Mass Tel WYman 9-6058

The KEYSTONE Office Equipment

Salesroom NEW AND USED

Wood and Steel Desks anc chairs steel filing cabinets locIcers shelving tablesQJIM_storage cabinets safes wardrobes etc

Street ~ _

_ -near un ion

New Bedford

- 993-2781

LINCOLN PARK Rt 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

NEW ENGLANDS PtAYGROUND Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties

2 - ROllER COASTERS - 2 Thrilling Rides and Amusements

For Complete information Contact OUTING MANAGER

PHONE WYman 9-6984 or MEcury 6-2744

I

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 2: 07.16.64

2

bull

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan liver-Thurs July 16 1964

Diocese of FaII River

OFFICIAL

lRANSFERS

Rev Joseph L Pcwoenr cohaplain and instructor of Religion lit Bishop Stang High School No Dartmouth to chaplain and klstruetor of Religion at Bishop Feehan High ScnooI Attleboro Be retains tile office of Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctr~

Rev Patrick J OmiddotNeill in residence at st ThomQS More Somerset to chaplain and instructor of Religion at Bishop Stang High School No Dartmouth He remains Superinshytendent of Dioeesan SChools

TEMPORARY APPOINTMErrr

Rev Peter J Mullen newly ordained to SaBed Heart ChUldl Fall River as assistant

Appointments effective Frklay July 17 1964

~ tpound-5 -Bishop of Fall River

Morally UnobjectionQble for Everyone Battle Hymn Brass Bottle Bridge on River Kwal Circus World Day Mars Invaided Dream Maker Drum Beat Fall of Roman Empire Gladiators Gotd Rusft

Great Escape Incredible Mr limpet

Unobiectionable for Adults Adolescents middotAct Hamlet Shock Treatment Advance tG Rear Horror of It All 633 Squadron Black Zoo King of Sun South Pacific

Blue Hawaii lawrence of Arabia Surf Party Captain Newman MD Man From Gafvestolt Twenty Plus Twa

Chalk Garden Mary Mary Twice Told Tales Children of Damned Miracle Worker Unsinkable Molly Brown Charade Muscle Beach Party Voice of Hurricane Citizen Kane Point of Order Walk Tighbope Come Fly With Me Ring of TreasolJ War is Hell Distant Trumpet Sanjuro Weekend With lulu

Donovans Reef 7 Days in MaJ Wheeler Dealers Evil Eye Secret Door World of Henry Orient Fort Dobbs Secret InvasiOll Young Doctors The

Morally Unobiectionable for Adults All Nighfs Work Hypnotic Eye Prize

America America Loneliness of Long Term of Trial Becket Distance Runner Thin Red line

Bedtime Stol Mafioso Third Secret Bye Bye- Birdie Mail Order Bride Thunder of Drums Cardina~ Mans Favorite Sport To Bed or Not to Bed

Darbys Rangers No My Darling Daughter Town Without Pity Flight frol Ashiya Operation Petticoat Two Ale Guilty FUR in Acapulco Paris When It Sizzle$ 0 West Side StoryGlobal Affair Pilfow falk Woman of Straw Mud Pink Panther bull Zulu -

I For Adults (With Reserv~tions)~ This classifieation is given to certain f i1rns whicli while not morally offensive

in themselves require atution andsQme anplysis and explanati~nas a protection ~to the uninformed against wrong Interpre~~ions and false conclusions f ~ bull

I Best Man Martin luther This Sporting life Black like Me Organizer Tom Jones

Divorce Italian Style Pressure Point Under Yum Yum Tree coor World Servant Victim Dr Strangeove Sky Above amp Mud Below Walk on Wild Side 81h Strangers in the City Young amp Willing

Girl With the Green Eyes Suddenly last Summer

Morally Obiectionable in Part for Everyone Black Sabbatfl

Cleopatra Comedy of Terrors Conjugal Bed Curse of living Cor~se Female Jungle4 for Texltis Frightenad City From Russia With lne GI Blues Honeymoon Hatel Horror of Party Beacb Jessica

Empty Canvas

Kissin Cousins S~lendor in Grass Kittan With AWhip StranglerLlttiy in Cage Sunday in New York long Ships The Devil and tre Man in Middle 10 Corrnandments Masque of the Red Death Tftree Fables Qf love

fiight Must Fall Tiara Tahiti (BrJ Psyche 59 Viva las Vegas Racing Fever Wtat A Way To Go Srock Corridor Wtere Boys Are Small World of Sammy lee Yesterday Today and Soldier in the Rain Tomorrow Some Came Running

Condemned Silence Weekend

Its Mad Mad Mad World Romeo amp Juliet lillies of Field Sampson amp Slave Queen longest Day Sergeants 3 Modern Times Summer Holiday tImse on Moon Whan the Clock Strikes Never Put it in Writing Whos Minding Store Ona Mans Way Wild amp Wonderful Papas Delicate Condition Windjammer Patsy The Yank in Viet Nam A Pepe You Have to Run Fast Ready for the People Young Swingers The

MgDAL FOR POPE Pope Paul VI receives the Thomas More Association Medal on the 25th anniversary of that organi2ation Presenting the medal are from left Msgr Edward Berr principal of Central Catholic High School Lima Ohio his brother Dan Herr president of the Thomas More Association Chicago and John Drahos sales manager The A~sociation was founded tq promote Catholic reading and reading among Catholics NC Photo

Difficult Course Lenrning Language First Stage in Life

Of Missioner in ~apan

middotTOKYO (NC)-The first stage characters they use for reading of missimary life in Japan is instead of letters as we do There the Frarlciscan language school are thousands of these but durshyhere I here the missionary ing the occupation following spends the first two years of his the war a committee of scholars (~areer ir the Japanese missions reduced these to 1850 basic

--and it is a course that might characters They were to be the make some of his previous basic language of the press and school work seem ligM indeed general publicati0S Th~ all

The basic purpose of the lan- have to be memorIZed guage school is to enable the 3000 Meanings Preface of Trinity missionary to speak fluently As In addition one chaiaeterma MONDAY-St Jerome Ae~ one student said We comemiddot into haveseveral meanings-so t4ese ian Confessor m Cll a highly -developed- culture To IS5G characters may have a total White MaJ~i~oper Gloria

the extent that we can meet of 3~OO or mo~ readingS or second Collectst Margaret thesepecple on their ownlevel meanmgsmiddot VlrgiD and Martyr no Creect are we likely to be effective in Needless to say this does notmiddot Common Preface~ reaching them with our simplify the problem of the mis- TUESDAY - St Lawlenlte at thoughts our teachings sionarymiddotmiddot Brlndisi ConfesSor and D~

B t J t 1 - The FranCIscan Language of the Church m CIaBa u apanese IS no aS11llp e School- here is used by all the White M Pr bull Gl

lmguage to learn J~st ~ one incoming missionaries except Second C~~ect ~Prax= example take the kan11 the

Necrology JULY 17

Rev William J Smith 1960 Pastor S James TauntolL

JULY 19 Most J1lev Daniel P Feehan

DO 1934 second Bishop of Fan River 1907-34

JULY 23 Rev George B McNamee

)1138 Pastor middotmiddotHolymiddot Namegt Fall River

FOFlTY1iOURS DEVOTION

ruIy 19--St Pius X South Yamlouth St Stephen Dodgeville

~ruly 2~-St Francis of Assisi New Bedford

HoI Redeemer Chatham Aug 2-8t George Westport

Sacr ~d Hearts Fairhaven St Iheresa So Attleboro

Aug 9---8t Theresa lew BI~dford

OUl~ Lady opound Victory Clmterville

THE ANCHOR

lleclnd Clms Postage PalO at Fall River Mass Pul1lished every Thursday at 41ct

~~~~rg p~~IU~j ~~ D~~e ~s~aIlD~lv~ SulJSCrlptfoa IIrlca ~ lUll DOitllakl $400 YIIL

the Jesuits who have a school Virgin no Creed Commoa of their own for their scholastics Prefa~

The teachers are all Japan- wEDNESDAY-st Mary ~ag-ese-except for Japanese writ- dahme Penitent III Class i~g which is ta~ghtmiddotby a for- White Mass Proper Gloiia eIgneI That foreIgner ismiddot Father no Creed Common Preface Beatus Theunissen and he says THURSDAY - st Apollinaris with a smile I always tell BiShop and Martyi III Chisa

them stories For every little sign I write on the blackboard Itellthem a big story

Antique Pqtade

In coj~nctionwith the 65th anniversary celebration of St staniSlaus parish Fall River an

old-fashioned parade will be held at 13G Saturday afternoon July 18~- Starting from the church the pirade will go to downtown Fall River and reshyturnmiddot Included in the line of march will be antique carS bi shycycles built fortwo and old fire-engines The anniverSary

will be further celebrated Saturshyday and Sunday July 25 and 26 at Urbans Grove Tiverton

BROOKLAWN fUNERAL HOME INC

R Marcel Roy - G Lllrralne R1ly Roger laFrance

FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Irvington Ct

WY 7-7830 New Bedfordmiddot

Asks All Citizens To Welcome Law

CINCINNATI (NC) - Cincmshynatis Karl J Alter called on aU ~tizens to welcome the civil

rights legislation With a spirit of gracious cooperation

The archbishop expressed the hope that the overwhelming reshysponse to the law would be based on motives of a high order of nobility on Christian eharit and justice and on a genuine desire to promote the hue welfare of our eountry

All men of good will can now rejoice that the equal personal dignity of our Negro fellow Citi shyzens has been reeognized and guaranteed by the public law of our eountry the Archbishop said

For Nations Welfare Great obstacles have beetl

overcome but much still reshymains to be done The new civft rights bill can be either grudgshyingly accepted its implementashytion resisted and its promise of peace and reconciliation retardshyed or else it can be welcomed with a spirit of gracious coopshyeration and with the desire to

make it effective he declared We sincerely hope and pra

that the overwhelming response will be based on motives of a high order of nobility on Chriampshytian Charity and justice and Oft a genuine desire to promote the true welfare of our eountrvmiddot the prelate declared

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sunshy

day IV Class Green Mass Proper No Glorfa or Creed second Collect st AlexiUB

Confessor Common Preface SATURDAY-St Camillus De

Lellis Confessor ill Class White Mass Proper Gloria

second Collect SS Symphorshyosa and her Seven Sons Marshytyrs no Creed Common Prefshyace

SUNDAY - IX Sunday Aft el Pentecost II ~lass Gr~eD

Mass Proper qloria Creed

Red Mass Proper G~oria second Collect $tmiddot middotLiborlur

Bishopan4 Confessor ~ CoImDori ~refa~~

AUBERTINE Funeral Home Inc Helen Aubertine Braugh

William H Aubertine Brian J Aubertine

Spacious Parking Area WY2-2957

129 Allen St New Bedford

A AMILY TREAT

BAR-B-Q CHICKENS

ROSELAWN FARMS

145 Washin~on St~ Fairhaven Just off Route 6

WY ]-9336

Watch for Signs While out for a Drive

StoP at this delightful SpOt

3 Anglican Church Seeks to Extend Use of latin

LONDON (NC) - White the Roman Catholic Church in England is preparing to use English in part of the Mass the state Ohurch of Engshyland is seeking to extend its use of Latin

This move is included in one of two Anglican Ohuroh measshyures submitted-as the EstabshyHshed Church must by law-to Parliament for approval They seek to obtain legal recognition of some current Anglioan Ohurch practices already in use

And these two small requests lQt sufficiently important to merit the title of parliamentary bills are expected by some p0shy

litical observers to arouse a storm in the House of Commons as further signs of the Anglican Ohurchs alleged drift to Rome

One is called in official legal jargon the Vesture of Ministers Measure and is about vestmeruts and rubrics The other is the Pl1ayer Book (Miscellaneous Provisions) Measure and also deals with rubrics and liturgy In general these measures would simply recognize practices which have long been common in AnshygUcan churches bull

Die-bards Protest nle little gloup of die--hard

Protestant Members of Parliashyment is planning according to reports to fight them tooth and nail One sucb M P was said to have declared that some of their intended provisions such as leshygalizing stone altars and mass vestments the use of unleavened bread for communion and exshytensions in the use of Latin were attempts to legalize the Roman Gatholic forms

One clause in the Prayer Book Measure would extend the use of Latin The Act of Uniformity establishing the State Church allows Latin in the colleges and halls of Oxford and Cambridge universities and in the three big Anglican colleges of Westrninshy1Itler WinCibester and Eton Now it is proposed that it should be allowed in other universities and such other places of religious and sound leMlling as custom doth allow Ol ordinary may pershyit

Prelate Has Reunion With Paratroopers

WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxshyitiary Bishop Philip M Hannan of Washington had a reunion with some of his World War II buddies at the annual oonvenshytiQll of the 82nd Airborne Divishyion Association here

The bishop who served as a cmaplain with the paratroopers gave the invocation at the conshyyention banquet The convention elected as president John (Spike) Lynchpresident of the Chicago Fire Fighters Union and a member of St Killians parish there

Approves Sainthood For 22 Martyrs

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Vaticans Congregation of Rites has approved the canonization of 22 African Negroes who were slain in Uganada in the 19th century for refusing to renounce their Faith

Vatican sources indicated the new saints would be canonized on Mission Sunday Oct 18 dur_ ing the third session of the Vatshyican council

It was also expected that some note would be taken in the canshyonization ceremonies of 12 Anshyglicans who died during the same persecutions rather than deny Christ

Bishop of Arecibo Puerto Rico Addresses Sacred Heart Parishioners Fall River

A zealous shepherd and a many-sized fascinating man-thafs Bishop Alfred Francis Mendez CSC Ordinary and first Bishop of the Diocese of Arecibo Puerto Rico estabshylished in 1960 Bishop Mendez preached Sunday at Sacred Heart Church Fall River under auspices of the Missionary Cooperative Plan He outlined to parishioners the needs of his Diocese comprising 1100 square miles but served by only 72 priests for 600000 Catholics Although born in Chicago the Bishop is from an old Puerto Rican family His grandfather was the last Spanshyish governor of the island and when it was ceded to the United States in 1898 his youngest son the Bishops father became an American citizen

As a youth Bishop Mendez led a cosmopolitan life He studshyied in Spain and embarked from there to enter Annapolis But on the boat I met a handsome man who talked me into entershying the seminary At the end of the voyage when he put on his Roman collar I was astounded

At any rate the young man entered the Holy Cross commushynity and was ordained in 1935 He did administrative work at the University of Natre Dame and then served in various Texas Dioceses for 13 years before his consecration as Bishop of Areshycibo in 1960

His pectoral cross he reshycounts with pride belonged to Bishop Lamy fanloUS missionshyary of old New Mexico immorshytalized in Willa Cathers novel Death Comes for the Archshybishop

Many Activities In Arecibo says the Bishop

he confirms between one and two thousand youngsters each Sunday he is there He has his own version of the Papal VolshyunteelS for Latin America sevshyeral young women from New York who have volunteered as teachers in schools of the Dioshy~se

His hope is to send mission- aries from Puerto Rico to Latin American countries far the l

South We have never sent out missionaries he says and this would be a wonderful thing for the Church in Puerto Rico

The prelate has organized the Serna Club and Christian Family Movement in his DioceSe and notes that be was in on the ground floor of the CFM beshying instrumental in securing the Notre Dame campus as a conshyvention site for the organization

Also aiding the Bishop in his works of mercy is a secular inshystitute for young women he has organized in Arecibo Members live in a community and have rendered the infant Diocese much assistance

Bishop Mende~ highest praise oowever is reserved for the Cursillo movement which he feels is the instrument that will change the Church inLatia America

Cursillos are literallYlittle courses in Christianity and the Bishop says the three day proshygram can and often does comshypletely change mens lives It is primarily for men and Bishop Mendez says it is important for Latin America that it remain 90

Women have plenty of spirshyitual exercises be says and the Church fails in Latin Amershyica because it is too feminine Men want something viriie and masculine of their own The Cursillo fills this need and if women take it over the men will abandon it

Women he concludes are strong in piety in Latin America but the men are becoming strong in knowledge

League of Prayer Another project close to the

episcopal heart is the League of Prayer for Captured Peoples which he organized two years ago following a suggestion from a convert Its mode of operation

is shnple A parish adopts a parish in an iron curtain counshytry and once monthly offers a special Mass for it and for cap- tive peoples in general

National headquarters of the league are at Post Office Box 248 Menomonee Falls Wisc from which complete informashytion may be obtained Bishop Mendez recently turned over operation of the league to a zealous group of Wisconsin lay people but he remains as honshyorary chairman

He explains that the captive parish adopted by an American parish is notified of its adopshytion and that parishioners strive to attend their own church at the time Mass is being offered for them in the United States In most cases they have no priests or services but the knowledge of the prayers of their brothers in Christ is a real source of com- fOlt and inspiration for them

HUlamper for Justice

One parish Queen of Martyrs Ft Lauderdale Florida has adopted one of the most perseshycuted parishes in Castros Cuba Havanas Our Lady of Charity Both churches are full at the time of the monthly Mass in Florida said Bishop Mendez

Shrine Prayer Vigil Tommorrow Night

WASHINGTON (NC)-An all night vigil of prayer iii response to President Johnsons proclashymation urging t~Americans ma-k Captive Nations Week will be held in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart tomorrow night

President Johrnlon in a June 20 proclamation called for anshynually by a 1959 Congressional resolution named July 12 to 18 as a time to show U S support for the just aspirations of the people of Eastern Europes Redshycontrolled nations

BARBEROS PIZZAmiddotPATIO

ROUTE 6 HUTTLESON AVE Near Fairhaven Drive-In

Itcilian Dinners Our Specialty Service OD Patio

Bishop Mendez and Monsignor Childs

The project is under the pashytronage of Our Lady of Guadashylupe and Bishop Mendez intershyested iron curtain Bishops in it in the course of the Ecumenical Council

The prelltlte quoted a prayer recited by Auxiliary Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvidal at a large banquet The auxiliary exiled from Havana is also acshytive in the League of Prayer

May those who are hungry have bread and may those of us who have bread have ever a hunger for justice and peace

Today said Bishop Mendez those words are inscribed on the shywall of that banquet room

The prelate is now visiting Chicago and will return to Puer to Rico for ordinations Satu-shyday July 25

rtfl ANCHOR-Thurs July 16 1964

British Consider Overseas Family Planning Advice

LONDON (NC) - Lord Dundee British minister of state for foreign affairs has declared that the J3ritish government was prepared to give technical assistance in family planning projects overshyseas

He told the House of Lords rt would be wrong for the British government to take the initiashytive to help any country whose own government was not purshysuing a family planning polshyicy and had not requested help and advice

The government recognizes the seriousness of the world population problem We are preshypared to give technical assistance to family planning projects on the same terms as we give it in other fields he added

Lord McCorquodale w h ~

raised the matter suggested that the United Nations should use its agencies to spread contracepshytive knowledge throughout the underdeveloped countries and conduct family planning reshysearch to find methods satisfyshying religious and cultural obshyjections

Food Production Solution But Lord Dundee told him the

trouble with the United Nations was that it was dominated by Catholic communist and African states none of whom are in favor of birth control He said Britain would do what it could to change the climate of opinion but he was pessimistic of the chances

Lady Su~merski1l who is a doctor criticized this attitude and said the real solution to the war on want was food producshytion ~althus WWl an economic peasant she said Publicizel9 of unproved contraceptives were preying on ignorant women

The pill and other methodll could well prove harmful and to argue that the birth rate would decline if the United Nations distributed contraceptives Wall to over-simplify the issue

OretEllI Idea 21~day Priceless tour of Europe-from $695

Including Jet hotels sightseeing

Aufaina That the time to visit Europe Superh weather bullbull theatres new shows sports eventa bullbull fairs bullbull festivals And no crowds of tourists It the time to enjoy a Priceles tour of Europe Seven different itineraries oach with many departures

Where you got by jot oc sea to England then HoImiddot land Belgium Luxembourg Germany Lucerne Venice Florence Rome Home via Paris

What you geh price includes jet (or ship) motoc coach hotels most meals sightseeing multilingual escorts

Free brochure Get all the facts in a big 24-pago full-color brochure Phone the number below oc drop in No obligation of course

Fall Klver Travel Bureau Henry J Feiteberg Pres

~29~qrth Main 8t - TeL 08 5-7408 ~i Established 1906

NEWPORT PROVIDENCE NEW BEDFORD 1l0MERSET

683middot1515 UN 1middot6168 WY 4middot2413 OS 4middot8844 OFFICIAL DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE

~

- - ---

4

Come Visit

St Annes Shrine in

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs July 16 1964

Maryknolls First Lady Inspiring Story of Nun

By Rt Rev lUsgr John S Kennedy The sister in charge was vexed with the clumsy novice

who had somehow succeeded in breaking the sturdy chain en her medal To impress on the miscreant the full extent ef this enormity the mistress directed her to show the chain

to the reverend mother of an American mission society a the entire community The hody that is of American command was carried out p~iests brothers and sisten who blt in a way hardly intend- woald go ou~ into the mission ed by the giver The novice put fieta 1he chain in an envelope and Tiis came into being with tle with it a note American bishops approval in

ISH of his scheme for a foreignto the reverend mission society and seminary mother reading which was to be known asI have broken

Maryknoll my chain Please Its first headquarters were in fix it Thank a farmhouse and other buildings you Shortly at Hawthorne New York near 15ereafter she tle tome for incurable cancer was given an patients headed by Mother e n vel 0 p e Alphonsa who had been Rose addressed to her Hawthorne Lathrop the daughshyin the reverend te~ of Nathaniel Hawthorne and mothers hand the subject of Katherine Bur-In it was the She tons extremely popular book chain neatly repaired Sc-cw Built a Bridgereally does fix them thought the novice And good lfother Alphonsa Aids

This is one of the many stories c Hawthorne went the other in a biography published a few yc-mg ladies of Boston who had months ago but until now un- bee helping Father Walsh with fortunately and unaccountably his correspondence and bookshyoverlooked by your reviewer keeping his publications and Maryknolls First Lady by Sis- mailing Mollie whose family ter Jeanne Marie (Dodd Mead had suffered reverses could not $95) The reverend mother in leave her job and go to Hawshyquestion is the books subject thorne much as she wanted to Mother Mary Joseph foundress But during vacations and whenshyof the Maryknoll Sisters and an e~er else she had free time she eI~raordinary person in the his- hurried there to work on what tc~ of the Church in America was nearest her heart

She was born in Jamaica Plain It was Mother Alphonsa who in 1882 the eldest daughter in made it possibe for Mollie to be a Catholic family of eight chil- ampt Maryknoll full time That exshydren Her name was Mollie ceptional w 0 men discerned Rogers and she grew up in a something of Mollies importance household that was comfortable to the project and its imporshyand happy She attended West teflCe to her and raised and gave Roxbury High School and at her $2000 which turned over the graduation ceremony held to the Rogers family freed in a Congregational church she MoHie of the necessity of earnshyread an essay on Toleration ing a living and helping support

Highly Popular her parents By this time Maryknoll had

She went to Smith College moved from Hawthorne to Osshywhere because of her good sining which was to be its pershylooks her fine mind and her manent home And Father Walsh delightful disposition she was was glad to be able to put Molshyhighly popular She was one of lie aged 29 in charge of the the small Catholic minority group of young women whom there and it may well be said he styled the secretaries Alshythat it was at Smith that bel ready there was the stirring noshy1ocation took root tion that they should and would

There was a Smith College organize as a community of reshyAssociation for Christian Work ligious But this was rather slow This was strictly Protestant in realization and it fostered interest in and assistance to Protestant mis- Receive Recognition sions Some of the members First they became Dominican pledged themselves to work in tertiaries Then they had a year the missions for a term of years and a half of supposedly canonshyafter graduation Mollie wonder- ical formation in a sort of novishye( why there wasnt a Catholic tiate It was then discovered mission group too however that the procedure had

When after a graduate course not been canonical at all at the Boston Normal School Permission had to be sought she returned to Smith as a dem- through proper and not especial_ onstrator in zoology she formed ly rapid channels eventually a Catholic Ilissior study club they were granted It was only For guidance in this undertak- ir 1920 that recognition as a ing she wrote to Father James religious community was accordshyAnthony Walsh director of the ed and the first professions could Society for the Propagation of finally take place the Faith in the Boston arch- But when this came Mother diocese Mary Joseph (as she was now

Having outlined the project known) was more than ready for his consideration she asked for it More and more young Who knows but that the little women had joined her group work we do here may be the and Maryknoll priests were al shybeginning of greater efforts in ready at their first spots in later life She could not have China realized how prophetic that It was in 1921 when the Maryshythought was knoll Sisters numbered between

Bishops Approve 75 and 100 that the first among them was assigned to foreign

Father Walsh not only assisted parts In that year six set out ber with the study group He on a pioneering assignment in also pressed her into service China part time at his dingy clutte~ed Boston office He had a gemus Work Expands for planning organization and Tne sequel is a glorious chapshypublicity and he was busily enshy teo in American Catholic anshy

---~--~

CLERGYMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD Auxiliary Bishop Philip 11 Hannan of Washington the nationaHy Imown prelCher and writer presents to Rev Dr Norman Vineent Peale right of New York the Religious Heritage of America Award for his significant contributions to reshyigit)n The organization is composed of Protestants Cathshyoks and Jews and it emphasizes the spiritual basis of American democracy NC Photo

IFairbullbullaven Fiesta to Aid School St Joseph Midway Fiesta Asshy night and on July 25th six grand

sociation of Tairhaven will preshy prizes will be awarded plus one sent its annual fiesta on July gigantic main prize 22 23 24 and 25 on the fair

On Friday July 17 a dinnergoltnds located at Spring of fish chowder scallops and aUAdams and Jefferson Streets the the fixings will be served for a

sS~e of St Josephs Church d-cnation of $150

Proceeds wiII be used to deshyfray the exgtenses of the new On Thursday July 24 the paish school now being comshy Ladies group of the Fiesta Assoshypleted ciation will serve a chicken

Booths of l~very type midway dinner rides and a food section are there to satsfy the desires of everyone attmding

Prizes will be awarded eacl1

seorkmiddothed by war persecution expulsion The community numshybers confeSS(lrS and martyrs in GOODits ranks

But whe never one door slammed shut another seemed to open And the work has gone on ever expnding ever imbued with the pristine spirit of Mother Mar~r Joseph

She was a big woman and her girth was the subject of jokes which none enjoyed more than she But this did not prevent her venturing to the most distant missimiddotan under the most difficult ci-cumstancel

Sorrow Joy

Sne had to overcome not merely the crises which saw promising missions stamped out but also the rigors of the depresshysion at home and many another majoI trial material and human But she endured them all with serenity and always the comshymunity survived strengthened and increased

In 1947 she stepped down from its cllmmand and death came to her in 1955 In the interval in Come Pray to Saint Anne1950 she went back to Smith to fECeive a1l honorary degree of Doctor 0 Humane Letters MASSES (Upper Church) The influence and inspiration 6 7 8 930 and 11 AM and 5 PM of Protestallt students and teachers at Smith had led her to MASSES (Shrine) 930 and 11 AM FathE~r Walsh and Father Walsh had led her fO Maryknoll DEVOTION SERVICE

----------__------

Solemn Requiem For Foundress Of Carmelites

NEW YORK (NC)~So1shy

emn Requiem Mass for ~Ioth-er M Teresa one of the seven founders of the Carshymelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm was offered in S1 Patshyricks Home here by her brother Father Raphael Schoof OSB Burial was in Gate of HeaveB Cemetery

Cannelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm staff the Cathshyelic Memorial Home in FaD River and Our Ladys Haven Fairhaven

Iother Teresa died of a COl shy

onary occlusion at CarmellVIanor Home Fort Thomas Ky which she founded Bishop Richard H Ackerman CSSp of Covington Ky offered a Pontifical Reshyquiem Mass for her ir the Ca- shythedral Basilica of the Assumpshytion in Covington

Nun 54 Years A native of Richmond Va the

daughter of Mr and Mrs Joseph Sdoof joined the Carmelites in uno She and six other Carmelshyi~e nuns founded the ron-co~sshytered Carmelite Sisters of the Aged and Infirm in 1929 in New lfc-k under the direction of Patrick Cardinal Hayes

Of the founders only Moth~ M Angeline Teresa superior general of the community which new has some 350 members sur_ vives MothermiddotM Teresa founded Carmel Manor Home here in 949 She also helped found homes of the community in St et Miami and S1 Petersburg Fla

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER bull TEEV1SION bull fURNITURE bull APPLIANCES bull GROCERY

104 Allen St New Bedford YVman ]-9354

ANNE

River Mass

gaged in stirring interest in nals To Japan to Korea to the Her inspiring story with its and PROCESSION 2 3 4 and 730 PM and contributions for the misshy Philippines to Latin Am~rica moments of drama and of fun sions tc Africa the Maryknoll SIsters of sonow and of joy full of acshy

SAINT ANNES SHRINE But he wanted to do much have gone by the hundreds In complishmen- for the Lord is more He was bent on founding many ~es initial success was en~(ssingly told here 818 Middle street fall River Mass 027221

J

5 THE ANCHORshyInclude Private Immaculate Conception Church in Fall River Thurs July 16 1964

School Teachers In House Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) fhe House special sub com- lIlittee on education has sent to the full Education Comshymittee a bill to revise and exshytend the National Defense Edushycation Actmiddot for two years over its expiration kite of 1965

Sponsored by Rep Edith Green of Oregon subcommittee

chairman the bill would end inshyequities for private school and eollege personnel in some secshyCions of the original 1958 law

Chief among these is the proshyrision that a college student who borrows Federal funds to finance his education can get 50 per cent of his debt forgiven if he teaches five years in a public grade or high school

Private school supporters and spokesman for the college comshymunity have argued that this forgiveness provision should exshytend also to those who choose 00 teach in colleges or in parochial or other private schools Mrs Greens bill would permit this

A second major amendment would permit every individual who attends special Federally sponsored institutes for teachers or guidance personnel to receive a stipend of $75 a week plus $15 weekly for dependents

Loan Program At present only public school

personnel receive this stipend Private school supporters have testified that 1lhis limitation bas prevented thousands of teachers and guidance experts poundrom atshy6ending the institutes usually held during the Summer months

The bill (HR 11904) increases from $135 million to $200 million Ute total of Federal funds bB be lent by colleges to needy stushydents Public and private collegshyiate associate degree or diploma aclwols of nursing would be iashyduded in the loan program

In addition to extending part shyial forgiveness of debt to private IliJChool personnel it would do llhe same for borrowers who become social workers or who become teachers nurses or counselors in projects related to President Jobnsons proposed wac on poverty

Family Planning Private Matter

TRENTON (NC)-New Jersey tov Richard J Hughes has deshydined to act on a suggestion Chat the state take the initiative in providing birth control inshyformation to welfare recipients as part of a drive on poverty

The suggestion came from Dr Aurdeymiddot Reiger of Teaneck ehairman of the Community Advisory Council of the Bergen County Planned Parenthood Center

In a letter to Dr Reiger the eovernor said Family planning bull essentially a private matter bull determination to be made en CIte basis of personal and reli shygious convictions It is not in my opinion the proper function ef the state either to encourage or discourage such decisions in tile private lives of our people

Private Ageneles Private agencies should be

CIte principal sources of inforshymation and guidance in this area the governor said He DOted that State Department of Health regulations permit pubshylk health personnel if reshyquested to refer an inquirer to a proper source of family planshyning information

He also noted that medicallly prescribed contraceptives are paid for by public assistazwe agencies

Marks 82 Years Serving FlilJt Catholics By Marion Unsworth

A century ago the five or six hundred English-speaking Catholics in the Flint section of Fall River attended Notre Dame Church By the 1880s Rev Owen Kiernan was conductshying English services at Notre Dame and boarding in a nearby home to be available to the faithful in the area In 1882 Father Kiernanpurchased a large section of the Hall farm and in the Spring the parishshyiontrs began preparing the foundation for the church a Gothic structure funt entireshyly of wood By October Immacshyulate Conception Church was completed and -the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence pershyformed the dedication ceremoshyniess Two years later a rectory was erected near the church

Father Kiernan was s~cceeded by Rev Cornelius McSweeney who served several years at Imshymaculate Conception during which time the parish grew rapshyidly From 1919 until 1925 Msgr Edward J Carr served as pastor working steadily toward erecshytion of of a new and more subshystantial church His plans were realized under the pastorship of Rev George Flanagan who came to Immaculate Conception in 1925 and by 1929 saw the completion of the present brick structure and the dedication of it by Most Rev James E Casshysidy then Vicar-General of the Diocese

In 1938 Rev John McNamara was named pastor at Immaculate Conception and during his three years there further enhanced the appearance of the church by the installation of stained glass windows

Father Smith Rev Charles R Smith was asshy

signed as pastor on May 1 1941 and remained at Immaculate Conception until his death in 1955 During his tenure he comshypleted renovation of the interior of the church and paid off the parish debt Rev Felix Childs succeeded Father Smith

Father Childs added to the church property which included church and rectory a large parkshying area and adjacent land to

Archdiocese Loses State Court Case

TRENTON (NC) -The New JelSey Supreme CoUlt on techshynical grounds has upheld a zonshying ordinance which barred the Newark archdiocese from buildshying a schOOl in Hohokus Borshyough

The 6-to-l decision was given in a major test case which the archdiocese had pursued to proshyteet itself in conjunction witb future building plans The arch_ diocese some time ago abanshydoned its plan to build the school in Hohokus Borough and now is constructing it in Montshyvale

The high court ruling upset a 1963 decision given by Superior Court Judge Charles W Broadshyhurst in Hackensack who held that the Hohokus Borough ordishynance did not apply to public sehools but prohibited building of private schools and was a yiolation of state law

Rename Bethlehem Street for Pope

BETHLEHEM (NC) - T b e main street of Bethlehem has been renamed for Pope Paul VI who made a historic visit here last January The unveiling of the memorial plaque bearing the Popes name was done by the apostolic delegate Archbishop Lino Zanini

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro archbishop of Bologna noted the 50th anniversary of his ordinashytion while on pilgrimage here with 20 of his priests and aQ other pilgrimi from Italy

~- -~__

t~middot fV _ I I

[I

ilI

[ JLt jbull bull i [ Lchc bull bull

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH

provide for future expansion In 1960 Rev Edward F

Dowling then assigned to Our Lady of the Isle Parish in Nan-

Planning Service For Catholics

DETROIT (NC) - Plans are under way for a family planning service to be conducted under Catholics auspices here

Father Kenneth P MacKinnon of Detroit natiQnal moderator of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds said it will be centrally located and will be a referral service for Catholic couples who for ecoshynomic physical or emotional reasons wish to limit their famshyilies by the use of the rhythm method

Doctors will readily admit their inability to take the time during an office- visit to instruct couples properly in the use of the rhythm method of family planning Father MacKinnon said

Also counseling is necessary not only on the physical aspects of the rhythm method where a priest is not qualified but on the spiritual and psychological aspects where he can be of most help A cooperative base of edushycation is the advantage of such a family planning referral ser shy

vice he said

No Dighton Barbeque The chicken barbeque planned

for Saturday Aug 1 will be followed by an open house in the rectory in order that the parishioners may view the renshyovations that have been made and at the same timemiddot have the opportunity of meeting the new curate Rev Martin L Buote

St Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-2892

tucket was named new pastor of the Fall River parish which now includes some 1200 families He is assisted in his task by Rev Paul Connolly and Rev Robert L Stanton A Womens Guild Holy Name Society st Vincent de Paul Society and Catholic Youth Organization are in opershyation in the parish and use the church hall for their activities

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes directed by Sisshyters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and lay teachers also meet in the parish hall Alshythough there is no parish school 240 pupils are transported on three busses to neighboring parochial schools

Heads Clergy Union WORTHINGTON (NC-Msgr

John P Kleinz professor at Ponshytifical College Josephinum here in Ohio has been elected nationshyal director of the Apostolic Unshyion of the Clergy at a meeting of the organizations national council at the college Msgr Kleinz said it was the filst truly national meeting of the organshyization to foster 1he spiritual lives and a sense of command among diocesan priests

LEMIEUX

~ PlUMBING amp HEATING INC

for Oomestic and Industrial

Sales and Service Oil BUfoIIers

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD

Mark Centennial Of Three Kings In Cologne

COLOGNE (NC) - The cathedral city of Cologne which hasnt been ruled by a monarch in nearly 50 years will pay homage to three of them this month when it marks the 800th anniversary of the arrival of the relics of the Three Kings in Germany

Hallowed legend states that St Helena discovered the bodies of the Three Kings the famous Magi of St Matthews Gospel in Persia while she was returning from her expedition to find the True Cross in Jerusalem

Taken to Constantinople the relics were transferred to Milan in the fifth century Then in 1164 during a campaign of the German Emperor Frederick Barberosso into Italy the holy relics were spirited away by the Archbishop of Cologne Rainald von Dassel

Despite the protests of Pope Alexander III the relics were transported over the Alps Everywhere the caravan halted inns were renamed in honor of the Three Kings Some of them still exist by that name today

Symbol of Unity Once in Cologne the relics of

the kings became the symbol of a unified German monarchy Coins( flags and official seals were decorated with three crows

During the Middle Ages thoushysands of pilgrims flocked to the city to see the gold sarcophagus studded with jewels donated by German emperors and a second reliquary in the shaPe of bull golden basilica

This month the citizens of Cologne will give vent to their lebenskraft by commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings Besides a Solemn Pontifical Mass at famous Cologne catheshydral there will be pilgrimages exhibits and civil celebratioRs for the people of this city beshylieve the Three Kings followed a distant star to their cathedral and they take this asmiddota proof that the Child Jesus is sleeping ia their midst

BRUNOS Business Supply Co

SUPPLIES bull MACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford Mass Tel WYman 9-6058

The KEYSTONE Office Equipment

Salesroom NEW AND USED

Wood and Steel Desks anc chairs steel filing cabinets locIcers shelving tablesQJIM_storage cabinets safes wardrobes etc

Street ~ _

_ -near un ion

New Bedford

- 993-2781

LINCOLN PARK Rt 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

NEW ENGLANDS PtAYGROUND Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties

2 - ROllER COASTERS - 2 Thrilling Rides and Amusements

For Complete information Contact OUTING MANAGER

PHONE WYman 9-6984 or MEcury 6-2744

I

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 3: 07.16.64

3 Anglican Church Seeks to Extend Use of latin

LONDON (NC) - White the Roman Catholic Church in England is preparing to use English in part of the Mass the state Ohurch of Engshyland is seeking to extend its use of Latin

This move is included in one of two Anglican Ohuroh measshyures submitted-as the EstabshyHshed Church must by law-to Parliament for approval They seek to obtain legal recognition of some current Anglioan Ohurch practices already in use

And these two small requests lQt sufficiently important to merit the title of parliamentary bills are expected by some p0shy

litical observers to arouse a storm in the House of Commons as further signs of the Anglican Ohurchs alleged drift to Rome

One is called in official legal jargon the Vesture of Ministers Measure and is about vestmeruts and rubrics The other is the Pl1ayer Book (Miscellaneous Provisions) Measure and also deals with rubrics and liturgy In general these measures would simply recognize practices which have long been common in AnshygUcan churches bull

Die-bards Protest nle little gloup of die--hard

Protestant Members of Parliashyment is planning according to reports to fight them tooth and nail One sucb M P was said to have declared that some of their intended provisions such as leshygalizing stone altars and mass vestments the use of unleavened bread for communion and exshytensions in the use of Latin were attempts to legalize the Roman Gatholic forms

One clause in the Prayer Book Measure would extend the use of Latin The Act of Uniformity establishing the State Church allows Latin in the colleges and halls of Oxford and Cambridge universities and in the three big Anglican colleges of Westrninshy1Itler WinCibester and Eton Now it is proposed that it should be allowed in other universities and such other places of religious and sound leMlling as custom doth allow Ol ordinary may pershyit

Prelate Has Reunion With Paratroopers

WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxshyitiary Bishop Philip M Hannan of Washington had a reunion with some of his World War II buddies at the annual oonvenshytiQll of the 82nd Airborne Divishyion Association here

The bishop who served as a cmaplain with the paratroopers gave the invocation at the conshyyention banquet The convention elected as president John (Spike) Lynchpresident of the Chicago Fire Fighters Union and a member of St Killians parish there

Approves Sainthood For 22 Martyrs

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Vaticans Congregation of Rites has approved the canonization of 22 African Negroes who were slain in Uganada in the 19th century for refusing to renounce their Faith

Vatican sources indicated the new saints would be canonized on Mission Sunday Oct 18 dur_ ing the third session of the Vatshyican council

It was also expected that some note would be taken in the canshyonization ceremonies of 12 Anshyglicans who died during the same persecutions rather than deny Christ

Bishop of Arecibo Puerto Rico Addresses Sacred Heart Parishioners Fall River

A zealous shepherd and a many-sized fascinating man-thafs Bishop Alfred Francis Mendez CSC Ordinary and first Bishop of the Diocese of Arecibo Puerto Rico estabshylished in 1960 Bishop Mendez preached Sunday at Sacred Heart Church Fall River under auspices of the Missionary Cooperative Plan He outlined to parishioners the needs of his Diocese comprising 1100 square miles but served by only 72 priests for 600000 Catholics Although born in Chicago the Bishop is from an old Puerto Rican family His grandfather was the last Spanshyish governor of the island and when it was ceded to the United States in 1898 his youngest son the Bishops father became an American citizen

As a youth Bishop Mendez led a cosmopolitan life He studshyied in Spain and embarked from there to enter Annapolis But on the boat I met a handsome man who talked me into entershying the seminary At the end of the voyage when he put on his Roman collar I was astounded

At any rate the young man entered the Holy Cross commushynity and was ordained in 1935 He did administrative work at the University of Natre Dame and then served in various Texas Dioceses for 13 years before his consecration as Bishop of Areshycibo in 1960

His pectoral cross he reshycounts with pride belonged to Bishop Lamy fanloUS missionshyary of old New Mexico immorshytalized in Willa Cathers novel Death Comes for the Archshybishop

Many Activities In Arecibo says the Bishop

he confirms between one and two thousand youngsters each Sunday he is there He has his own version of the Papal VolshyunteelS for Latin America sevshyeral young women from New York who have volunteered as teachers in schools of the Dioshy~se

His hope is to send mission- aries from Puerto Rico to Latin American countries far the l

South We have never sent out missionaries he says and this would be a wonderful thing for the Church in Puerto Rico

The prelate has organized the Serna Club and Christian Family Movement in his DioceSe and notes that be was in on the ground floor of the CFM beshying instrumental in securing the Notre Dame campus as a conshyvention site for the organization

Also aiding the Bishop in his works of mercy is a secular inshystitute for young women he has organized in Arecibo Members live in a community and have rendered the infant Diocese much assistance

Bishop Mende~ highest praise oowever is reserved for the Cursillo movement which he feels is the instrument that will change the Church inLatia America

Cursillos are literallYlittle courses in Christianity and the Bishop says the three day proshygram can and often does comshypletely change mens lives It is primarily for men and Bishop Mendez says it is important for Latin America that it remain 90

Women have plenty of spirshyitual exercises be says and the Church fails in Latin Amershyica because it is too feminine Men want something viriie and masculine of their own The Cursillo fills this need and if women take it over the men will abandon it

Women he concludes are strong in piety in Latin America but the men are becoming strong in knowledge

League of Prayer Another project close to the

episcopal heart is the League of Prayer for Captured Peoples which he organized two years ago following a suggestion from a convert Its mode of operation

is shnple A parish adopts a parish in an iron curtain counshytry and once monthly offers a special Mass for it and for cap- tive peoples in general

National headquarters of the league are at Post Office Box 248 Menomonee Falls Wisc from which complete informashytion may be obtained Bishop Mendez recently turned over operation of the league to a zealous group of Wisconsin lay people but he remains as honshyorary chairman

He explains that the captive parish adopted by an American parish is notified of its adopshytion and that parishioners strive to attend their own church at the time Mass is being offered for them in the United States In most cases they have no priests or services but the knowledge of the prayers of their brothers in Christ is a real source of com- fOlt and inspiration for them

HUlamper for Justice

One parish Queen of Martyrs Ft Lauderdale Florida has adopted one of the most perseshycuted parishes in Castros Cuba Havanas Our Lady of Charity Both churches are full at the time of the monthly Mass in Florida said Bishop Mendez

Shrine Prayer Vigil Tommorrow Night

WASHINGTON (NC)-An all night vigil of prayer iii response to President Johnsons proclashymation urging t~Americans ma-k Captive Nations Week will be held in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart tomorrow night

President Johrnlon in a June 20 proclamation called for anshynually by a 1959 Congressional resolution named July 12 to 18 as a time to show U S support for the just aspirations of the people of Eastern Europes Redshycontrolled nations

BARBEROS PIZZAmiddotPATIO

ROUTE 6 HUTTLESON AVE Near Fairhaven Drive-In

Itcilian Dinners Our Specialty Service OD Patio

Bishop Mendez and Monsignor Childs

The project is under the pashytronage of Our Lady of Guadashylupe and Bishop Mendez intershyested iron curtain Bishops in it in the course of the Ecumenical Council

The prelltlte quoted a prayer recited by Auxiliary Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvidal at a large banquet The auxiliary exiled from Havana is also acshytive in the League of Prayer

May those who are hungry have bread and may those of us who have bread have ever a hunger for justice and peace

Today said Bishop Mendez those words are inscribed on the shywall of that banquet room

The prelate is now visiting Chicago and will return to Puer to Rico for ordinations Satu-shyday July 25

rtfl ANCHOR-Thurs July 16 1964

British Consider Overseas Family Planning Advice

LONDON (NC) - Lord Dundee British minister of state for foreign affairs has declared that the J3ritish government was prepared to give technical assistance in family planning projects overshyseas

He told the House of Lords rt would be wrong for the British government to take the initiashytive to help any country whose own government was not purshysuing a family planning polshyicy and had not requested help and advice

The government recognizes the seriousness of the world population problem We are preshypared to give technical assistance to family planning projects on the same terms as we give it in other fields he added

Lord McCorquodale w h ~

raised the matter suggested that the United Nations should use its agencies to spread contracepshytive knowledge throughout the underdeveloped countries and conduct family planning reshysearch to find methods satisfyshying religious and cultural obshyjections

Food Production Solution But Lord Dundee told him the

trouble with the United Nations was that it was dominated by Catholic communist and African states none of whom are in favor of birth control He said Britain would do what it could to change the climate of opinion but he was pessimistic of the chances

Lady Su~merski1l who is a doctor criticized this attitude and said the real solution to the war on want was food producshytion ~althus WWl an economic peasant she said Publicizel9 of unproved contraceptives were preying on ignorant women

The pill and other methodll could well prove harmful and to argue that the birth rate would decline if the United Nations distributed contraceptives Wall to over-simplify the issue

OretEllI Idea 21~day Priceless tour of Europe-from $695

Including Jet hotels sightseeing

Aufaina That the time to visit Europe Superh weather bullbull theatres new shows sports eventa bullbull fairs bullbull festivals And no crowds of tourists It the time to enjoy a Priceles tour of Europe Seven different itineraries oach with many departures

Where you got by jot oc sea to England then HoImiddot land Belgium Luxembourg Germany Lucerne Venice Florence Rome Home via Paris

What you geh price includes jet (or ship) motoc coach hotels most meals sightseeing multilingual escorts

Free brochure Get all the facts in a big 24-pago full-color brochure Phone the number below oc drop in No obligation of course

Fall Klver Travel Bureau Henry J Feiteberg Pres

~29~qrth Main 8t - TeL 08 5-7408 ~i Established 1906

NEWPORT PROVIDENCE NEW BEDFORD 1l0MERSET

683middot1515 UN 1middot6168 WY 4middot2413 OS 4middot8844 OFFICIAL DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE

~

- - ---

4

Come Visit

St Annes Shrine in

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs July 16 1964

Maryknolls First Lady Inspiring Story of Nun

By Rt Rev lUsgr John S Kennedy The sister in charge was vexed with the clumsy novice

who had somehow succeeded in breaking the sturdy chain en her medal To impress on the miscreant the full extent ef this enormity the mistress directed her to show the chain

to the reverend mother of an American mission society a the entire community The hody that is of American command was carried out p~iests brothers and sisten who blt in a way hardly intend- woald go ou~ into the mission ed by the giver The novice put fieta 1he chain in an envelope and Tiis came into being with tle with it a note American bishops approval in

ISH of his scheme for a foreignto the reverend mission society and seminary mother reading which was to be known asI have broken

Maryknoll my chain Please Its first headquarters were in fix it Thank a farmhouse and other buildings you Shortly at Hawthorne New York near 15ereafter she tle tome for incurable cancer was given an patients headed by Mother e n vel 0 p e Alphonsa who had been Rose addressed to her Hawthorne Lathrop the daughshyin the reverend te~ of Nathaniel Hawthorne and mothers hand the subject of Katherine Bur-In it was the She tons extremely popular book chain neatly repaired Sc-cw Built a Bridgereally does fix them thought the novice And good lfother Alphonsa Aids

This is one of the many stories c Hawthorne went the other in a biography published a few yc-mg ladies of Boston who had months ago but until now un- bee helping Father Walsh with fortunately and unaccountably his correspondence and bookshyoverlooked by your reviewer keeping his publications and Maryknolls First Lady by Sis- mailing Mollie whose family ter Jeanne Marie (Dodd Mead had suffered reverses could not $95) The reverend mother in leave her job and go to Hawshyquestion is the books subject thorne much as she wanted to Mother Mary Joseph foundress But during vacations and whenshyof the Maryknoll Sisters and an e~er else she had free time she eI~raordinary person in the his- hurried there to work on what tc~ of the Church in America was nearest her heart

She was born in Jamaica Plain It was Mother Alphonsa who in 1882 the eldest daughter in made it possibe for Mollie to be a Catholic family of eight chil- ampt Maryknoll full time That exshydren Her name was Mollie ceptional w 0 men discerned Rogers and she grew up in a something of Mollies importance household that was comfortable to the project and its imporshyand happy She attended West teflCe to her and raised and gave Roxbury High School and at her $2000 which turned over the graduation ceremony held to the Rogers family freed in a Congregational church she MoHie of the necessity of earnshyread an essay on Toleration ing a living and helping support

Highly Popular her parents By this time Maryknoll had

She went to Smith College moved from Hawthorne to Osshywhere because of her good sining which was to be its pershylooks her fine mind and her manent home And Father Walsh delightful disposition she was was glad to be able to put Molshyhighly popular She was one of lie aged 29 in charge of the the small Catholic minority group of young women whom there and it may well be said he styled the secretaries Alshythat it was at Smith that bel ready there was the stirring noshy1ocation took root tion that they should and would

There was a Smith College organize as a community of reshyAssociation for Christian Work ligious But this was rather slow This was strictly Protestant in realization and it fostered interest in and assistance to Protestant mis- Receive Recognition sions Some of the members First they became Dominican pledged themselves to work in tertiaries Then they had a year the missions for a term of years and a half of supposedly canonshyafter graduation Mollie wonder- ical formation in a sort of novishye( why there wasnt a Catholic tiate It was then discovered mission group too however that the procedure had

When after a graduate course not been canonical at all at the Boston Normal School Permission had to be sought she returned to Smith as a dem- through proper and not especial_ onstrator in zoology she formed ly rapid channels eventually a Catholic Ilissior study club they were granted It was only For guidance in this undertak- ir 1920 that recognition as a ing she wrote to Father James religious community was accordshyAnthony Walsh director of the ed and the first professions could Society for the Propagation of finally take place the Faith in the Boston arch- But when this came Mother diocese Mary Joseph (as she was now

Having outlined the project known) was more than ready for his consideration she asked for it More and more young Who knows but that the little women had joined her group work we do here may be the and Maryknoll priests were al shybeginning of greater efforts in ready at their first spots in later life She could not have China realized how prophetic that It was in 1921 when the Maryshythought was knoll Sisters numbered between

Bishops Approve 75 and 100 that the first among them was assigned to foreign

Father Walsh not only assisted parts In that year six set out ber with the study group He on a pioneering assignment in also pressed her into service China part time at his dingy clutte~ed Boston office He had a gemus Work Expands for planning organization and Tne sequel is a glorious chapshypublicity and he was busily enshy teo in American Catholic anshy

---~--~

CLERGYMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD Auxiliary Bishop Philip 11 Hannan of Washington the nationaHy Imown prelCher and writer presents to Rev Dr Norman Vineent Peale right of New York the Religious Heritage of America Award for his significant contributions to reshyigit)n The organization is composed of Protestants Cathshyoks and Jews and it emphasizes the spiritual basis of American democracy NC Photo

IFairbullbullaven Fiesta to Aid School St Joseph Midway Fiesta Asshy night and on July 25th six grand

sociation of Tairhaven will preshy prizes will be awarded plus one sent its annual fiesta on July gigantic main prize 22 23 24 and 25 on the fair

On Friday July 17 a dinnergoltnds located at Spring of fish chowder scallops and aUAdams and Jefferson Streets the the fixings will be served for a

sS~e of St Josephs Church d-cnation of $150

Proceeds wiII be used to deshyfray the exgtenses of the new On Thursday July 24 the paish school now being comshy Ladies group of the Fiesta Assoshypleted ciation will serve a chicken

Booths of l~very type midway dinner rides and a food section are there to satsfy the desires of everyone attmding

Prizes will be awarded eacl1

seorkmiddothed by war persecution expulsion The community numshybers confeSS(lrS and martyrs in GOODits ranks

But whe never one door slammed shut another seemed to open And the work has gone on ever expnding ever imbued with the pristine spirit of Mother Mar~r Joseph

She was a big woman and her girth was the subject of jokes which none enjoyed more than she But this did not prevent her venturing to the most distant missimiddotan under the most difficult ci-cumstancel

Sorrow Joy

Sne had to overcome not merely the crises which saw promising missions stamped out but also the rigors of the depresshysion at home and many another majoI trial material and human But she endured them all with serenity and always the comshymunity survived strengthened and increased

In 1947 she stepped down from its cllmmand and death came to her in 1955 In the interval in Come Pray to Saint Anne1950 she went back to Smith to fECeive a1l honorary degree of Doctor 0 Humane Letters MASSES (Upper Church) The influence and inspiration 6 7 8 930 and 11 AM and 5 PM of Protestallt students and teachers at Smith had led her to MASSES (Shrine) 930 and 11 AM FathE~r Walsh and Father Walsh had led her fO Maryknoll DEVOTION SERVICE

----------__------

Solemn Requiem For Foundress Of Carmelites

NEW YORK (NC)~So1shy

emn Requiem Mass for ~Ioth-er M Teresa one of the seven founders of the Carshymelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm was offered in S1 Patshyricks Home here by her brother Father Raphael Schoof OSB Burial was in Gate of HeaveB Cemetery

Cannelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm staff the Cathshyelic Memorial Home in FaD River and Our Ladys Haven Fairhaven

Iother Teresa died of a COl shy

onary occlusion at CarmellVIanor Home Fort Thomas Ky which she founded Bishop Richard H Ackerman CSSp of Covington Ky offered a Pontifical Reshyquiem Mass for her ir the Ca- shythedral Basilica of the Assumpshytion in Covington

Nun 54 Years A native of Richmond Va the

daughter of Mr and Mrs Joseph Sdoof joined the Carmelites in uno She and six other Carmelshyi~e nuns founded the ron-co~sshytered Carmelite Sisters of the Aged and Infirm in 1929 in New lfc-k under the direction of Patrick Cardinal Hayes

Of the founders only Moth~ M Angeline Teresa superior general of the community which new has some 350 members sur_ vives MothermiddotM Teresa founded Carmel Manor Home here in 949 She also helped found homes of the community in St et Miami and S1 Petersburg Fla

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER bull TEEV1SION bull fURNITURE bull APPLIANCES bull GROCERY

104 Allen St New Bedford YVman ]-9354

ANNE

River Mass

gaged in stirring interest in nals To Japan to Korea to the Her inspiring story with its and PROCESSION 2 3 4 and 730 PM and contributions for the misshy Philippines to Latin Am~rica moments of drama and of fun sions tc Africa the Maryknoll SIsters of sonow and of joy full of acshy

SAINT ANNES SHRINE But he wanted to do much have gone by the hundreds In complishmen- for the Lord is more He was bent on founding many ~es initial success was en~(ssingly told here 818 Middle street fall River Mass 027221

J

5 THE ANCHORshyInclude Private Immaculate Conception Church in Fall River Thurs July 16 1964

School Teachers In House Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) fhe House special sub com- lIlittee on education has sent to the full Education Comshymittee a bill to revise and exshytend the National Defense Edushycation Actmiddot for two years over its expiration kite of 1965

Sponsored by Rep Edith Green of Oregon subcommittee

chairman the bill would end inshyequities for private school and eollege personnel in some secshyCions of the original 1958 law

Chief among these is the proshyrision that a college student who borrows Federal funds to finance his education can get 50 per cent of his debt forgiven if he teaches five years in a public grade or high school

Private school supporters and spokesman for the college comshymunity have argued that this forgiveness provision should exshytend also to those who choose 00 teach in colleges or in parochial or other private schools Mrs Greens bill would permit this

A second major amendment would permit every individual who attends special Federally sponsored institutes for teachers or guidance personnel to receive a stipend of $75 a week plus $15 weekly for dependents

Loan Program At present only public school

personnel receive this stipend Private school supporters have testified that 1lhis limitation bas prevented thousands of teachers and guidance experts poundrom atshy6ending the institutes usually held during the Summer months

The bill (HR 11904) increases from $135 million to $200 million Ute total of Federal funds bB be lent by colleges to needy stushydents Public and private collegshyiate associate degree or diploma aclwols of nursing would be iashyduded in the loan program

In addition to extending part shyial forgiveness of debt to private IliJChool personnel it would do llhe same for borrowers who become social workers or who become teachers nurses or counselors in projects related to President Jobnsons proposed wac on poverty

Family Planning Private Matter

TRENTON (NC)-New Jersey tov Richard J Hughes has deshydined to act on a suggestion Chat the state take the initiative in providing birth control inshyformation to welfare recipients as part of a drive on poverty

The suggestion came from Dr Aurdeymiddot Reiger of Teaneck ehairman of the Community Advisory Council of the Bergen County Planned Parenthood Center

In a letter to Dr Reiger the eovernor said Family planning bull essentially a private matter bull determination to be made en CIte basis of personal and reli shygious convictions It is not in my opinion the proper function ef the state either to encourage or discourage such decisions in tile private lives of our people

Private Ageneles Private agencies should be

CIte principal sources of inforshymation and guidance in this area the governor said He DOted that State Department of Health regulations permit pubshylk health personnel if reshyquested to refer an inquirer to a proper source of family planshyning information

He also noted that medicallly prescribed contraceptives are paid for by public assistazwe agencies

Marks 82 Years Serving FlilJt Catholics By Marion Unsworth

A century ago the five or six hundred English-speaking Catholics in the Flint section of Fall River attended Notre Dame Church By the 1880s Rev Owen Kiernan was conductshying English services at Notre Dame and boarding in a nearby home to be available to the faithful in the area In 1882 Father Kiernanpurchased a large section of the Hall farm and in the Spring the parishshyiontrs began preparing the foundation for the church a Gothic structure funt entireshyly of wood By October Immacshyulate Conception Church was completed and -the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence pershyformed the dedication ceremoshyniess Two years later a rectory was erected near the church

Father Kiernan was s~cceeded by Rev Cornelius McSweeney who served several years at Imshymaculate Conception during which time the parish grew rapshyidly From 1919 until 1925 Msgr Edward J Carr served as pastor working steadily toward erecshytion of of a new and more subshystantial church His plans were realized under the pastorship of Rev George Flanagan who came to Immaculate Conception in 1925 and by 1929 saw the completion of the present brick structure and the dedication of it by Most Rev James E Casshysidy then Vicar-General of the Diocese

In 1938 Rev John McNamara was named pastor at Immaculate Conception and during his three years there further enhanced the appearance of the church by the installation of stained glass windows

Father Smith Rev Charles R Smith was asshy

signed as pastor on May 1 1941 and remained at Immaculate Conception until his death in 1955 During his tenure he comshypleted renovation of the interior of the church and paid off the parish debt Rev Felix Childs succeeded Father Smith

Father Childs added to the church property which included church and rectory a large parkshying area and adjacent land to

Archdiocese Loses State Court Case

TRENTON (NC) -The New JelSey Supreme CoUlt on techshynical grounds has upheld a zonshying ordinance which barred the Newark archdiocese from buildshying a schOOl in Hohokus Borshyough

The 6-to-l decision was given in a major test case which the archdiocese had pursued to proshyteet itself in conjunction witb future building plans The arch_ diocese some time ago abanshydoned its plan to build the school in Hohokus Borough and now is constructing it in Montshyvale

The high court ruling upset a 1963 decision given by Superior Court Judge Charles W Broadshyhurst in Hackensack who held that the Hohokus Borough ordishynance did not apply to public sehools but prohibited building of private schools and was a yiolation of state law

Rename Bethlehem Street for Pope

BETHLEHEM (NC) - T b e main street of Bethlehem has been renamed for Pope Paul VI who made a historic visit here last January The unveiling of the memorial plaque bearing the Popes name was done by the apostolic delegate Archbishop Lino Zanini

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro archbishop of Bologna noted the 50th anniversary of his ordinashytion while on pilgrimage here with 20 of his priests and aQ other pilgrimi from Italy

~- -~__

t~middot fV _ I I

[I

ilI

[ JLt jbull bull i [ Lchc bull bull

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH

provide for future expansion In 1960 Rev Edward F

Dowling then assigned to Our Lady of the Isle Parish in Nan-

Planning Service For Catholics

DETROIT (NC) - Plans are under way for a family planning service to be conducted under Catholics auspices here

Father Kenneth P MacKinnon of Detroit natiQnal moderator of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds said it will be centrally located and will be a referral service for Catholic couples who for ecoshynomic physical or emotional reasons wish to limit their famshyilies by the use of the rhythm method

Doctors will readily admit their inability to take the time during an office- visit to instruct couples properly in the use of the rhythm method of family planning Father MacKinnon said

Also counseling is necessary not only on the physical aspects of the rhythm method where a priest is not qualified but on the spiritual and psychological aspects where he can be of most help A cooperative base of edushycation is the advantage of such a family planning referral ser shy

vice he said

No Dighton Barbeque The chicken barbeque planned

for Saturday Aug 1 will be followed by an open house in the rectory in order that the parishioners may view the renshyovations that have been made and at the same timemiddot have the opportunity of meeting the new curate Rev Martin L Buote

St Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-2892

tucket was named new pastor of the Fall River parish which now includes some 1200 families He is assisted in his task by Rev Paul Connolly and Rev Robert L Stanton A Womens Guild Holy Name Society st Vincent de Paul Society and Catholic Youth Organization are in opershyation in the parish and use the church hall for their activities

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes directed by Sisshyters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and lay teachers also meet in the parish hall Alshythough there is no parish school 240 pupils are transported on three busses to neighboring parochial schools

Heads Clergy Union WORTHINGTON (NC-Msgr

John P Kleinz professor at Ponshytifical College Josephinum here in Ohio has been elected nationshyal director of the Apostolic Unshyion of the Clergy at a meeting of the organizations national council at the college Msgr Kleinz said it was the filst truly national meeting of the organshyization to foster 1he spiritual lives and a sense of command among diocesan priests

LEMIEUX

~ PlUMBING amp HEATING INC

for Oomestic and Industrial

Sales and Service Oil BUfoIIers

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD

Mark Centennial Of Three Kings In Cologne

COLOGNE (NC) - The cathedral city of Cologne which hasnt been ruled by a monarch in nearly 50 years will pay homage to three of them this month when it marks the 800th anniversary of the arrival of the relics of the Three Kings in Germany

Hallowed legend states that St Helena discovered the bodies of the Three Kings the famous Magi of St Matthews Gospel in Persia while she was returning from her expedition to find the True Cross in Jerusalem

Taken to Constantinople the relics were transferred to Milan in the fifth century Then in 1164 during a campaign of the German Emperor Frederick Barberosso into Italy the holy relics were spirited away by the Archbishop of Cologne Rainald von Dassel

Despite the protests of Pope Alexander III the relics were transported over the Alps Everywhere the caravan halted inns were renamed in honor of the Three Kings Some of them still exist by that name today

Symbol of Unity Once in Cologne the relics of

the kings became the symbol of a unified German monarchy Coins( flags and official seals were decorated with three crows

During the Middle Ages thoushysands of pilgrims flocked to the city to see the gold sarcophagus studded with jewels donated by German emperors and a second reliquary in the shaPe of bull golden basilica

This month the citizens of Cologne will give vent to their lebenskraft by commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings Besides a Solemn Pontifical Mass at famous Cologne catheshydral there will be pilgrimages exhibits and civil celebratioRs for the people of this city beshylieve the Three Kings followed a distant star to their cathedral and they take this asmiddota proof that the Child Jesus is sleeping ia their midst

BRUNOS Business Supply Co

SUPPLIES bull MACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford Mass Tel WYman 9-6058

The KEYSTONE Office Equipment

Salesroom NEW AND USED

Wood and Steel Desks anc chairs steel filing cabinets locIcers shelving tablesQJIM_storage cabinets safes wardrobes etc

Street ~ _

_ -near un ion

New Bedford

- 993-2781

LINCOLN PARK Rt 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

NEW ENGLANDS PtAYGROUND Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties

2 - ROllER COASTERS - 2 Thrilling Rides and Amusements

For Complete information Contact OUTING MANAGER

PHONE WYman 9-6984 or MEcury 6-2744

I

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 4: 07.16.64

- - ---

4

Come Visit

St Annes Shrine in

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs July 16 1964

Maryknolls First Lady Inspiring Story of Nun

By Rt Rev lUsgr John S Kennedy The sister in charge was vexed with the clumsy novice

who had somehow succeeded in breaking the sturdy chain en her medal To impress on the miscreant the full extent ef this enormity the mistress directed her to show the chain

to the reverend mother of an American mission society a the entire community The hody that is of American command was carried out p~iests brothers and sisten who blt in a way hardly intend- woald go ou~ into the mission ed by the giver The novice put fieta 1he chain in an envelope and Tiis came into being with tle with it a note American bishops approval in

ISH of his scheme for a foreignto the reverend mission society and seminary mother reading which was to be known asI have broken

Maryknoll my chain Please Its first headquarters were in fix it Thank a farmhouse and other buildings you Shortly at Hawthorne New York near 15ereafter she tle tome for incurable cancer was given an patients headed by Mother e n vel 0 p e Alphonsa who had been Rose addressed to her Hawthorne Lathrop the daughshyin the reverend te~ of Nathaniel Hawthorne and mothers hand the subject of Katherine Bur-In it was the She tons extremely popular book chain neatly repaired Sc-cw Built a Bridgereally does fix them thought the novice And good lfother Alphonsa Aids

This is one of the many stories c Hawthorne went the other in a biography published a few yc-mg ladies of Boston who had months ago but until now un- bee helping Father Walsh with fortunately and unaccountably his correspondence and bookshyoverlooked by your reviewer keeping his publications and Maryknolls First Lady by Sis- mailing Mollie whose family ter Jeanne Marie (Dodd Mead had suffered reverses could not $95) The reverend mother in leave her job and go to Hawshyquestion is the books subject thorne much as she wanted to Mother Mary Joseph foundress But during vacations and whenshyof the Maryknoll Sisters and an e~er else she had free time she eI~raordinary person in the his- hurried there to work on what tc~ of the Church in America was nearest her heart

She was born in Jamaica Plain It was Mother Alphonsa who in 1882 the eldest daughter in made it possibe for Mollie to be a Catholic family of eight chil- ampt Maryknoll full time That exshydren Her name was Mollie ceptional w 0 men discerned Rogers and she grew up in a something of Mollies importance household that was comfortable to the project and its imporshyand happy She attended West teflCe to her and raised and gave Roxbury High School and at her $2000 which turned over the graduation ceremony held to the Rogers family freed in a Congregational church she MoHie of the necessity of earnshyread an essay on Toleration ing a living and helping support

Highly Popular her parents By this time Maryknoll had

She went to Smith College moved from Hawthorne to Osshywhere because of her good sining which was to be its pershylooks her fine mind and her manent home And Father Walsh delightful disposition she was was glad to be able to put Molshyhighly popular She was one of lie aged 29 in charge of the the small Catholic minority group of young women whom there and it may well be said he styled the secretaries Alshythat it was at Smith that bel ready there was the stirring noshy1ocation took root tion that they should and would

There was a Smith College organize as a community of reshyAssociation for Christian Work ligious But this was rather slow This was strictly Protestant in realization and it fostered interest in and assistance to Protestant mis- Receive Recognition sions Some of the members First they became Dominican pledged themselves to work in tertiaries Then they had a year the missions for a term of years and a half of supposedly canonshyafter graduation Mollie wonder- ical formation in a sort of novishye( why there wasnt a Catholic tiate It was then discovered mission group too however that the procedure had

When after a graduate course not been canonical at all at the Boston Normal School Permission had to be sought she returned to Smith as a dem- through proper and not especial_ onstrator in zoology she formed ly rapid channels eventually a Catholic Ilissior study club they were granted It was only For guidance in this undertak- ir 1920 that recognition as a ing she wrote to Father James religious community was accordshyAnthony Walsh director of the ed and the first professions could Society for the Propagation of finally take place the Faith in the Boston arch- But when this came Mother diocese Mary Joseph (as she was now

Having outlined the project known) was more than ready for his consideration she asked for it More and more young Who knows but that the little women had joined her group work we do here may be the and Maryknoll priests were al shybeginning of greater efforts in ready at their first spots in later life She could not have China realized how prophetic that It was in 1921 when the Maryshythought was knoll Sisters numbered between

Bishops Approve 75 and 100 that the first among them was assigned to foreign

Father Walsh not only assisted parts In that year six set out ber with the study group He on a pioneering assignment in also pressed her into service China part time at his dingy clutte~ed Boston office He had a gemus Work Expands for planning organization and Tne sequel is a glorious chapshypublicity and he was busily enshy teo in American Catholic anshy

---~--~

CLERGYMAN OF THE YEAR AWARD Auxiliary Bishop Philip 11 Hannan of Washington the nationaHy Imown prelCher and writer presents to Rev Dr Norman Vineent Peale right of New York the Religious Heritage of America Award for his significant contributions to reshyigit)n The organization is composed of Protestants Cathshyoks and Jews and it emphasizes the spiritual basis of American democracy NC Photo

IFairbullbullaven Fiesta to Aid School St Joseph Midway Fiesta Asshy night and on July 25th six grand

sociation of Tairhaven will preshy prizes will be awarded plus one sent its annual fiesta on July gigantic main prize 22 23 24 and 25 on the fair

On Friday July 17 a dinnergoltnds located at Spring of fish chowder scallops and aUAdams and Jefferson Streets the the fixings will be served for a

sS~e of St Josephs Church d-cnation of $150

Proceeds wiII be used to deshyfray the exgtenses of the new On Thursday July 24 the paish school now being comshy Ladies group of the Fiesta Assoshypleted ciation will serve a chicken

Booths of l~very type midway dinner rides and a food section are there to satsfy the desires of everyone attmding

Prizes will be awarded eacl1

seorkmiddothed by war persecution expulsion The community numshybers confeSS(lrS and martyrs in GOODits ranks

But whe never one door slammed shut another seemed to open And the work has gone on ever expnding ever imbued with the pristine spirit of Mother Mar~r Joseph

She was a big woman and her girth was the subject of jokes which none enjoyed more than she But this did not prevent her venturing to the most distant missimiddotan under the most difficult ci-cumstancel

Sorrow Joy

Sne had to overcome not merely the crises which saw promising missions stamped out but also the rigors of the depresshysion at home and many another majoI trial material and human But she endured them all with serenity and always the comshymunity survived strengthened and increased

In 1947 she stepped down from its cllmmand and death came to her in 1955 In the interval in Come Pray to Saint Anne1950 she went back to Smith to fECeive a1l honorary degree of Doctor 0 Humane Letters MASSES (Upper Church) The influence and inspiration 6 7 8 930 and 11 AM and 5 PM of Protestallt students and teachers at Smith had led her to MASSES (Shrine) 930 and 11 AM FathE~r Walsh and Father Walsh had led her fO Maryknoll DEVOTION SERVICE

----------__------

Solemn Requiem For Foundress Of Carmelites

NEW YORK (NC)~So1shy

emn Requiem Mass for ~Ioth-er M Teresa one of the seven founders of the Carshymelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm was offered in S1 Patshyricks Home here by her brother Father Raphael Schoof OSB Burial was in Gate of HeaveB Cemetery

Cannelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm staff the Cathshyelic Memorial Home in FaD River and Our Ladys Haven Fairhaven

Iother Teresa died of a COl shy

onary occlusion at CarmellVIanor Home Fort Thomas Ky which she founded Bishop Richard H Ackerman CSSp of Covington Ky offered a Pontifical Reshyquiem Mass for her ir the Ca- shythedral Basilica of the Assumpshytion in Covington

Nun 54 Years A native of Richmond Va the

daughter of Mr and Mrs Joseph Sdoof joined the Carmelites in uno She and six other Carmelshyi~e nuns founded the ron-co~sshytered Carmelite Sisters of the Aged and Infirm in 1929 in New lfc-k under the direction of Patrick Cardinal Hayes

Of the founders only Moth~ M Angeline Teresa superior general of the community which new has some 350 members sur_ vives MothermiddotM Teresa founded Carmel Manor Home here in 949 She also helped found homes of the community in St et Miami and S1 Petersburg Fla

CORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER bull TEEV1SION bull fURNITURE bull APPLIANCES bull GROCERY

104 Allen St New Bedford YVman ]-9354

ANNE

River Mass

gaged in stirring interest in nals To Japan to Korea to the Her inspiring story with its and PROCESSION 2 3 4 and 730 PM and contributions for the misshy Philippines to Latin Am~rica moments of drama and of fun sions tc Africa the Maryknoll SIsters of sonow and of joy full of acshy

SAINT ANNES SHRINE But he wanted to do much have gone by the hundreds In complishmen- for the Lord is more He was bent on founding many ~es initial success was en~(ssingly told here 818 Middle street fall River Mass 027221

J

5 THE ANCHORshyInclude Private Immaculate Conception Church in Fall River Thurs July 16 1964

School Teachers In House Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) fhe House special sub com- lIlittee on education has sent to the full Education Comshymittee a bill to revise and exshytend the National Defense Edushycation Actmiddot for two years over its expiration kite of 1965

Sponsored by Rep Edith Green of Oregon subcommittee

chairman the bill would end inshyequities for private school and eollege personnel in some secshyCions of the original 1958 law

Chief among these is the proshyrision that a college student who borrows Federal funds to finance his education can get 50 per cent of his debt forgiven if he teaches five years in a public grade or high school

Private school supporters and spokesman for the college comshymunity have argued that this forgiveness provision should exshytend also to those who choose 00 teach in colleges or in parochial or other private schools Mrs Greens bill would permit this

A second major amendment would permit every individual who attends special Federally sponsored institutes for teachers or guidance personnel to receive a stipend of $75 a week plus $15 weekly for dependents

Loan Program At present only public school

personnel receive this stipend Private school supporters have testified that 1lhis limitation bas prevented thousands of teachers and guidance experts poundrom atshy6ending the institutes usually held during the Summer months

The bill (HR 11904) increases from $135 million to $200 million Ute total of Federal funds bB be lent by colleges to needy stushydents Public and private collegshyiate associate degree or diploma aclwols of nursing would be iashyduded in the loan program

In addition to extending part shyial forgiveness of debt to private IliJChool personnel it would do llhe same for borrowers who become social workers or who become teachers nurses or counselors in projects related to President Jobnsons proposed wac on poverty

Family Planning Private Matter

TRENTON (NC)-New Jersey tov Richard J Hughes has deshydined to act on a suggestion Chat the state take the initiative in providing birth control inshyformation to welfare recipients as part of a drive on poverty

The suggestion came from Dr Aurdeymiddot Reiger of Teaneck ehairman of the Community Advisory Council of the Bergen County Planned Parenthood Center

In a letter to Dr Reiger the eovernor said Family planning bull essentially a private matter bull determination to be made en CIte basis of personal and reli shygious convictions It is not in my opinion the proper function ef the state either to encourage or discourage such decisions in tile private lives of our people

Private Ageneles Private agencies should be

CIte principal sources of inforshymation and guidance in this area the governor said He DOted that State Department of Health regulations permit pubshylk health personnel if reshyquested to refer an inquirer to a proper source of family planshyning information

He also noted that medicallly prescribed contraceptives are paid for by public assistazwe agencies

Marks 82 Years Serving FlilJt Catholics By Marion Unsworth

A century ago the five or six hundred English-speaking Catholics in the Flint section of Fall River attended Notre Dame Church By the 1880s Rev Owen Kiernan was conductshying English services at Notre Dame and boarding in a nearby home to be available to the faithful in the area In 1882 Father Kiernanpurchased a large section of the Hall farm and in the Spring the parishshyiontrs began preparing the foundation for the church a Gothic structure funt entireshyly of wood By October Immacshyulate Conception Church was completed and -the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence pershyformed the dedication ceremoshyniess Two years later a rectory was erected near the church

Father Kiernan was s~cceeded by Rev Cornelius McSweeney who served several years at Imshymaculate Conception during which time the parish grew rapshyidly From 1919 until 1925 Msgr Edward J Carr served as pastor working steadily toward erecshytion of of a new and more subshystantial church His plans were realized under the pastorship of Rev George Flanagan who came to Immaculate Conception in 1925 and by 1929 saw the completion of the present brick structure and the dedication of it by Most Rev James E Casshysidy then Vicar-General of the Diocese

In 1938 Rev John McNamara was named pastor at Immaculate Conception and during his three years there further enhanced the appearance of the church by the installation of stained glass windows

Father Smith Rev Charles R Smith was asshy

signed as pastor on May 1 1941 and remained at Immaculate Conception until his death in 1955 During his tenure he comshypleted renovation of the interior of the church and paid off the parish debt Rev Felix Childs succeeded Father Smith

Father Childs added to the church property which included church and rectory a large parkshying area and adjacent land to

Archdiocese Loses State Court Case

TRENTON (NC) -The New JelSey Supreme CoUlt on techshynical grounds has upheld a zonshying ordinance which barred the Newark archdiocese from buildshying a schOOl in Hohokus Borshyough

The 6-to-l decision was given in a major test case which the archdiocese had pursued to proshyteet itself in conjunction witb future building plans The arch_ diocese some time ago abanshydoned its plan to build the school in Hohokus Borough and now is constructing it in Montshyvale

The high court ruling upset a 1963 decision given by Superior Court Judge Charles W Broadshyhurst in Hackensack who held that the Hohokus Borough ordishynance did not apply to public sehools but prohibited building of private schools and was a yiolation of state law

Rename Bethlehem Street for Pope

BETHLEHEM (NC) - T b e main street of Bethlehem has been renamed for Pope Paul VI who made a historic visit here last January The unveiling of the memorial plaque bearing the Popes name was done by the apostolic delegate Archbishop Lino Zanini

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro archbishop of Bologna noted the 50th anniversary of his ordinashytion while on pilgrimage here with 20 of his priests and aQ other pilgrimi from Italy

~- -~__

t~middot fV _ I I

[I

ilI

[ JLt jbull bull i [ Lchc bull bull

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH

provide for future expansion In 1960 Rev Edward F

Dowling then assigned to Our Lady of the Isle Parish in Nan-

Planning Service For Catholics

DETROIT (NC) - Plans are under way for a family planning service to be conducted under Catholics auspices here

Father Kenneth P MacKinnon of Detroit natiQnal moderator of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds said it will be centrally located and will be a referral service for Catholic couples who for ecoshynomic physical or emotional reasons wish to limit their famshyilies by the use of the rhythm method

Doctors will readily admit their inability to take the time during an office- visit to instruct couples properly in the use of the rhythm method of family planning Father MacKinnon said

Also counseling is necessary not only on the physical aspects of the rhythm method where a priest is not qualified but on the spiritual and psychological aspects where he can be of most help A cooperative base of edushycation is the advantage of such a family planning referral ser shy

vice he said

No Dighton Barbeque The chicken barbeque planned

for Saturday Aug 1 will be followed by an open house in the rectory in order that the parishioners may view the renshyovations that have been made and at the same timemiddot have the opportunity of meeting the new curate Rev Martin L Buote

St Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-2892

tucket was named new pastor of the Fall River parish which now includes some 1200 families He is assisted in his task by Rev Paul Connolly and Rev Robert L Stanton A Womens Guild Holy Name Society st Vincent de Paul Society and Catholic Youth Organization are in opershyation in the parish and use the church hall for their activities

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes directed by Sisshyters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and lay teachers also meet in the parish hall Alshythough there is no parish school 240 pupils are transported on three busses to neighboring parochial schools

Heads Clergy Union WORTHINGTON (NC-Msgr

John P Kleinz professor at Ponshytifical College Josephinum here in Ohio has been elected nationshyal director of the Apostolic Unshyion of the Clergy at a meeting of the organizations national council at the college Msgr Kleinz said it was the filst truly national meeting of the organshyization to foster 1he spiritual lives and a sense of command among diocesan priests

LEMIEUX

~ PlUMBING amp HEATING INC

for Oomestic and Industrial

Sales and Service Oil BUfoIIers

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD

Mark Centennial Of Three Kings In Cologne

COLOGNE (NC) - The cathedral city of Cologne which hasnt been ruled by a monarch in nearly 50 years will pay homage to three of them this month when it marks the 800th anniversary of the arrival of the relics of the Three Kings in Germany

Hallowed legend states that St Helena discovered the bodies of the Three Kings the famous Magi of St Matthews Gospel in Persia while she was returning from her expedition to find the True Cross in Jerusalem

Taken to Constantinople the relics were transferred to Milan in the fifth century Then in 1164 during a campaign of the German Emperor Frederick Barberosso into Italy the holy relics were spirited away by the Archbishop of Cologne Rainald von Dassel

Despite the protests of Pope Alexander III the relics were transported over the Alps Everywhere the caravan halted inns were renamed in honor of the Three Kings Some of them still exist by that name today

Symbol of Unity Once in Cologne the relics of

the kings became the symbol of a unified German monarchy Coins( flags and official seals were decorated with three crows

During the Middle Ages thoushysands of pilgrims flocked to the city to see the gold sarcophagus studded with jewels donated by German emperors and a second reliquary in the shaPe of bull golden basilica

This month the citizens of Cologne will give vent to their lebenskraft by commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings Besides a Solemn Pontifical Mass at famous Cologne catheshydral there will be pilgrimages exhibits and civil celebratioRs for the people of this city beshylieve the Three Kings followed a distant star to their cathedral and they take this asmiddota proof that the Child Jesus is sleeping ia their midst

BRUNOS Business Supply Co

SUPPLIES bull MACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford Mass Tel WYman 9-6058

The KEYSTONE Office Equipment

Salesroom NEW AND USED

Wood and Steel Desks anc chairs steel filing cabinets locIcers shelving tablesQJIM_storage cabinets safes wardrobes etc

Street ~ _

_ -near un ion

New Bedford

- 993-2781

LINCOLN PARK Rt 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

NEW ENGLANDS PtAYGROUND Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties

2 - ROllER COASTERS - 2 Thrilling Rides and Amusements

For Complete information Contact OUTING MANAGER

PHONE WYman 9-6984 or MEcury 6-2744

I

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 5: 07.16.64

5 THE ANCHORshyInclude Private Immaculate Conception Church in Fall River Thurs July 16 1964

School Teachers In House Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) fhe House special sub com- lIlittee on education has sent to the full Education Comshymittee a bill to revise and exshytend the National Defense Edushycation Actmiddot for two years over its expiration kite of 1965

Sponsored by Rep Edith Green of Oregon subcommittee

chairman the bill would end inshyequities for private school and eollege personnel in some secshyCions of the original 1958 law

Chief among these is the proshyrision that a college student who borrows Federal funds to finance his education can get 50 per cent of his debt forgiven if he teaches five years in a public grade or high school

Private school supporters and spokesman for the college comshymunity have argued that this forgiveness provision should exshytend also to those who choose 00 teach in colleges or in parochial or other private schools Mrs Greens bill would permit this

A second major amendment would permit every individual who attends special Federally sponsored institutes for teachers or guidance personnel to receive a stipend of $75 a week plus $15 weekly for dependents

Loan Program At present only public school

personnel receive this stipend Private school supporters have testified that 1lhis limitation bas prevented thousands of teachers and guidance experts poundrom atshy6ending the institutes usually held during the Summer months

The bill (HR 11904) increases from $135 million to $200 million Ute total of Federal funds bB be lent by colleges to needy stushydents Public and private collegshyiate associate degree or diploma aclwols of nursing would be iashyduded in the loan program

In addition to extending part shyial forgiveness of debt to private IliJChool personnel it would do llhe same for borrowers who become social workers or who become teachers nurses or counselors in projects related to President Jobnsons proposed wac on poverty

Family Planning Private Matter

TRENTON (NC)-New Jersey tov Richard J Hughes has deshydined to act on a suggestion Chat the state take the initiative in providing birth control inshyformation to welfare recipients as part of a drive on poverty

The suggestion came from Dr Aurdeymiddot Reiger of Teaneck ehairman of the Community Advisory Council of the Bergen County Planned Parenthood Center

In a letter to Dr Reiger the eovernor said Family planning bull essentially a private matter bull determination to be made en CIte basis of personal and reli shygious convictions It is not in my opinion the proper function ef the state either to encourage or discourage such decisions in tile private lives of our people

Private Ageneles Private agencies should be

CIte principal sources of inforshymation and guidance in this area the governor said He DOted that State Department of Health regulations permit pubshylk health personnel if reshyquested to refer an inquirer to a proper source of family planshyning information

He also noted that medicallly prescribed contraceptives are paid for by public assistazwe agencies

Marks 82 Years Serving FlilJt Catholics By Marion Unsworth

A century ago the five or six hundred English-speaking Catholics in the Flint section of Fall River attended Notre Dame Church By the 1880s Rev Owen Kiernan was conductshying English services at Notre Dame and boarding in a nearby home to be available to the faithful in the area In 1882 Father Kiernanpurchased a large section of the Hall farm and in the Spring the parishshyiontrs began preparing the foundation for the church a Gothic structure funt entireshyly of wood By October Immacshyulate Conception Church was completed and -the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence pershyformed the dedication ceremoshyniess Two years later a rectory was erected near the church

Father Kiernan was s~cceeded by Rev Cornelius McSweeney who served several years at Imshymaculate Conception during which time the parish grew rapshyidly From 1919 until 1925 Msgr Edward J Carr served as pastor working steadily toward erecshytion of of a new and more subshystantial church His plans were realized under the pastorship of Rev George Flanagan who came to Immaculate Conception in 1925 and by 1929 saw the completion of the present brick structure and the dedication of it by Most Rev James E Casshysidy then Vicar-General of the Diocese

In 1938 Rev John McNamara was named pastor at Immaculate Conception and during his three years there further enhanced the appearance of the church by the installation of stained glass windows

Father Smith Rev Charles R Smith was asshy

signed as pastor on May 1 1941 and remained at Immaculate Conception until his death in 1955 During his tenure he comshypleted renovation of the interior of the church and paid off the parish debt Rev Felix Childs succeeded Father Smith

Father Childs added to the church property which included church and rectory a large parkshying area and adjacent land to

Archdiocese Loses State Court Case

TRENTON (NC) -The New JelSey Supreme CoUlt on techshynical grounds has upheld a zonshying ordinance which barred the Newark archdiocese from buildshying a schOOl in Hohokus Borshyough

The 6-to-l decision was given in a major test case which the archdiocese had pursued to proshyteet itself in conjunction witb future building plans The arch_ diocese some time ago abanshydoned its plan to build the school in Hohokus Borough and now is constructing it in Montshyvale

The high court ruling upset a 1963 decision given by Superior Court Judge Charles W Broadshyhurst in Hackensack who held that the Hohokus Borough ordishynance did not apply to public sehools but prohibited building of private schools and was a yiolation of state law

Rename Bethlehem Street for Pope

BETHLEHEM (NC) - T b e main street of Bethlehem has been renamed for Pope Paul VI who made a historic visit here last January The unveiling of the memorial plaque bearing the Popes name was done by the apostolic delegate Archbishop Lino Zanini

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro archbishop of Bologna noted the 50th anniversary of his ordinashytion while on pilgrimage here with 20 of his priests and aQ other pilgrimi from Italy

~- -~__

t~middot fV _ I I

[I

ilI

[ JLt jbull bull i [ Lchc bull bull

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH

provide for future expansion In 1960 Rev Edward F

Dowling then assigned to Our Lady of the Isle Parish in Nan-

Planning Service For Catholics

DETROIT (NC) - Plans are under way for a family planning service to be conducted under Catholics auspices here

Father Kenneth P MacKinnon of Detroit natiQnal moderator of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds said it will be centrally located and will be a referral service for Catholic couples who for ecoshynomic physical or emotional reasons wish to limit their famshyilies by the use of the rhythm method

Doctors will readily admit their inability to take the time during an office- visit to instruct couples properly in the use of the rhythm method of family planning Father MacKinnon said

Also counseling is necessary not only on the physical aspects of the rhythm method where a priest is not qualified but on the spiritual and psychological aspects where he can be of most help A cooperative base of edushycation is the advantage of such a family planning referral ser shy

vice he said

No Dighton Barbeque The chicken barbeque planned

for Saturday Aug 1 will be followed by an open house in the rectory in order that the parishioners may view the renshyovations that have been made and at the same timemiddot have the opportunity of meeting the new curate Rev Martin L Buote

St Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 Whipple St Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3-2892

tucket was named new pastor of the Fall River parish which now includes some 1200 families He is assisted in his task by Rev Paul Connolly and Rev Robert L Stanton A Womens Guild Holy Name Society st Vincent de Paul Society and Catholic Youth Organization are in opershyation in the parish and use the church hall for their activities

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes directed by Sisshyters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts and lay teachers also meet in the parish hall Alshythough there is no parish school 240 pupils are transported on three busses to neighboring parochial schools

Heads Clergy Union WORTHINGTON (NC-Msgr

John P Kleinz professor at Ponshytifical College Josephinum here in Ohio has been elected nationshyal director of the Apostolic Unshyion of the Clergy at a meeting of the organizations national council at the college Msgr Kleinz said it was the filst truly national meeting of the organshyization to foster 1he spiritual lives and a sense of command among diocesan priests

LEMIEUX

~ PlUMBING amp HEATING INC

for Oomestic and Industrial

Sales and Service Oil BUfoIIers

WY 5-1631 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD

Mark Centennial Of Three Kings In Cologne

COLOGNE (NC) - The cathedral city of Cologne which hasnt been ruled by a monarch in nearly 50 years will pay homage to three of them this month when it marks the 800th anniversary of the arrival of the relics of the Three Kings in Germany

Hallowed legend states that St Helena discovered the bodies of the Three Kings the famous Magi of St Matthews Gospel in Persia while she was returning from her expedition to find the True Cross in Jerusalem

Taken to Constantinople the relics were transferred to Milan in the fifth century Then in 1164 during a campaign of the German Emperor Frederick Barberosso into Italy the holy relics were spirited away by the Archbishop of Cologne Rainald von Dassel

Despite the protests of Pope Alexander III the relics were transported over the Alps Everywhere the caravan halted inns were renamed in honor of the Three Kings Some of them still exist by that name today

Symbol of Unity Once in Cologne the relics of

the kings became the symbol of a unified German monarchy Coins( flags and official seals were decorated with three crows

During the Middle Ages thoushysands of pilgrims flocked to the city to see the gold sarcophagus studded with jewels donated by German emperors and a second reliquary in the shaPe of bull golden basilica

This month the citizens of Cologne will give vent to their lebenskraft by commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings Besides a Solemn Pontifical Mass at famous Cologne catheshydral there will be pilgrimages exhibits and civil celebratioRs for the people of this city beshylieve the Three Kings followed a distant star to their cathedral and they take this asmiddota proof that the Child Jesus is sleeping ia their midst

BRUNOS Business Supply Co

SUPPLIES bull MACHINES EQUIPMENT

OFFICE SYSTEMS ENGINEERS

1913 PURCHASE STREET New Bedford Mass Tel WYman 9-6058

The KEYSTONE Office Equipment

Salesroom NEW AND USED

Wood and Steel Desks anc chairs steel filing cabinets locIcers shelving tablesQJIM_storage cabinets safes wardrobes etc

Street ~ _

_ -near un ion

New Bedford

- 993-2781

LINCOLN PARK Rt 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford

NEW ENGLANDS PtAYGROUND Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties

2 - ROllER COASTERS - 2 Thrilling Rides and Amusements

For Complete information Contact OUTING MANAGER

PHONE WYman 9-6984 or MEcury 6-2744

I

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 6: 07.16.64

6 THE ANCHOR-Oiecese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 1964

Paternal Hierarchy The younger generation has always been the concern

of those who are older That is good and as it should be An older generation always hopes to pass on its responsishybiJitiemiddots to those prepared those of maturity and balance those who have learned the wisdom of the past those trained in knowledge and in discipline

Children do not become this way by chance Growth in knowing and in judgement does not come with the mere passing of time The family is the first school the parents the first teachers the children students open to improveshyment and training and direction

Dr Karl Stern a noted psychiatrist has recently pointed out that the family is not doing its job judging by the results And he puts the blame on the vague idea of the family as a little democracy in which all have equal voice

In such a family democracy the child just as much as the parent has a voice and a vote And the result is a

family in which parents cater to the whims of the child a family in which children give orders and make demands

middot to which parents must accede under threat of being called tyrants Mothers and fathers tamely submit to the blackshy

mail by their offspring and appeal for support to the middot eoncept of a democracy equality for all

The idea is ridiculous ~the results havocsuch a family eoncept furthermore far from helping children breeds

middot insecurity into their whole make-up For children have middot desires but know that these must be tempered by wisdom they have wants but look for the steadying hand of control They expect their parents to teach them how far their f1esires are to stretch They want mothers and fathers to provide discipline and to teach them self-control

Parents are not to be harsh unreasonable and unreasonshying dictators lheir role is the role of direction with love But- parents must fulfill their role and insist that children take theirs

And the father of the family especially must project-tllii image of strength and direction and control A strong middotfather one who is a real man in that he is mature and balanced and morally strong gives to his wife and children the real image of what a man and husband is All too often

when a case of juvenile delinquency crops up investigation middot shows the father of the family to be a weak man one who -has abdicated to his wife or children his proper role as head m the family His children grow up with no idea of control or strength and act accordingly -

Politics in Massachusetts The newspapers have had a happy time over the young

adults who have proclaimed themselves candidates for office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts taking advantage of the omission of the State Constitution to spell out specifically the minimum age for office-holders

Behind all the side-show however there is the disturbshying thought that maybe these young adults are trying to teach their elders a lesson Maybe the youngsters are disgusted with the odor of corruption that surrounds politics in Massachusetts Perhaps in their innocence they are sick of the wheeling and dealing that encircles Beacon Hill and are trying to touch the consciences of decent men to at least become angry at the situation

Of course as soon as corruption in politics is mentioned the Massachusetts politician turns to his favorite answer the technicality No matter what the stench is in the air he demands to be brought to the exact piece of political garbage that is objected to and unless an accuser can come liP with pictures places dates and names twice-documented and witnessed accordingly he will cry out smear And meanwhile everyone knows that something is wrong

The name politician is an honorable one belonging to many honorable men They would do well to inspect their ranks and reject those of their number who wear it unshyworthily

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCE~E OF FALL RIVER PublisheG weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass OSborne 5-7151

PUBLISHER f Most Rev James L Connolly--DDbullbull PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER It Rev Daniel F ShaIlOoMA Rev John-P Driscoll

M~~~~ING EDITOR Hugh J Golde

Memo to Motorists

rrrhnorultih th~ CWU1t CWith thpound Chunch I~BY REV ROBERT W HOVDA Catholic University

-TODAY-middotMass as on Sunday

What is this nature that has J)() longer any claim on us (FillSt Reading) Certainly it js not nature as we commonly use the word today Here in our worship it means precisely a life lived without the over-all iew mentioned above

It means a human life which ooes not realize that God is our Father and we are his heirs a life of happenings without the planning and the direction commended by our Lord in the Gospel

TOMORROW - Mass as on SUIlday If you mortify the wa)s of nature through the power of the Spirit you will have life (First Reading) Nature in this sense tends to disintegrate tends to chaos and ine~mingles1ness

The power of the Spirit manishyfested among us in many ways but espesci~lly in the teaching of the Gosel and in our public worship gives us sanity because it gives us a view of lifes mean_ ing from birth through death to f~ternity

SATURDAY-St Camillus de Leillis Confessor Both readings todllY teach of the self-sacrificshying love which only a Christian view of lif(~ can ultimately jusshytify and render intelligible Jesus calls us his friends (Gospel) because I have made known to you all that my Father has told me He has made known to us the meaning which is so hard for us to see in nature He has made it posshysible for Us to go out and bear fruit

NINTH SUNDAY AFT E R PENTECOST These years of renl~wal and reform in the ChVlrCh beinning with the reshyform of public worship are hard to understand for those of _ US who have lieen bitten by the bug of self-righteousness or selpoundmiddotmiddotsatisfaction who have been l() defensive about Christianity that we thillk any admission of fault iSlack of faith

TDdays lessonS speak to our problem ~rhe First Reading warns us that he who thinks he rtands firmly should beware ef I falL SubmiSBioD tbe

will of God is never an accomshyplished an achieved state of afshyfairs It demands life moveshy

-ment progress watchfulnessshynot a clasping of the past to ones bosom

And in the Gospel Jesus weeps over Jerusalem Jerusalem-of all places The city of believ~rs

the city of the righteous the city where Temple worship conshyformed to Gods own directions Yet he weeps bull and drives out of the Temple those who sold and bought there The Church is not immune to the same rigidity and unyielding stubbornness which alienated the Chosen People of old from the living God

MONDAY-St Jerome EmiJshyiani Confessor Charity and child-likieness the themes of todays Mass are precisely the qualities which encourage reshynewal and reform and which save us from rigidity And both are of the essence of salvation for the Christian

Love-because the new life in Christ and in His Spirit is the life of love we live now for others Child-likeness-because to live in the past determined by the habits of the past is to deny the Holy Spirit and the present action of the risen Christ

TUESDAY - st Lawrence of Brindisi Confessor Doctor But the teacher of Christ does not gauge his success by popularity todays First Reading reminds us The same love and childlikeshyness which move him to clothe the Word of God in modern lanshyguage and concepts and in terms of modern needs also encourage in him the faithfulness and trust of whic~ the Gospel teaches

WEDNESDAY - St Mary Magdalene Penitent This is a feast-day of us all for we are all sinners

And if love ripped in mans little way from the context of the common good and the salvashy~on of us all seemssomeiinles to lead - us into sin love is nevertheless the great~ virtue which leads us to repenta~e 141 receive forgiveness an4 abe Spkit cbange-Qi-hean

oticon Council Continued from Page One

procedure of speeches In short it aimed at getting results of the Council meetings The CardinalllJ met on Dec 26 Jan 15 Mar JO April 16-17 and June 26

Doctrinal Commission This group was entrusted wm

~e study and elaboration Of - two fundamental schemata that

on Divine Reveliltionand that on the Church as well as pan of the one on the Church in our times The special commissiGa formed by Pope John to work out the problems concerning Divine Revelation contented )t self with making suggestions The Doctrinal Commission has Fe-written in its entirety the whole schema Joint meetings were also held with the Comshymission for the Lay Apostolate Plenary meetings were held on

_March 2-14 and June 1-8 Bishops and Dioceses

lhe Commission for Bishoptl alld the Government of DioceseS held a full meeting on March 3-13 after a series of subcomshy

- mission meetings Its schema is now reduced to three chapters and joint meetings were held ~ith the Commissions for Orienshytal Churches Religious Diseishypline of the Clergy ~nd the Christian People

Oriental Churches This group held meetings duyshy

ing the last session and a plenary meeting on March 10-16 Its text i6 considerably reduced

MlssloDS The schemas new title The

Churchs Missionary Activity HI indicative of a more specifie CQntent and an attempt not repeat ~ Church schema Four

middot subcommissions prepared for the middot plenary assemblies of May 4 and

13 Christian Unity

The Secretariat for the Preshymiddotmoi~~n of Christian Unity had a thtee-week meeting of experts middot before itsmiddot general meeting oil ~Feb 2~-Mar 7 It re-elaborated with the coo~rationof the Comshy

miSsion of Oriental Churches oil the basis of proposals alrea~ expressed in council bull _

_ Christian Education The Commission of Semishy

naries Studies and Christian Education in a plenary meeting of March 3-10 produced a seshyries of proposals to be voted on without discussion

Clergy The Commission for the Di

cipline of the Clergy and the Christian People has presented

a document entitled Of Priests It contains 10 proposals to be voted on without discussion

Religious This commissions schema has

been reduced thanks to the work of six especially erected 9Ubshycommissions

Lay Apostolate J~ schema is also condensed

here to five chapters Expert8 met in Dec 1963 Jan 1964 aDd Feb of this year in Zurich - draw up the text Joint meetingS were also held with other comshymiampSions

Sacraments The Commission for the Discishy

pline of the Sacraments has conshycentrated on Marriage during iUI plenary sessions of March 2-8

Results The final texts have beeil

passed by themiddot Coordinating Commission at its final meetirig on June 26 Therefore Msgr Vallainc concludes all the meshyterial to be debated and voted oa during the forthcoming third se6Sion now is in the hands of tbe Fathers who will thus be able to examine it and study raquo ill depth

- Abstinence Union NEW YORK (NC)-The 92Jl41

annual tliree-day COBvention of the Cetholic Totalmiddot Abstinence Union 0pound Ameriea will be held lIeft ~ Sunda1 Auamp 9

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 7: 07.16.64

THE ANCHOR - ~Hits Government Two Brunette Scholars Among Outstanding Thurs July 16 1964

Water Policies I California WASHINGTON (NC-A natshyional Catholic rural life spOkeamp man has sharpely criticized 10shyteriw Department policies which he said favltlr huge industrial shybled farm operations over famshyily farms

Father James L Vizzard SJ director of the Washington ofshyfke of the National Cathoijc Rural Life Conference singled out for attack a proposed conshytraet between the gover~ent

and the Westlands Water District In California He made his oharges befQre a Senate i~ tion and reclamation subcomshymittee

The proposed contract would govern rlistribution of water in the San Luis irrigation and reshyelamation project in southern Californias San Joaquin Valley

Under existing law water from a federally financed proshyject can legally be obtained )Y an individual owner for no more than 160 a~ 3~O acres in ~he case Qf a husband and wife Owners of excess land howeV~ ~ get such water for all t~r land for 10 years if they si~ a oontract agreeing ~ dispose of the exce~ jand under cOnditions a~ceptableto the Secr~ of the Interior

Cite TWo Faeton But some large landownerS in

1Ihe WestlatidS Water District h~ve announeed 1ihat they will refuse tociispose of their eXcess land OppOnentsof the poPoSec1 contract between the govern mentand the water distriCt at- tack the pact on the grounds that -such noncomplying land owners would nevertheless benefit from two factors irrigamn water would seep through the ground into the underground water tabte and become available to ~ -d to the ~xtent~ eomplying land owners used irrigation Wllter the underground water wouM become tlvallable aimQ$ exclusiveiy to ~ non-ootDPIYshying owners

lbe opporients of the eontraet hav~ argued that the prOposed distribution system Should not be builtuntil the owners of exshyeess lands agree to dispose of fihetn under 1he -usual oondl~~

Dutch PJan ReYision Of CatechismTexts

THE HAGUE NC-Dutch Catholics are dropping their 4OO-year-old catechism in favor of an experimental outline that will be tried in September in the countryS 2857 elementary achQOls Meanwhile an entirel new catechism for adults is being written

The traditional Dutch cateshyebism is basea on Bwork comshypleted in 1550 by St PeterCanshyi8ius It was revised in 1948 but still came underermcism as being too difficult for schooi children Catecheties itself has been under fire in Holland for ~eing too abstract and failing te give meaning to huInan life

Split Lower Canada Jesuit Proyince

MONTREAL (NC)-The Lowshyer Canada Jesuit Province bas been divided into two provinces one to be based at Montreal and the other at Quebec City

The Montreal Province will include the dioceses of Montreal Toliette Valleyfield Sf Jean St Jerome st Hyacinthe MORt Laurier and Hull It will have about 400 members

The Quebec Province will take in the rest of the former French_ language Lower CanadaProvshyinee inclucting the Prairies and Northern Ontario This proy inee will have about 400 mem bela

Seniors at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven Two brunette scholars will be among ou tstanding personalities of the senior claSS

at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven come September Theyre Dale Wingert president of the National Honor Society and student council secretary and Rosanna Ventura honor society vice-president and student council treasurer There are advantages to being honor students at the Fairhaven school confide the girls S1udents with perfect attenshydance and an 85 per cent average can skip exams if your attendance isnt perfect but you maintain a 90 per cent average J)u can also skip them

It sure keeps us coming to school laughs RGsanna

Daleis a member of St Franshy~is Xavier parish Acushnet where shes active in CYO and Children of Mary She has one sister and her parents are Mr and Mrs Chester Wingert

Spapish and biology are her favorite subjects and Spanish ean get a surreptitious workout at the Academy which has a large enrollment of seD1lritas from Latin America Theyre really supposed to speak Enshyglish all the time though 110 theyll learn it says Dale

She oopes to go to Boston Colshylege where shell maiCr in soci- ology-if she doesnt change her mind and decide upon nursing school Other interests include tennis and all sports glee club membership at ~hool and tamshyily campingmiddot

lhe Wingerts have been campingfor seven years and theyve traveled to Canada Maine Wisconsin and Montaina Another trip to Canada is on the agenda for this Summer The mosquitoes are juStmiddotas big 1here though sighs Dal~

Shes a strong advocate of family trips as opposed to organshyized Summer camps however The regular camps are too scheduled she maintains sayshying she prefers a middotrelaxed vaeashytion regime

All theWa Through Rosanna possessor of a pixie

sense of humor is an SHA girl -through andthlOugh having aItshy~ded the Fairhaven aeadeniy since firSt grade day Shes an onlyehild daughter of Mr and ampIrs Virgil Mmiddot Ventura atmiddot St Mliryll parish Fairhaven

This Summershen be workshying with her mother as a factory floorgirI She wants me to apshypreciate the value lgtf an educashytion she explains

When asked what she liked best at school she immediately and diplomatically replied The teachers then added-that favshyorite subjects are languages and eommercial offerings

Like Dale she$ interested in llttending Boston College and also like Dale ber Inind isnt quite made up as to her future I might be a doctor or a nuxse or an English teacher ~e

mused She has strong leanings

towards nursing however and thoroughly enjoys the foUf or five hours she spends each Friday as a Carmelette a teen-age volshyunteer at Our Ladys Haven in Fairhaven

I love helping witholdpeo pIe she said I dont like to see people suffer Shes a member of the glee

club and dramatic group at SHA and often singS lor the enjoy ment of guests at Our Ladys Haven

ClJ like to cook she added I like anything-just so its fOQd

Both girls unite in saying they enjoy SHA because its a small

IsPraying for Peace VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VIappearing athis win dow on Sunday noon to bless the crowd waiting in St Peters squaIe spokemiddot of the painful parts oaf thewOTld scene where peace could- be endangered and said he was prayiDI fOlpeace

schooI Both lttendmiddotmiddottt onitehoi arships from iisal~e assi)ctation

school IDstory Quiet and secluded SHA is in_

deed a small school and ~ne with a difference Students seem far removed from the busy world outside and can COlleen trate fully on studies The Sisters of the Sacred

Hearts of Jesus and Mary who staff the academy bear in mind the simple credo of their foUndshyer Countess Henriette 1 want the children to be happy and to poundeelat home with us Eight Sisters arrived in Fairshyhaven in August 1908 to found the Academy They were the first religious in Fairhaven aIid are still in charge of two pariSh $chools in Fairhaven in addition to their own academy

The Sisters began fheir work on the graromarschool level and by 1911 had organized a high achooi In the early years the academy was largely a boarding school but today day nudents predominate

In 1918 a iann adjoining the sohQOI was purchased extending the campus an entire block

One of the communitys parshyticular devotions is that of the Enthronement of the Sacred Hearts and this was carried out at the academy in 1918 The Sodality of Our Lady however was of even earlier origin havshyingbeen active at the school since 1912

Long middotRours In the early years When

music painting a~d need1ewor~ were included in the cuiTicushy1WIi school hcitirs e~tended ~ 830 to 4 followed by stuay periods Today the hours are ftom 815 to 230 but students ate expected to spend at least three addltiortal houts on home work rThe -name -of the achQOl year

FAIRHAVEN SENIORS Gait Hedon (left) chats with classmates Dale Wingert and RosannaVentura (seated) at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhav-en

book Aymerian reflects the family name of thecommuilitysmiddotmiddot foundress Countess Henriette Aymer de la Chevalerie The daughter of a noble ~nch famshyity she and her mother were imshyprisoned during the French revshyolution for having hidden a priest They were ready for exeshyeutwn when by a quirk of fate they were released

This experience determined 1he 70ung countess to iive bershyself 10 God and she met the Rev Father Coudrin who became her -spiritual director and with whom she was a co-founder of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts which embraces priests and brothers as well as Sisters

By 1800 the community came into formal existence and today themiddot scenic town of Fairhaven is the beneficiary of a ytlung eountess who lived through the rigors of the French revolution aodmiddot passed on her spirit of love and dedication to the teaching nuns at Sacred Hearts academy

MR FORMULA 7 Fuel Oil Booster

forNo 5 Fuel Oil Keeps Your Burner

Running Tip Top

BROKSTON CHEMICAL CO BROCKTON MASS

DONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY lNC

96 WilliAM STRUT NfW eEDFORD MASS

wyr SmiddotStS3 wy 7middot~167

PERSONAL SERVia ~ I bull

Report Includes Church-Related Schools in Bill

WASHINGTON (NC) The Senate Labor Committee has reported the administrashytions war on poverty bill to the Senate floor after amendshying it to permit participation by private non-profit agencies in two of its key programs

Under the amendment pri shyvate non-profit agencies includshying church-related schools would be authorized to partici shypate in the measures workshytraining and work-study pioshygrams envisioned as a plan to give work and expeiience to young people aged 16 to 21 to increase their employability and to providemiddot part-time employ ment to enable them to stay ia ahool

Like Bouse VerslOIl The measure calls for some

200000 young people to take part in 1he work-training proshygram Participation by church related schools and other private agencies would be allowed so long as it did not involve youths

in projects for the con~cti~n operation or mailltenance of as mUch of a ampcility as is used fOr ~ian purposes

Thearilended Senate bill thus is close to the House version-of the legislation which is no before the Rules Committee The House bill provides for parti cipation of Church-related schools and other agenciesin the work-training qnd workshystu~y prograID$ provided their projects do not involve the youths in projects on facilities to be used solely for sectarjan purPGampeamp

Permanent Shrine for Saint1s Relic

AYLESFORD (NC) - ltie skull egtf st Simon Stock En glands first Carmelite who died at the age of nearly 100 in 1265 in Bordeaux France will be pennamentlyenshrined by Bish_ op Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark

in a new Chapel of the recently restored 13th century Carmelite aonastery here

nishop Cowderoy will take the relic frama niche in the wall of a small chapel in the cloister Where it has been preshyserved since 1951 when Arch bishop - now Cardinal - Paul Richaud of BordeauJr brought it back to Aylesford

St Simon born near here in 1165 was a hermit in the Ho~ Land on Mount Cannel and be (lame the first priegtr general Of the Carmelites in 1247

Montie Plumhing amp Heating COI Inc

GEORGE M MONTLE 1bIgMaster Plllmber 29

Over 35 ears of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN STREET faD River OS 5-7497

A D McMUllEN Inc

MOVERS SERVING

Fan River Newsecfford Cape Cod ~rea

Agent

AERO MAYflOWER TRANSIT CO INC

Nato_ide Movers WY30904

3J4IEMPTtlN ST HEW BEDFORD

I

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 8: 07.16.64

bullbull

DEBROSS - CO

__ H tmiddot Omiddotls~ ea In9 I ~ and Burners

)365 NORTH FRONT STREi~

NEW BEDFORD 2-5534

middot-e THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaHRiver-Thura July 16 196c CDA Convention 10 Open Sunday Death of Oak Ttee Like Loss

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardishynal Cushing of Boston will preshy

side at a Solemn Pontifical MaS -offered by Bishop Coleman F

Of Dear Mem~er of Family By Mary Tinley Daly Carroll of Miami in the Catheshy

-Many years ago a family moved into our house when dral of St Mary here Sunday opening the 30th biennial conshymiddot it ~as brand tJew The family too was brand new only middot vention of the Catholic Daughshy

- the beginning of a family really-a man a woman an exshy ters of America The sermoR peeted child Why did they choose this particular house middot will be preached by Bishop middot From a practical standpoint Villilent S Waters of Raleigh

depression times but he withshy N C national CDA chaplainit was with a little reaching held his decision Cardinal Cushing will giveill their price range For Our tree was an acorn when the keynote address a few hours

middot more emotionable reasons it George Washington was a baby later at the convention banquet middot bad expandable bedroom space he commented to his wife Do The convention is expected Mgt forthe family they hoped for you want it made inio table attraCt more than 1000 deleshyit had a fire- tops -gatesplace rough The woman didnt Other ~mbers of the MeFshymiddot and recesSed Years went on Seven children archy expected to be present inshy1ha t promised middot elude Bishop Paul Hagariy

eozy fires of filled the house There was no longer a sewing room nor a QSB Nassau Bishop Joseph H

Wfn ter eve writing room and the guest H)dges Wheeling W Va and nings And in Bishop William G Connare - 1 Ii e backyard

room had become a thing of the past ~reensburg Pa

stood a stately Bishop Carroll will be the oak tree Man

But the fireplace in Winter middot principal~aker during a

woman ba by the oak tree iri Summer had

luncheon Monday Margaret middot e Ii joyed the

become established fixtures of Buckley Chevy Chase Md

warmth of the fireplace that A single-rope swing hung life in that house

CDA Supreme Regent will preshy first Winter they lived here from one of the strong oak limbs side at the sessions Mrs Cathshy- The extra bedrooms One was provided a daringly adventurous erine McGinness State Regent

used as a writing room for the challenge to children zooming West Virginia is conventiOil newspaperman father another precariously between heaven chairman

as a sewing room for the mother and ellrth on a 15-foot cycle There was a nursery and even Moonlight Filter AFRICAN ORDAINS AMERICAN A member of the ff - h C middot a room for guests White Fathers of Africa Father David L Clement WF 0 er Eng IS oursesMore years passed and so did

Summer Is Nigh the sandbox Former sandpipers of Waterford NY kneels in St Annes Church there to To Foreign Students Then with the first Spring then teenagers would wander relteive Holy Communion from the African bishop who ~ad SOUTH WOODSTOCK (NC)

the even-then old oak tree put intothe backyard of a Summer just ordained him The ordaining prelate Bishop Peter -An English language trainingforth its leaves and with the evening look up at their umshy

Poreku Dery of Wa Ghana was the first African named center for foreign students whoeoining of Summer spread a brella still marvel at the way h XXIII NC Ph to plan to attend American colshy glOrious umbrella of green over those leaves filtered moonlight byPope Jo n bull 0 bull leges has been established by

1he roof-top keeping the house as they used to filter sunlight Annhurs1 College here in Conshyeool in natures own way The fil1ering however is less middot necticut shy

In a few more years upstairs and less Storms have taken For Und~rprivileged Sister Gertrude Emilie cotheir toll Branches have fallenrooms were converted into lege dean said the center is beshybavehad to be removed bark bullbabies dormitories but the old lieved to be the first of its kind

oak tree stili stood sentinel peeling Cleveland Diocese Project Peace Offers at a Cathoiic womens college in Sandbox under it was a natural The old oak we are sorry to this country middot there was the sun not blistershy say has had it Its tabletop days Cultural Enrichment Program Three fulltime instructors wi))

are over the tree man tells using but a filtered sun thanks tAl CLEVELAND (NC)-Project Elwell of Cleveland diocesan be engaged in the project whichBut it will make fine fireshythe oak And when a cooling PE~ace a program of cultural school superinlendent The word will cover a course in English

breeze Wlafted _through its wood enrichment for the underprivishy peace in the title is an abbre- flom elementary to college levelSothe oak tree will eome intobranches it was as though giant lej~d has been launched by the viation for Program for Educa- depeild~ngon the students -need

the fireplacearms were waving green fans Cleveland diocese tional and Cultural Excellence The college 16 conducted by theEverything comes to an endover the small red-haired sandshy The plan will feature educashy It is expected that Project Daughters of the Holy Ghost

piPers playing beneath tional imd leadership training Peace will eventually be iJitro- shyDepression Came Attempt to Brooden programs for the underprivishy duced into about a dozen Cleveshy Refugee Nun to Ope

Came hard times iIi this counshy leged from pre-school to adult land parishes First steps willGrounds for Divorce trY and thepeopie living in our level In many of its aspects it be taken iIi the Fall with a yearshy Convent in Indiana house were as beset financially NEW YORK (NC) -Another wHl put Catholic parish facili shy long pilot study at St Thomas

GARY (NC)-5ister M Cecelshyas all other U S citizens Exshy attempt to broaden grounds for tiES at tlw disposal of the genshy Aquinas parish in a racially ia who escaped from the comshypenses were cut to cover only absolute divorce in New York eral comnunity on a non-secmiddot mixed area munists in Czechoslovakia instate will be undertaken by the tarian baHisnecessities However solicitous Seeks Volunteers 1952 is here to open the first

lest a tree limb might fall on Association of the Bar of the The plan was announced by Cooperating in the projects American establishment of her one of his sandpipers the man City -of New York Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E implementation will be the diocshy Cltlmmunity the Daughters of theSamuel I Rosenman formerof the family called in a tree esan school board and the Cathshy Most Holy Saviorstate Supreme Court justice andsurgeon for the old oak olic Interracial Council The She came here at the invim~association president has named Plrelate to Address council will recruit volunteersYou have a piece of propershy tion of Bishop Andrew G Grutshya committee to draw up recomshyty here Mister said the tree Catholic Daughters for parts of the program ka of Gary surgeon after a bit of pruning mendations to be submitted to

MIAMI (NC)-Richard Cardi_ Highlights of the plan include Sister Cecelia central figureI can get you a lot of money the legislature a group experience class simshynal Cushing ()f Boston will be in the book The Deliverance ofThe states 177-year-old stat shy lar to nursery school to preparemiddotfor this tree and it wont cost the keynote speaker at the 30th Sister Cecelia since her arrivalute makes adulte17 the only children for formal learningyou a cent to get it taken down biennial national convention of in the United States has lived inground for absolute dlVtQrce The use of the 43-character InitialThis is the kind of wood they the Catholic Daughters of Amer Oakland Calif and Homesteadcommittee Rosenman Indicated Teaching Alphabet in kindershyuse for valuable table tops-pure ica here starting Sunday July Fa will r e com men d additional

19 garten to develop early reading oak and with a base circumfershygrounds and also seek a clarifi shy and an intensified course in pershyence of 20 feet Two hundred The cardinal will address thecation of divorces obtained by sonal health and mental hyg~eneyears old Id say this tree is Cltlnventioll banquet Other conshyNew York citizens in other juris fOr grade school pupls includshyWant to sell vention speakers will includemetions including Mexico ing special instruction f~r tho~The man of that family Wall Bishop Coleman F Carroll of

in grades five to eight bY VOIUBshy~rely tempted for these were Miami host to the convention teerdoctors aiHi nursesPlank Unnecessary and Bishop Vincent S Waters of

Raleigh NC national CDA ~SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Oppose Public Buses chaplainThe National C ou neil 01 Ideals for Women

More tilan 1000 delegates areChurches advised the platformmiddot For ~rivote P~pil$ Y~TICAN CITY (~C)~p0PeeJipected ro attend the convenshycommittee for the Republican Paul VI addr~ssing390 p~r~~~ishyMOUNT PLEASANT (NC)shy tio~ at which Margaret~convention here it feels a eonsti shy pants in a study cours~dor diocmiddotThe annual South Iowa Methoshy BuckleYhevy eurohase Md aushy~tional ameridri1ellll to overrule es8iileadersof Wonuine Cath~ diSt CoDference convention here premerelent will preside the U S Supreme Court and olicAction iii- italy encoura~rejected a ~inority rEiport on permit prayers in public schools them to offer young womenuse of public Schnolbuses by is unnecessarY and unwiseparochial and private school jiirst Nun to Teach worthwhile Substitutes for tne

Arthur S Fleming spokesman eoilformism and emotionalismpupils The minority re(lori for the council which is an agenshy aIled the bus trarisportiltion isshy At ~tCl1~ Con~~e _which hesaid have been sOcent~shycy of 31 Protestant and Ortho- fJlea legitimate public welfare PROVIlgtENltE (HC) The etys h~biiual guiding iJe~ 1ordox bodies urged the committee

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY ~

273 CENTRAL AVE~ I )lt l(1 ~

WYmiddot 2middot6216

NEW B~DFORD _

gprogram to endorse vigorous support first Catholic nun named to the 80_lon_ _ ~ The convention voted in favor faculty of state oper~ted RhOdeand enforcement of the civil of a nonsectarian study of the Island C~tl~ge is ~i~r Jeanclerigh1s acthistory of religion in the public Milan of th~ qfay Nu~ of~

The opposed Cl~OSS She tea~h Cosey-SextoriSchools delegates will psychoshythe proposal of an amendment Heads Parochial Sshool 10 the U S Constitution which NEW YORK (NC) A lay 10~t native of Lowell Mass bullbullbull Cleansers would permit prayers and Bible woman has been named princishy Sister Jean now is on the faculty I reading in the public schools pal of S1 Paul the Apostle of Rivier College for women nc ~

The conference is composed parochial school here Ann M Nashua NH She will receive 94 TREMONT STREET of 470 organjzed Methodist Wallace a former professor of a salary 01 $7200 a year and will churches with rriore than 145000 education at Fordham Univershy reside a1 the Franciscan Mis- lUNTON MASS members in 47 counties of south- sity will have both nuns and sionaries of Mary Convent near Tel VAndyke 2middot0621 era Iowa lay teachers on her faculty the eolle~e

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 9: 07.16.64

Tells Wife Tilke Quick Action Oh Husbarids Self-delusion-

By 101m J Kane Ph~ D We are married siX years and have three children

Before marriage my husband was shy and never went out much Now he wants to make up for the fun he missed He is running around with teenagers although he is 25 He stays out all night takee advantage of these girls then says he is sorry How long shall I take it1

Your husband is not omshyamazingly immature but he ~ also on the way ~ serious pioo~ i

leInS with the ~ a nd the posSible break P of hi marshyrijlge ~ dont t h ink you 8h ltgt ~ ~ d wait any longer to take quick and decisive aetion BU~ the quick action to which I refer is not necessarily punishytive

As emotionally upset as Y~ MUst be and eyen perhaps ~ what your husband ~eeds ~ help You wID have to try 10 unshyclerstand him his problem and IUs probable prognosis

The claim that he aned to have fun before marriage and wishes to make up for it now is bull plausible excuse which he has persuaded himself is justifieashylion for his misbehavior Before be can grasp what is happening to himself this banoOn must be punctured

For a yo~ unmatrled man to have a number of girl friends to enjoy dan~es partie and other social gathermgs Wlth ~ opposite sexis desirable within limits This has ~ever extended t the idea of SOWing wdd oa~ which may refer to Un IDOral behavior e moral eoJie cannot be held ~ abey~ because people are teenagers

hasized - idea that must be emp

he purpose of yo~g people aeeting and nung~ WiV1 other youths is to acquaint them with the opposite sex to helP them understand and get ~ with each other Its u1tiIpa~ purpose is to assist them ~ ehoose a suitable marital padshyaero

sttn bull Child One of ihe most serious objeeshy

ttons to youthful marriage is that too many involve boys and girls who are not really prepared tor marriage They live in a dream world of romantic life with little or no realization that marriage m~ responsibility

Your husbands self-delusion that he owes himself a good time which he missed earlier seems to indicate that he is either un~ -illing or as yet ineapable of -suming an adult role Yet to paraphrase St Paul when ~ lire children we act as children ~en we grow up we put away the things of childhood

University of Dayton Honors British Author

DAYTON (NC) ~ Hilda C aef of Oxford England W8S aamed 1laquo the Univemty of Daytons 1964 Marian Library lIIedal for her book Mary A History of Doctrine and Devoshylionmiddot middot The award given each year at ate annual Marian Institute here flo the author of the years best book on Mary was accepted for lIIiss Graef who was unable to attend by John L Maddux of Washington DC

A native of Berlin Miss Graef fled Germaay in 1936 and selshytled in England Although of Jewish origin Miss Graef was Itised a Protestant aDcI became bull Cathollaquo ill 1841

Your husband seems to think he is still a child Hence he cannot or will not put away the things of childhood ev~n thoUgh ~hat he is doing is not penniashySlble even before marrIage

CODSDlt Priest Your first step is to consult

with one of the parish priests If your husband will aeeompany you fine If not go yourself Ask the priest hnw he thinks you can help your husband You too will have to do some soul

searching and make certain you do not contribute directly or indirectly to your husbands present attitudes

But you must call the attenshytion of a parish priest to your situation for it will likely beshycome worse before it becomes better You may even after COD_ sultation have to take some drastic steps

The priest may be able to recshyommend a professional marriage co~or to you In a good marshyriage counseling situation there are resource persons such as psychologists and psychiatrists to whom your husband ~atl be referred Basically yourhusshybands problem is a personality problem and I will risk a guess that ultimately he may need professional help of a psycho- logical nature

Critical Condition Immaturity is not an uhcomshy

mOll human failing bumiddott your husbands immaturi~ is critical As I m~tioned in the first parshyaiTaPh he is risking involvement witih thelaw specifically for conshytnbuting to the delinquency oflIinors if mdeed not something worse

Whetherhe sees a priest a m~age counselor or any~ ~ running around with ~ ~ girt must be ~ed at OP-ce ~ to persuade him justwhat will happen to his famlly If he is arrested on such charges Pieture for him the disgrace his dUldren will feel even thoughthey are young Even bill job ~ be in jeopardy

YOu have been most patient to date Perhaps and I say it feshyretfully you will have to be firmer even if necessary tough on this matter But dlt)Dt slam the door on him or else all chance of change is gone

Needs HelpIn view of your husbands

probable personality problem I want to warn you of what mayhappen Without help it is not really going to change But if sUfficiently frightened he may teltJporarily give up this Diode of life or he maymanltge to keep it secret from you

lhus YOJ1 may be misled into believing all is well and ~ ou to fall to follow tllroUgh WiUl tlle Steps reeommended~

If this sbc)uld happen your hopes will be raised Eventually however the whQle sordid sit~ uation wilJ again emerge and this time wUl absolutely overshywhelin you If this o~urs I $fe

lit~le ~ance of a reconciliation When your husband tells you

he is sorry you have been kind enough to accept his statement But you must realize that this is merely a sop he throws you to get you off his neck He may even mean it when he says it hut his resolution is quite weak because there is some doubt that be canh~lp himself at all

By all means seek help for yourself and him and do it now Tomorrow or next week be too late

BLESSES PARENTS Rev Peter J MUIlenblesses his mother and father Mr and Mrs JamesD Mullen fltllow~ his First Solemn Mass in Immaculate Conception Church North Eas-tonon last Sunday

Honors WomanDoctor founder of Maternity Hospital t~R~ceive

Highest Civilian Award HEREFoRD (NC) - A Negro

woman doctor who gave up a private practice in obstetrics and gynecology to start a maternity hospital lKre in Texas for mishygrant workers wives has been named to receive the 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Tohnson Dr Lena Edwards 62 forshy

merly of Jersey City was i)De of 30 persons named to receive the award highest civilian honor the president tan bestow Another Catholic named to reshyceive the medal isFatherThe0shydore M Hesburgh CSC pre ident of the University of Notre Dame

Dr Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St Francis

Offer Sufferings For Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC) - Acl1es and anxieties pain and appreshyhensions were offered here as prayers by the sick and infirm for an increase in religious vocashytions

The Cincinnati archdiocese conducted its Day of Prayer reshycently This is an annual affair of the archdiocese on the feast Of the Precious Blood sponsored by the Archdiocesan Vocation Endeavor (AVE) a committee representing-the 33religioas cmnmunities ofwomen working in the arcl1diocese

Groups of Sisters visited pashytients in hospitals and residents of rest homes on that day and gave out printed copies of a prayer for religious vocations

Representa~ives of all reli shygious communities in the area attended a Pontifical Mass in St Peter in Chains Cathedral for the saine intention

Heads Deaf Athletes MADRAS iNC) ~A Catholic

laywoman Mrs LOAdhammal Simon has been elected presishydent of the sports association for the deaf of India which is choosing a national team to send to the world competition for the deaf to be held next year ia Washiniton D C

She is the mother of six ehfl- cken one of whom is a priest of the Society 01 the AtonetOOnt

At the age of 60 she gave up her private practice in Jersey City to devote her medical skills free of charge to migrant farm workers in the TeJQlSPanhandle She MoVed toit ulrm labor camp near here in 1961 and set up lshy25-bed hiateriUty hospital and eliniC to wl)i~ shp has contribshyuted several thousand dollars of her OWZl mane)

Sometimes Called the Tom nooie7 of Deaf SmithCOunty Dr EdwardcS last year was honshyored as Herefords Citizen of the Year by community clvicc1ubs

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington D C and a former teacher in its m~dical school The university last year gave her its alumni achievement award

SAVE MONEY ON JOUR Oil HEAII

~

~fU sn atARLES Fmiddot VARGAS

2M ROCKDAlE AVENUE EW eEQFORQ MAss

fIllck~ ~~

HEATn~G OIL

mE ANCROR ~ 9 Thurs July 16 19604

IntroduceCause Of French Nun

WEST HARTFORD (NC) shyhe cause for the beatificaUOOl ofa French nun whn pioneered in education and hospital work in Brazil more than a century ago has been introduced in Rome according to word receiV6i lit the North American Provincial House of the Sisters of StJosshyeph of Chambery here in C0nnshyecticut Motb~ MaryIlb~ VQli

lQIi firlrt provlncial superior of the congregations Prov~ee of ltu ampwPaulo Brazil wes barn in SaWy~ France April 6 1835 Shebecame $Uperior of the IXlUshysioncentIttiin 1859 when she was 24middot Y~3l1 old replacing the OiiginU sU~orr who died at lea wtUle the Sisters were enshy~ ~France to their new station

Because of her youth the10eal billbop M first refused to permit her to assume her duties but relented after several months

EstabUslled School

Despite poveIty and religicM indiffelence in the area Motheir Theodore established a school Whicll today em-oIls 2000 pfrpils Later city officlak urged ibe Sisters to assume charge of 1be local municipal hospital Today more than 1500 persons receive free medical care there annually Orphanages and a leprosarium were turned over to the Sisters

Additional schools and ~ ta1s were established by Mothermiddot MaTy Theodore before her death in 1m July 17 1925 at the ue of 90

Sale in Chatham Association of the S~

Hearts Holy Red~mer parish Chatham will hold a publie Summer Sale and ham and bean supper today in theehureh basement The sale is being held from 10 to 12 aud fn)m 4 to a wh~ ampupper will be ~ froms to 7 Booths will ine1ucle ewing white elephant ehil em jewelry and food

The Carriage Trade Likes To Bank Here Too

Easy t --w FREE mail f_00 opa _ accevnt

The

Od Red Balik Fall afver Savings Bank

141 North Main FALL RIVER

893 County SOMERSET

A tHy -doitt itmiddot1ty MA

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 10: 07.16.64

10 THE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Catholic Bishops Urge Faithful Accept Act

JACKSON (NC)-Mississhysippis Catholic bishop has appealed to the states 71000 Catholics to accept passage of the civil rights act as loyal Americans

Bishop Richard O Gerow of Natchez-Jackson asked the faithful to make a positive conshytribution in our state by rejectshying the spirit of rebelilion and by standing for justice love and peace

Each of us bearing in mind Christs law of love can estabshylish his own personal motive of reaction to the bill and thus turn this time into an occasion of spiritual growth

The prophets of strife and ~istre9S need not be right he said in a statement

The people of our beloved Mississippi have the historic opportunity of giving to the world an example of true patri shyotism in a democracy he said

As Loyai Americans Dear Christian Catholicpeoshy

RECEIVE REPLICA The five millionth visitoli to the Vatican Pavilion at the New

pIe your Bishop calls upon you York Worlds Fair receives a replica of the famed Pieta statue on exhibition there Mrs to accept the action of CongresS Barbara Troost~yk and Lee Troostwyk and their children Sara 9 and Mark 11 of Orange ~el~re~l Americans saiclthe Conn accept gIft from Father roseph T Lahey assistant director of the Vatican Pavil-

Catholic Bishops of Louisianamiddot km NC PhotO also have urged Citizens of the state to comply with the letter of the Civil )lights Act and to heed the voice of their conscience inobServirig its spirit

Loyal compliance with the law is clearly the duty or ai eitizens they said in a Joint statement

The spirit of the law is the 80ul of a sOciety characterized by equality of rights and immushyBities they said

Legal Abortions Cause Concern

Communistsl-Ilit Red Attack on Church

SANTIAGo (~G)The sa~ atbacking the Churoh and openshytiago arlt$diocese has called a ly sought catholic votes for AI-Red attack on theOhurcll in the lende An organization called Chilean Senate a grave warn- Catholics With Allende is a ing of what Communism means ~llal1 but importent group in 1Ibe aDd of its inumtlons to perseCute the Catholic ChurCh

But the cent1arPestprotestagaiJlM ~AoraI law Binds the speech of communist Sen Joaime Barros came from the Film IndustryCommunist party itself which

Says Acceptance Of Christ Key To Peace 0-

PLAINFIELD (NC) ~

Archbishop Thomas A BOolt land of Newark said here that he agrees with the late Pope Pius XII that World War II never ended because men have not awakened to the true condition of peace which lies in Christian morality

Archbishop Boland spoke ~me 300 members of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima attending a 10th anniversary observance of the organization first pilgrimage to Fatima The Blue Army is engaged in spreadshying information about the Blessed Virgins appariti1gtns and message at Fatima Portugal in 1917 bull

Silent Sermon

The Archbishop recalled the devotion to Mary of recent popea and their appeals for prayer to Mary for world peace He said Pope Benedict XV pontiff at the time of World War I had placed in the church of St Mary Major in Rome a statue which is a silent sermon in stone for all the world

In one hand he said Our Lady holds the palm whick symbolizes the peace which ia the desire of all men In the other she holds forth the infant christ Quite simply she is sayshying You cannot have the one without taking the other

Disavowr Chilef~n Senators Speec~ ~ Non-Catholics Mark Revolutionary Front OfP~U~~r PapcdA~ni~ers~ry Action the coalition backing the LONDON (NC) - Anglican Marxist nominee and Orthodox leaders attended

Army of VultureS bull Mass offered in Westminst~ eath~dral here to mark the first

In his attack Barros char-ged anniversary of the eoronatioJi OIl ~ Church with possessing feb- Pope Paul VI ulous wealth used to enrich Archbishop Ig~ ~ardinal~ churchmen but not to help tile apostolic delegate offered the p0r He criticized ~ulCardinal Mass Among those present wer4t SlIva SB of Santiago and Archbishop Athenagoras Greek

BUDAPEST (NC)-A startling said the attack in no way te- VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pqpe calle~ prIests an ~rmy oJ vul~ IOr~~~~6x Metropolitan in Great increase in th~ number of legal fleeted its thbiking Puul VI has reasserted the right tuires Brltaiil and Anglican Bishop abOrtions in this country i$ The clilyafter making his at of the m()r~l UlW to ~ ro~e in I~ replythe Santiag~ arch- Mervyn Stockwood of South eausing concern among Church tack sen Barros issued a re- fheproquchon of moVIes dlo~ese saId waft as well as representativeS leaders traction and accused himself of Spea~ing to participan~ in a We lament the~nopPOJiIlJe of Archbishop Michael Eamse Statistics show that in the past not underst-mdfng the true corn- eo~venhOJ~ of the It~han Ca~h- zea of theCqmmumst party~p of Canterbury the Anglican

eight years more than 1173000 munistmiddot position on religion It ollc a9S9clat~on of mOtiOppIC- trymg to 1IIvolve the Catholie primateand the Anglican bishshyabortions have been performed~ was the first time in Chilean tu~e theater managers tbePo~ Church and its hiernrchy in the op of Londonmiddotmiddot shyHungary has a total population history thoatt a public retraction sa~ pol~~ieal struggle whiclJ is ex- During the Ma~ AichbishOlJ of 6nly about 10 million had been made in the Senate The moral order-we kn~-w elUSIvely the conltern of the po- Athenagorasknelt at a piie-dieuI

The number per year increased from 82000 in 1956 to 181000 in 1963 The n~mber ofsuch op erations has increased particu larty among young women and more quickly among girls than married women

In a group of 100 wOlQen it was found that there were 11 abortions before the age of 20 62 before the age of 25 and 126 before the age of 30 The figshyures show that 18 per cent of the women in Hungary have an abltlrtion before the birth of their firlit child and 74 per centbe- thee a~biuoqs and often un ST JOHNS (NC)-A Clitho- fore their third child 0

together with the rising ~um-bel1 of abortions the birth rate her~ is decreasing because of a growing number of premature births and children born too frail to survive their first days of life

Teachers Volunteer For Mission Work

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Two school teachers here gave up their Summer vacations to assist in parish work in Puerto Rico

Kathleen Byrnes history teacher at Notre Dame Girls High School and Margaret Sasshy80 a kindergarten teacher at Roosevelt School are working as unpaid volun~eers in Naguabo Puerto RicO assisting two Sisshytexs of M~rcyat the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary

rheir main duty is helping prepare parish children for first Communion

Ilhe Red maneuver was seen hCJW unpopu~r it is ~o ~ecall litical paniEls Imiddot beforethe sanctuary Archbishop by observers here as a commu- ~hlS ~p~d thlS Idea thIS hIgher It added that the Church for- JohnHeenano Westminste19 nist effort to prevent a Mattis ImperatIVI We know how blred goave Sen~ Barros and ~enied his presided at the ~remony candidate Sen Salvador Allen B1a~t p~ple look when ~Jl)~n~ gratuitous affirmations about

de from IOSiIig Catholic votesm dar~s to peak of them ~urlng bullthe wealth and ~nom~c privi- the Sept 4 presidential elections a dISCUSSIon on the artlstIc as-The Communist party is support- pects of a show ing Allend~woo also denounc- Boast of Freedom ed Barros attack-=-in his rnce We know that many producshyagainstmiddot the Christian DeJll)Cratic ersj artists ~ritics and spectators candidate Sen Eduoardo Frei a boast th~t they are free from the Catholic usual norms of the moral order

During the campaign the Com- We know that unfortunatey the munist partyhasref~inedfrotn at1ra~tiottof a large part of the

productiol1 of films comes frQm

lege of the Church Itsaid that the goods that the Church po-Bsesses have always been and will continue to be at the service of our brothers and especially as~ IOsectioal the poor~st 81ld nee(hest

Wns Competton

Name Laymen Head principled and exciting portrayal lic school choir of this city won IOf DocesanBomiddotard of immodest scenes bullbull bull filJt place in a nationwide group

But WE aiso know that it is singing competition The feder- WICHITA (NC) - A layman fhie unchangeable mission of our ation of Canadian MusiC Festi- has been elected by the 19mem- ministry ~middottl affirm ~s pereIJni~I vals meetingin Calgary award- ber school board of the Wichita and absolute the moral postu- ed the GeorgeS Mathieson

diocese to serve as its chairman la1es Which sustain and defend Election of Raphael Letour- mllns trul life his dignity hiS

neau vice-president of a local goooness and his natural and construction firm and father of supernatuIal destiny the Pope

10 children was described by cOJilcluded

Trophy for the best choral singing by groups aged 19 and under to the llO-girl choir of Our Lady of Mercy Convent School here in Newfoundland

local Church officials lWl the first time a layman has been named to head a Catholic school board

Bishop Leo C Byrne apostolic administrator of Wichilp said the election was historic for the diocese and the nation The pre~ate said that the new board folloWs the suggestions of our beloved Pope John that we inshyvite our lay people to share their

points of view with us~ The board determinespoliey for Catholic schools in the 25 southshyeastern Kansas counties which make up the Wichita diocese

bull bull bulllive

Boats are coming bngng

LAR~GE

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN--_---______-__--

General Insurance

JOHN J (ONNOR 56~ (ounfy Street

Across From $t Lowrence Church

TEL Wy 4~O323

HATHAWAY

OIL CObull INC NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales ampServce

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 31751

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 11: 07.16.64

bull bull bull bull

bull bull

11 ---

THE ANCHORshyAsk Republicans Thurs July 16 1964

Include All Pupils Minor Seminaries In Education Aid Need Effective SAN FRANCISCO (NC)shyThe Republican Party was Guidance Planasked by the National Cathshy

BURLINGTON (NC) - Aolic Welfare Conference to well planned and conducted include all school-age children

as beneficiaries if it supports coun8eling program is one Federal aid for education

The request was made of the GOP platform committee by Msgr Mark J Hurley superinshytendent of schools diocese of ~tockton and Thomas Mellon San Francisco businessman and former member of the California board of education

They spoke for the NCWC na- tioool secretariat of the U S bishops in WashingtonD C Acshycompanying them was William Consedine director of the NCWCs Legal Department

Give DueRecognition

Msgr Hurley said of a GOP platform for the 1964 elections which would include all chil shydren regardless of the school they attend as recipients of any proposed Federal program to improve education

It is our conviction that such a platform will give due recogshynition of the public service ren dered by private nonprofit schools in the total educational I

effort of this country and that such a platform is essential to ) good public legislative policy

Mellon argued thalt GOP sUP~ Port last year of Federal aid for conBtruction-of academic facilj ties at colleges indicated that in- eluswn of private grade and high schools in aid proposals might be acceptable to Republicans

Same Logie Noting that 19 GOP Senato-

XDand 107 Republican members ~ the House supPorted the collegeaid bill which benefit both Public and prlvate instltutlOns Mellon oDld - same 10glC

- loinwhich applies at the colleshy

t~re shoUld be middotFederal aid is t r1 h h t

nho Pldroptaek y one ti~ w BICt ~ s ou e a POSI on u bullbull holds that if Congress does1 h d t ~vor suc al liS our conVlCshy

bon that the general welfare of the eountry and the national inshyterests dictate that all children h 11 this hind

s are equa y I epa ~couragement

Murder Scdesinan Of C th0 Ibull p

~pera IC G EORGETO N NC W ( ) - The

chief salesman of Georgetowns diocesan Catholic Stiuldard n~spaper has been shot and killed in the latest in a series 9f violent incidents that have Plagued British Guiana slnce March

The dead man Charles Migshygins was the father of 10 chil shydren The number of people who have died in the latest wave of violence now exceeds 60

Divided both politically and racially British Guiana is headshying for a showdown election in October which might result in the ouster of left-leaning Primshyier Cheddi Jagan Jagans Peoshyples Progressive Party has been supported largely by East Indishyanamp-most of the1D Hindus and Moslems-and has been opposed by the Negro population-m~ of them Catholic

~ bull

STONEHILL HOSTS SCHOOL LUNCH CONFERENCE Principals planning the School Lunch Conference for public private and parochial schools to be held at Stonehill College Aug ~n -Sept 4 are left to right Brother Herman ZaccarelIi CSC co-ordinshyator of the conference Very Rev John T Corr CSC president of StonehilI Henry Seguin supervisor of the lunch program at Feehan High Attleboro and John C Stalker director of the lunch program for the Department of Education of Massachusetts

Director Advocates Better Preparation Properly Motivated Personnel Necessary

NEW YORK (NC)-Increased eifortsto recruit and train young people for careers in nursing and other paramedical fields were urged at the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of CatholL Schoomiddot of Nursing here

The meeting was held in adshyVance of the 4Hh annual con- vention of the Catholic Hospital A~ociation of the United States and Canada About 500 nursing educators attended

F - J 1 S Jather John F anagan bull bull of th Hexecutive dlrector e osshy

tal A ted th

The NCWC ~lieves he said Jesults Run School that the question of Whether bull - For irish Workers

DUBLIN (NC) - More than 530 students were awarded dishyplomas by the Catholic Workers

training schoolrun by the Jesshymiddotts it

Ul TheerhoOl trains workers to participate in trade unions fosshytering among its students as Father Edmond Kent SJ di shyrecto of studies declared in his

on themiddot sick patient untrained personnel in the health fields aides and a hodgepodge of raw Father Flanagan said we must recruits do more than advertise and reshy-Urging better preparation of cniit - we must help set up

training centers or get t1e as~US P A-d sistance of educational institushybullbull rlest I S

M LeXlcon epers shy

NEW HOLSTEIN (NC)~ur- plus food clothing and a wonder drug calied sUlfo~ are the inshystruments of mercy that an American missionflry priest is using to bring new hope to len

ers In a mountalnous region of level applies also to the eiemen pi ssoclatloh CI e suc- ance to vocatjonal education 0 e prIes U1 e mo ern ta d d 1 cess of the Peace Corps as proof MeXICO world and intelligent spiritual

ry an seconarYlev~ thatyoung lgteople want 16 help Father Daniel CarrollSDS ageq~le~ We ~~n Pe prepared direction counseling aliltl g~id-Mellon also CItedGOP suppo-i others and said positions in ibemiddot 11M traveled some 9000 miles m to l~rticlpatem governmental ance

in ~958 for the NatlOrial Defen~ ) paralnedical field will enable the 9tateof Guanajuliiflo 150 pr~g~ms for traUllDg and reshyEdtre~lOn Act~veral of ho~ them to help people not for a miles northwest of MexiCo City tramuJg personnel p~ov1Slons in~ Iud e prvate year or two but on a permanent seeKirlg out vicUms of the dis- Fat~erFlanagan said areaWide Jubilee Rites schools and their teachers basis ease and giving them food clo plapnmg for health care ~hat COVINGTON (NC) - Mother

In a preparelt statemept He deplored what he termed a thing and medicine co~c~~trat~s only on phYSICal Msgr ~~ley ~ressClaquoitha1 tQemiddot willingness on the part Of the Efforts to aid are paying off facihtie~ does n~ reach the NCWC IS not an o~trIght Pr~ health professioJIfl to turn loose herep6rted on a visit to Salva most Vital facet m the total ~on~t of Federal aid to educa~ I torllih Fathers headquarters problem of health c~~e-the cryshytlO11 here in Wiseltgtnsin mg n~d f9r qualified personshy

to I nger do the lepers sit nel~pable and pr~perly~oti-Ion tt road c in Uncleanry g

a 19 ~ d th Id I per col une ean an e 0 e shyonies are about gone Father C 11 d IT d th

arro f sal 0 ay letr~ are very ew cases 0 f ISO a mg a t 1 1 f h patlen comp Ce y rom IS B0shy

ciety Travels Widel

LeprosY is contagious butDOtmiddot as badly as people believe YoU cahShake hands with them arid not be in any real dangeT

an~ual repor~ t~e spirit of in- One would have to have an open telligent participation in the affairs of the political economic cut or sore to CoIitnWt the dis~ease isocial and cultural societies of The treatment 1osy i- I-r whiCl)they are members LV~

the drUg sulfone As a consultant The courses since their foun-tothe Inter-American Council

dation in 1951 are attended at for Medical Assistance Father night by the student-workers Father Kent said he hopes it will be possible in the near future to havedaytime classes

Carmelite Meeting CHICAGO (NC)-More than

2000 American and Canadian membeTS of the third order secshyular of the Carmelite Fathers are expected at the organizashytiOJs 15th national conference

here starting Friday July 17 Jr Howard Rafferty OCarm natjonal director of the organshy

ization for laymen founded in the 13th century said the conshyfereIKle~s theme will be After 100 Years in America to comshymemorate the centennial of the

Caimeliteain North America

Oarroll travels widely in Guanshyajuaf(l a region criss-crossed by th S ra M d M ~- d e ler a re oUulIs1ns ISshytributing the drug middotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

J B LUMBER CO So Dartmouth and ~yannis

50 Dartmouth wy 7-9384bull bull bullHyannis 2921 bull-

Illbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

lions and agencies - MostVital Faeet

we can attempt tQ interest 4 d ill d number of Catholic religioueJUnlQr an middotsen or co eges m e- t d1 hd voca Ions durmg the next ecshyve opmg programs e sal d H d th I f d We can help them organize a e e sal e p an or (lmg

-1 d if so includes mcreased prayer for~eanlD6~ programs ~n 0 er t d 1 -tbth 1 bo to d I 1 f voca IOns goo examp e e~ a ra ryan c lDlca a eff tmiddotlit e h h they m ed an ectlve public rela IonsCI I S W IC ay ne t h th W ddt program 0 en ance e Image e can glve1 Vice an assls - f th t th d shy

vatfd to gIVe techDlcal and proshyfessional care of sick people

Papal Decorations - OMAHA (NC)-Gen Thomas S Power commander-inchief of the Strategic Air Force Comshymand and Mrs Power have reshycei~ decoratioJIfl from Pope

Paul VI The general was named

a Knight of the Grand Cross of the Qrder of st Sylvesterwhile Mrs Power was awarded the Pro Eeclesia et Pontifice medal

SERVING FI~E ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia 1094 Bay Street

TAUNTON VA 4middot8754

BROOKLAWN PHARMACY J~ph A Charptlntier

Reg Pharm TEL WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACUSHNET AVE NEW BEDFORD

of the major needs of minor seminaries a Franciscan vocashytions conference here in Wiscorishysin was told

Fr Carroll Tageson OFM a psychologist from San LuIs Rey California said counseling and personal spiritual directshyion are important ~o the minor seminarian in helping him to evaluate his seminary expeli~ ences clarify his own motives for being there and con~inuing and easing him through the inshyevitable stresses of his transshyitional status

Some 50 Franciscan vocation d-ireciors and rectors from the US Canada and England at shytended the 19th meeting of the American Franciscan Society fQr Vocations at St Francis Monastery here Theme of the meeting was Aggiornamento in Vocations

father Juniper Alwell OFM Conv of Union City NJ said that in recruitment a vocations director should have the good of the individu~1 boy foremost in his mind

Vatican Plan Whatever is good for the boy

wiVl all t~ings being ~ciual be eventually good for the diocese or religious cOmmunity he said

F-h Godf PCP er rey oage Vatican vocations expert said the Vatican hopes to double the

Anile M Berchmans Superior General is coming here to Ken- tucky from Mo~eUej France f~l the celebration of the 75th anshy

niversary of the arrival oftl)e Sisters of Divine Providence in

the Covington diocese The sis- terhoods provincial house is ill Melboure Ky

~

llendrtes

NO JOB TOO BIG

NONE TOO SMAU

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant LOWELL MASS

01852

Telephone Lowell 458-6333 and 457-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT N J~

PAWTUCKET R I PHILADELPHIA

l

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 12: 07.16.64

i

THE ANCHOR~pfoce~e of Fan River-Thurs July 16 196412 bull bull 111 bull

Jj Gin MdY~aet y omiddotIUVe oumiddotRecommends Bus Parties I I

bullbullbull middot1

Jy Most Rev Fulton 1 Sheen DD For Genuine Teenage Fun Americans are ~ong tlbe richest people on the ~ee Of the earth they give hundreds of millions of dollars a year in answerBy Rev Joseph T McGloin 8J to various appeals It is not however the man who gives the

It might be interesting to tell you about a form of most who will receive the greatest reward B depends upon tile sport known as a bus party These parties were indulged motivation of our giving To build a field house or a gymnasium in by the 80dalists of Regis High School Denver over a or science building to glorify ~s own name is not worlb as

much as giving a cup of cold water to a thirsty man in 1he Nam~period of some 10 years Once teen-agers see the genuine of Ohrist

~arefree f~n th~y can ~ave Games alternate with dances m somethmg like a bus with a little spontaneous and Our works and deetls have merit beeause they are 1IJltletl party theyre more eon unspontaneous amateur entershy with and diJne in Christ or as He put it In ifF Name- WIIF vinced than ever that the tainment thrown in from time was It tJiat God told Moses that if h over-sophisticated teen-ager IS tomiddottime Refreshments are served built Dim all Altar middotmiddot aDy tool in a poor phoney who has juSt somewhere along the line tooshy the making of It Is to protDe W (~x

ZOZ5) The reaSOn ttl becauSe no ereature ~~erio~v~c +1mmiddot ~i~~U~ir~f ~~~t goofed up Isteraquo have aDY ground for boastiniln the way to have yt It is smart to brtg along a Presence of GOd (I Cor 130) It was fUn and ev~n f camera to these things too as also to indiea1e that De saved 115 ~d It moe important some of the scenes are memor- NEW HEAD Rev Francis was noi thanks to anrthlnc we had done theyire sma r t able to say the least (We never for our OWII justiftcaUon (Tit 310C Mackin 8J Holy Cross enough to knoW tried a Polaroid but that would

42 executive assistant tothe reason for bea 14-karat rIOt) Sinfulness cannot approach the thrice-bolythe president of Boston Colshyit Each day in Riotous Success God with anything in hand which its own

their Morning The Bunny Hop or some such lege has been named rector labors have produced That is why the Lord Offering they int~llectual activity is a good of Cranwell Prep Lenox did not respert the offering which Cain me~n it when opener Then it helps to get all brought to Him Cain presented the fruits 01 they offer God the girls on one side of the hall AssIgnments the ground the product of his own labors all the i r to throw one shoe (preferably as if man llhrough his own efforts could prayers works joys lind ~ her own) into the center of the Continued from Page One redeem hinlself Abel on the contrary offered a bloody saerlfJce ferings floor The boys rush to get a will coltinue as Superintendent for it is ol)1y throu~h the1)lood of the All-Holy Lamb ttIat Our

The bus party is one at- shoe and its owner is their first of Schools sins aref-orgiven tempt at somewhat riotous fun part~er (This somewhat resem- Revelend Peter J Mullen who When it is planned from a boys bles a battle scene from LAW- was ordained December 18 1963 When It comes io making your wm you will do more ~ echool it progresses something RENCE OF ARABIA when you in Rorre and offered his First fOl your soul If you leave a little money to the Vicar of Chrfsamp like this Some sympathetic and have about 200 partiers) Solemn Mass last Sunday in 1m to spread Redemption through the world thaD U you leave a influential soul in a nearby (but In the course of time we macula1e Conception Churdl million dollars for a lawbuilCUq with your name Inscribed III DOtmiddot too nearby) girls academy evolved a new refinement on North Easton is temporarily Iltone None cent US ca~ be sure th~t he ~ aCquired SUfficient contacted to see if the girls Musical Chairs The trouble asSigned as assistant at Sacred merits for saivatlon Think Wlll then onany materfalpOssessloDswould like to have a party if with this game in its civilized Heart Church FaU River which the Good Lord luIos given to ypo Leave them In Dis we furnish the boys formis that kids can march father rowers Name for Dlii middotp~~~ve them particularly to DIs Vic

The answer to this is usually around to the music and hold Father ~owels a native of Fall 0- earth the ~oly Father Th~s YOR will do by wrltinC III yourbull ~yes sOirietimes hesitant ontoachair as they go so that River is il graduate of Coyle WU1 80metimes enthusiastic deperid they are very close to one when High Shool Taunton and at shy I ~ive devise and beqU~th to the NaUonal Office of The ing on whether or not the bus the music stops So we dr~w a tended Providence College fM Society for the Propagation of the Faith amphe sum of $ partys reputation has gone be- circle around the chairs but his clasliical training He studied This amount is to become part of the General Fund and will be fIore about 25 feet away so that Philosophy and Theology at st distributed ~ugh the HolY Father and his Congregation ol

The next step is to charter a when the music stopped there Marys Seminary Baltimore and the Propagation of the Faith FOI further details write to the bus figuring out the cost per was quite some little dash for was ordained in St Marys Cath- National Office of The Society for the Propagation of the Faithhead the cost of food en route the chairs edral raIl River by the lateshy 366 Fifth- Avenue New rork IOOOL shyand so on Then with the cost There are great numbers of Most Reverend James E Casshyin mind notice is given to those games not all very dignified sidy DD on June 15 1946

GOD LOVE YOU to bull Teenager for $5 I have just abouteligible for the trip in this case which can help such a party Father Powers was assigned as everything I could ask fcraquo Ill) please accept this gift I mightthe senior Sodalists and some- to be a riotous success The assistant at St Patricks Church otherw~se have used f~UsblyH bull bullto BW for 710 Nickelstimes a few juniors each of faster things proceed the better Falm-ou~h where he served until f~ piddng up splits and doubles for bowling season bullbull to MRCwhom pays his own way _ - It takes a lot to wear out a tie was 1lQnsfered to St Josephs

I teen-ager but these parties did for $1250 For soQle time 1 ~ve felt that I wanted to make a Seleded Adults it and it was a pretty quiet bus ChurCh Taunton as assistant on worthy contribution but as a workingmiddot widow 1117 iDcome is quite

- Other preparations include on the return middottrip But you N-ov 6 1951 1iInitecL the planning of the party itself could amosee Mary and her On April 11 1957 he was apshyand the gathering of the props Son smilemiddotat that last sleepy pointed Diocesan Director of the Send us YGar old geld aDd jewelry-the ftluables y01l _for same prizes song-books Memorare Confrat~rnity of Ohristian Doeshy longer USe but which are too Iood to uU-ow away We well reshybrin and transferred to Bishopamateur-talent showsmiddotballoons Stang High School on March 25 seD the earrlngs cold e7eilasse trames tIaampware etc IIIld we ~~~~s~~~-~~~ tourniquets Volunteers Protect 1960 the money to relieve the suffering in missfon lands Our addreBr

The SGclety for thePropagatlon 01 the Faith 166 Fifth AVeR1IIIt is also important to gather Ch h I d Father ONeill New York New York 10001a few selected adults (None of urc es In n la Father ONeill also a Fall

the kids ever called these peo- KOTTAYAM (NC)-An esti- River native was educated at pIe chaperons because they mated 10000 persons have been l~yle Our Lady of Providence always had as much or more fun mobilized to protect Catholic SeminarY and St Johns Semishy Cut out this coupOn pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to than the kids had Invariably churches in southern Indias Ke- llaiY B~ighton He received a the Most Rev Fulton ~ Sheen National Director of the Society too our bus driver a stranger rata state following a series of Master of Education Degree from for the Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York would soon join in the festivi- raids and desecrations Boston College Graduate School 1 NY or your Diocesan Director RT REV RAYMOND T ties) The volunteers have been or- of Education and has completed CONSIDINE 368 North Main Street Fall River Mass

Also on hand is a PA system ganized by the Kerala Catholic (~urses toward the attainment of and a tape-recorder with good Congress a laymens organiza- a PhD Degree in Education loud speakers and plenty of tion to stand guard over the Folllgtwing his ordination in St taped music--dance background church buildings at night Marys Cathedral Fall River on and otherwise lVIeapwhile the statesattempts lreb 2 H57 by Bishop Connolly

Since this is a Sodality proj- tomiddot firid the vandals have been he was assigned for a short time ect the trip and the party b~~~ ridiculedby a priest and by a to Immaculate Conception ParshybegIn and end with a Memo- f-ormer state minister Father M ish Fall River On April 9 1957 rare ~ George altcused the police of he wasassigned to St Thomas

Games Dances arresting scapegoat susPects More Palish Somerset as assist-Once arrived at the arena tiie ilndol falling to investigate middottIhe am

the kids are dividedmto teams lrlcidenti-properly OnJtiTl 19 1961 the Ordinary ef about 10 each five boysan4 appoi~li him Acling Superinshyfive girls They will be scOred p 1 A _I_ _ tmiddotel)dentbull)f the Di-ocesan Educa-OIl a team basis as the party pro- re amiddotte UXI larieS tional system He bas been

DiOCesM Superintendent of ~esses ~nd the winning ~~ Confirm 700 Adults 500Is since April 9 1962 WIll receIve some worthless but I lignificant prizes BUFFALO (NC) ~ The 117- H~ hal been in residence at

You need someone with enough yeaf~~d di-ocese of Buffalo has St Thomas More Rectory SOmshyeourage to direct the entire entered a new era with two aux- erset eXIept for a short period partY from a microphone as the fiiary bishops assisting the Mostmiddot in i-esid(mce in St William ether adults mingle with the Rey James A McNulty in the Parish Fall River in 1963 erowd and teams to keep the administration of the ei~ht- Father Mullen _gy organized county diocese with nearly 900- Fathe-r Mullen a native of

000 Catholics N~orth Easton graduated from The Most Rev Pius A Benin- Coyle He attended Cardinal

Plan Clamboil casa 51 titular bishop of Bur- QiConnel~ Seminary and St The annual Clamboil of St uni and the Most Rev Stanislaus Jl()hns ampmllnary in Boston and

Patricks Holy Name Society J Brzana 47 titular bishop of completed his studies at the Pall River is scheduled for Cufruta assumed their new du- NOrth American College Rome Sunday July 19 at Fall River ties f-ollowing their consecration He was ordained in Rome altt the Rod and Gun Club Servings in St Josephs cathedral Church of Christ the King by 1ril1 be at 130 and 330 and a The day after their consecra- the Most Reverend Martin ~

free frankfurter roast for youngshy tion they helped Bishop McNulty OConnor Seminary Rector OIl under 12 will be featured confirm 700 adults Dec 18 1963

BISAILLONS GARAGE

bull I 1

24-Hour Wreeker Service

653middot Washington Street Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

SHELL ~Premium Heating Oils Famoumiddot Reading HARD COAL ~~1J ~fr~

NEW ENGlAND COKE ~r~ ~1~ DADSON Oil 8URNERS f= ~~ O~

U-Hour OnB~r~erServIce Il ~ -3 Ys-

Charcoal B~iqu ~ ~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~~~

GLEN COAL amp OIL CO Inc_ 640 Pleasant S el WY 6-1271

j

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 13: 07.16.64

Af[LEBORO MISSIONER Rev Vietor Gaboury 8SC ehats with one of his altar boys in Zambales Philippine Islands The Columban missioner is the son of Mr and Mrs Albert V~ GahouJy 12 Horne Smiddottreet North Attleboro

bull Lay Apostolate Volunteers Continued from Page One

missionaries Arlenes sun-bleached browil

hair attests to her interest in tennis and she says she wouldnt mind a bit if she gets an adshyditional assignment as a gym eooher in British Honduras

To Boltota Also bull member of the Papal

Volunteers is Jeanne Olsen She will leave for three years in Boshygota Colombie Aug 23 but beshy~re reachingber destination me will undergo a four month tIainshyfig period at Catholic Univershysity Ponce Puerto Rico She wmiddotill take a concentrated course in Spanish learn sOmething of flle culture of Colombia and live with a Puerto Rican family fur 1IJe four months

I got things all mixed up Ale chuckled by joining PAVLA in New Hampshire As a result Jeannes officially sponshysored by the Manchester Diocese but since her family were lifeshylong resid~nts of st Josephs parish Fall River and have jUSt moved to Holy Tdnity pari9h Harwich this Diocese has more than a passing intere~ in her success

Jeanne a textile styling mashyjor attended Bradford Durfee College in Fall River concurshyrently taking courses at Bridgeshywater College She taught last year in Lisbon NH and will teach lower elementary grade Children at Colegio San Carlosmiddot in Bogota a Benedictine institushytion Shes the daughter of Mr and Mrs Elmer Olsen

Extension Volunteers Extension Lay Volunteers Me

Mary Jane Collins HoI y Name parish Fall River Judith Perry St Peter the Apostle Provincetown and Marguerite Desjardins St John the Baptisrt Central Village

The Extension prognlm whim WOlks withmiddot the Papal Volunshyteers is designed for lay people who wish to give a years service to the home missions Volunteen may teach nurse do catecl1etical and social work care for depenshydent children or serve in a varshyiety CYf other positions

Fall Rivers three gifls win teach Judiiflh and Marfguerite at Immaculate ConcePtion School Oklahoma City and Mary Jane at St Pius X High School Alshybuquerque

How did they learn of tlhe proshygram All heard explanatory talks by Rev John J Sullivan national director of the Extenshysion project on their college

First Retreat Continued from Page One

charge of arrangements announ- ces that all handicapped inclushyding those in wheelchamiddotirs and the blind of the Diocese and Rhode Island are welcome to the retreat If retrea-tamiddotnts need assistants they may bring tilem as guests

MiSS Faryniarz further anshynounced that transportationmiddot for thOsein middotthe Greater Fall River dirty slums do not promOte morshyarea wiilDe available at 00 a1ity So 1leChuTch is ~tally eost through cooperation of t)le interested in the social and

~ CerebTill Palsy Assoc~ation City ~oonomif situatiOn ill Latibull Han Taxi Company and sever~l America private in4i~i~ils To ~rrll1ge Leaders OfbOth progmms emshytranspoltati~ or to make r~ phesize ~the work middotof voliiri treat reservations Miss Fary- ~rfl ill ~ot easy bUt that itmiddot18

niarz may be contacted at 400 most re~arding~middot Remembe PalmerStreet FallRivet ele M~w 1929 querieS one ~ne 677~9724 bull

ShEl notes that the hBndgtieapshyped will participate in the dia shy Mission Minded logue- Mass by meails of an ofshy JEFFERSON CITY (NC) fertory procession a lay ~der The diocese Of Jefferson City and singing as well as by mekshy Mo which according to a ing the Mass responses Mr and spokesman in proportion to the Mrs Robert Cookson blind number of its clergy hasmiddot sent members of Holy Name parish more priests than any other U S Fall River will lead the singing dilo~ese to missions in Latin

Retreatants are asked to bring America and to military chapshybull box lunch Beverages and desshy l~incies is sending two more sert will be supplied by the FaU to Peru and another to the Air

campuses but Mary Jane had made up her mind W volunteer beflaquoe hearing him As New Enshygland region vice-president of the National Federation of Catihshyolic College Students she attendshyed a convention where the proshygram was explained-so when Father Sullivan came to college I had already decided

Mary Jane daughter of Mr and Mrs James H Co1lins gradshyuated ~is year from Newton College Olf the Sacred Heart where she majored in history

Marguerite is the daughter ()f

Mr and Mrs Annamiddotnd Desjardins arnd she attended Rivier College where her major was English She has to her credit a book til be issued in the Fall by bull New Hampshire pubHsher

Titled She Loveth the book grew out of a drama Marguerite srtaged at college It includes stenes emphasizing women from seven Shakespearean plays and ~nCi)1pOrates a chorus sevwal sonnets and original music the ]ati11 comppsed by a classmate

Afteq- her year in Oklahoma Marguerite plans to study for a masters degmiddotree in drama

Dark-haired Judith attended tlhe College of New Rochelle Sine is the daughter of Dr and Mrs JIhomas Perry and her father is one CYf only two doeshytors serving the Cape-fJip comshymunity of Provincetown Like Marguerite she is an English Eryajor

The three Extension volunshyteers will be i~ Chicago Aug 15 for a two week course in theolshy(lgy and trainiilg methods They wi)] have 342 companions from other parts CYf the nation and from Chicago theyll go to their mission assignments

Co-E~ Programs Although ~ Fall River volshy

unteers aregi1ls both the P A VLA and extension programs are co-ed includingmiddot married couples as wellmiddot as single meR and women Participants in both programs receive $50 a month plus room and boord

AU memberll CYf the Diocesaa quintet said they had considered entering the Peace Corps but they de-eided on the Oatholie Peace Corps where theyd be serving the Ohurch aond humanshyity

Sin~e 1961 note directors Ol the Extension progrnril over 500 volunteers have gone into parts of the country where there aTe no laymen who have had a full Catholic education In many areas they have organized proshygrams and trained local Cathoshy]ics to take over ~heyhope to do so elsewhere and 90 work themselves owl CYf a job

Prospective Papal Volunteers are told A hand-up is always better than a hand-out and as a Papal Volunteer you cen teach others to solve their ownmiddot prob- lems Only 1a)rougb education Camp~ theco1J1ltries of Latin Amer i46 solve the~r S9Cial problems Empty stomachs an4 crowded

~ yen THE SIGN OF COMPLETE

BANKING SERVICE Fall River National Bank depositors

earn quarterly intelest on savings

bull ~AFE DEPOSIT BOXES bull SAVINGS ACCOUNTS bull

INTEREST PAlO QUARTERlY ~ bull jANK8i middotMAil

bull Ctt~CKING ACCOUNTS bull MONEY ORDERS bull bE APPLIANCE LOANS

AUTO LOANS BOAT LOANS bull PERsONAL LOANS

BANK atianal

55 NORTH MAIN STREEf IL-- Mmhe Fedel Opoi Insuron CorporotjOll ~ ~ ~

bull SECURED LOANS bull MORTG~E LOANS

bull HOME-IMPROVEMENT LOANS bull COMMERCIAL LOANS ~

o bullbull BUSINESS LOAS ~

bull NIGHT DEPOSITORY bull DRIYE7)NWINOOW bull WAlKmiddot)P WINDOW

bull fJi~E nUSTOMER PAR~fNi

bull

~rN~~~R~ 196-( 3

Refuses Review Of Conviction

SAIGON (NC) - Vietnamll prime minister Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh has refused the request of 347 Catholic priests who asked that the unjust sentence passed on Maj Dang Sy be reviewed Dang Sy a Catholic was senshy

tenced to life imprisonment with hard lllbor for having allegedly murdered eight persons while obeying orders to disperse a crowd of Buddhist demonstra tors at Hue 01 May 8 1963

The priests presented their petitions on behalf of the Vietshynamese Clltholic community They analyzed the evidence Biven during the trial and asshy~rted that the case was a frameup and the verdict unshyjustified

Dang Sy was condemned bw a revolutionary court fro m which no legal appeal is per mitied Thus it functioned as the equivalent of the Supreme Court Only one member of the nineshyman bench the presiding judge had legal qualifications

Sudan Church LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Pershy

secution of the Catholic Church has taken a new turn in the Sudan according to reports reaching here FollowIng expulshysion of foreign missionaries the

- government of General Ibrahim Abboud in Khartoum is now trying to create a national church on the pattern of ~shymuniBt China

River Cerebral Pals AffUiateD F(fEee

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 14: 07.16.64

14 THE ANCHOR-Jocese of Fan River-Thurs Jury 16 196~

Jesuit Says Church Labor Battle Latin American Reds

CINCINNATI (NC)-An economist asserted here that US organized labor is standing with the Chureh in thl~

battle against the forees of communism in Latin America~

Father Clifford Besse St chairman of Xavier UniversityJ economics department paid

tensive education program 14)tribute to the AFL-CIO for promote the interests of frel~its most effective job in labor and thereby to counteract striving to achieve social the forces of communismmiddot justice in Latin America Father Besse said The program~

Speaking at the universitys a gift is financed by uniOll Summer lecture series Father funds he added J3esse said free labor and the Under the educational proshyChurch alone stand against the gram workers from the various forces of communism in the Latin American countries tak~

practical realmmiddot of housing 12-week training courses in clothing and a decent wage Washington with middota1l expenses

Who else is engaged in such paid work he asked The answer In a way said Father Besse to that question can be detershy it can be said that a key goal mined by obServing who middotthe in our Latin American policy is number one targets of the comshy to save Latin America from munists in Latin America are communism and national social today-the Church and free ism through the instrumentalit labor of a free labor movement

Depending on the relative strength of these two groups communism will either fail or Holy See Tunisici engulf all of Latin America he added Sign Accord

Invests Own Funds VATICAN CITY (NC) TheFather Besse explainedmiddot that Holy See and Tunisia haveAmerican labor is playingmiddot im reached an agreementmiddot ensuriniiactive role middotin conjunction with the Church freedom of action inthe State Departmentbqtit by that Moslem country and theinducing U Scapital to flow transfer of many church buildshyintOmiddot Latin America and in the ings and properties to the Tunishywork of lending technical a~ist~ sian government without comshyance

pensationHe pointed out that a considshy Among the terms of the agree_erable number ot U Sambas- ment it was revealed in an aushysadors and pther rep~esentat~vel thoritative articlemiddot publishedmiddotmiddot inol State to Latin American coun the Vatican City daily VOssershytries are men who held adminsshy vatore Romano -it hasmiddot beetltriitive positionsmiddot In the AFt-eI9 agreed that the present archdioshylabor organizations cese of Carthage will be reducerlI would not be overstating tomiddot the status of the independentthe pointmiddot he added to say prelature of Tunis A Vatican

th~t much of the practic~ll imshy press office bulletin termed -thep1ementation of u S policy in agreement a modus vivendiLatin America todayis adminshyistered by U S organized l~bor In the accompanying article

In the Vatican City daily ashyIn addition to vigorous efforts to persuade firoms to invest pro modus vivendi was described diktive capital in Latin America as a diplomatic international labor itself is investing its middotovvn c6nventioIiwhich does middotnot conshyfunds in housing projeCts for stitute a complete or wholly workers satisfactory settlement ofmiddot tbemiddot

various questions concermiddotning re Sound Investments lations between the Chi1rch and

These investments are reshy state in a given countrygarded as sound and prOductive Gives Assuranceand are in no way regarded as bull gift Father Besse said In the absence of such a setshy

Labor is conducting an ex- tlement evidently immatwe or not yet possible the modus vivendi aims at ensuring at leaJPl certain conditions indispensable for the life of the Church and for its relations with state aushythorities and organizations

This modus vivendi is the fruit of a long period of negotions bE~shytween the Holy See and Tunisiii resulting in part from the wholesale migration of Itaiian and French settlers from Tunisia after it passed from French conshytrol to the status of all independshyent country in 1959

Bishop Ahr Praises Romanian Catholics

TRENTON (NC)-Father Ilie Crihalmean pastor of 511 Georges church Canton Ohio was elected president at the 16th annual Association ofmiddot Roshymanian Catholics of Amerila convention here in New Jersemiddoty

Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton lauded the courage I)f bishops priests and faithful l)f the Byzantine Rite Ghurch in Romania in the face of pe~secushytion imposed by the Romanian communist regime since f948

Bymiddot their ~uit~ you shlilll know them Bishop Ahr said

PROMOTED Very Rev in his sermon at the Solemn Edward Thadd~us native of Concelepration of Divine -LitshyBoston and PrefeGt Aposto urgy (Mass) in St BasHs licia SokotomiddotNiger-ia sinCe eh~tc~Inthe hOIl1 of tri~ 1954middotmiddothmiddotmiddotmiddot b dB h they kept the Falthmiddotandmiddotbymiddotthelr

as een name l~ op example entouragelt their flock ()f thIS newly erected AfrlCaIt tomiddot hold fast to the unitymiddotlJf Diocese Peter

IATHER CONVERT SJ

Jesuit Missioner middotPraises Alaskan Eskimos Indians

FAIRBANKS (NC)-A charshytered bush plane landed at the small middotvillage of Kaltag on the lower Yukon river last Novemshyber

It single passenger was a higl-ranking official of the Deshypartment of Interior whQ had come from Washington DC to the lndian community to- consult WiUI a white man about pressing prohlems of Alaskas 43000 Esshykimcgts Indians and Aleuts

middotTle gnvernment middotoffic i a1 souht out Father Julesmiddot MI Convert SJ French-bornJesshyuit who last May was named superior of Alaskas far-flung Jesllit missionaries

Speaks Troth The Arctic-toughened priest

wh( has spent 22 years with Awkas wilderness-dwelling Esshykimos and Indians is rapidly emeurorging as Alaskas most eioshyquentand outspoken defender ot 1he states nativesmiddot andmiddot their heritagemiddot

A strongmiddot advocate of the prOshyposed Domestic Service Cmiddotorps Father Convert is executive seCshyretary of Alaskas SocioECoshynomic Advisory Committee It is leaded jointly by CathQiic Bishop Francis D Gleeson SJ and Episcopal Bishop William Gordon both of Fairbanks It includes all Catholic and Episcoshypalian missionaries of interior and Arctic Alaska in its memshyberlhip

Acknowledgement throughout the state that things are not goshying well for Alaskas natives in the transition from their primishytiVeuro way of life to the white mans civilization can bemiddot traced in part to Father Convertmiddot beshycamlEi he speaks the 1lruth as he seell it

Stone Age to Atomic HI have seen this whole a~ea

pas from what could righUybe called a Stone Age way of life to that of the Atomic Age the JesJit told state officials severai yeaJS ago I have also witnessed the hurts and damage caused by too rapid an evolutionmiddot in the socal and economic fields

A tall handsome man who beles his more than 50 years Father Convert joined the Jesshyuiu in 1929 While in the French Army he served in Syria teac~shying at the University Beiru~~pd traj ning with the French Forshyeign Legion He reached themiddot Unted States in 1937 ala comshypleted his Jesuit training at Alna (Calif) College

Drove Dogteam For ~ears after his a~ival In

1942 Father Convert drove a dogteam in serving his parishes ~

Since being stationeji at Kaltag he has flown his own bushplane in ~rripg for the spiritual needs Gi iis native floW -

CHUCK ROAST First Nationals famous

meh-in-your-mouth quality BT~37c beefmiddot- fuD of flavor

U SGrade A - 5 to 8 lB Avg - Plump and Meaty

TURKEYS BELTSVILLE 39c

OVEN READY LB

BING - large Size - Red Ripe Beauties

CHERRIES -~~~ 59c

Red Ripe - Fun of Juice

Watermelons u

HAWAIIAN - Always light and Refreshing

Dole Pineapple Juice 3 I ~~SOE $100

Apple Prune Apple Grape Orange Apricot Nectar Apricot Nedar

Winter Hill Juices middot3 iA~s 79c

RED - Rich Tropical Blend

3IQT40Z $1~OO CANSHawaiian Punch

RNAST - Tart end Refreshing

l uice Drink Pineappl~- GrapefrUIt

For Your F~vorit Punch 1PT8cnmiddot35cGrape luice FINAST lOT

FROZEN - in the Handy 6-Pedt

6 60E 79c CANSmiddotMinule Maid ~~

Lmon-Grape Lemonpineapple PineapplRaspberry Pineepplll-Strawberry

Libby Drinks FroOI 5 ~AO~S 49c

FROZEN - A Cootlng Thirst-Quencher 6 enYOR GARDEN Imiddot 4 CANSGrape ulce l2 ox CAN 34c

FROZEN - Red 6 OJ

CANSHawaiianPunch 4 FI RST NATIONAL- STORES

Same L~ Slf~HrVl~ rricu In~ St~ Th vr~~ MIt~fie Right fl lmlt QueIIIlI

~~--------------

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 15: 07.16.64

Forecast 20000 At Liturgy Week Annual Meeting

ST LOUIS (NC) - Adshyvance registrations already nearing 1600 indicate the 1964 Liturgical Week to be held here starting Monday Aug 24 will be the largest such gathshyering since they were organized 25 years ago Father David Thomas said

The advance registration is running almost three times greater than for any previous Liturgical Week Father Thomas local vice-president declared He forecast a total registration of about 20000 persons for the four-day convention Last years Philadelphia convention drew some 13000

Widespread interest in Cathshyolic liturgy reforms which will go into effect in the United States later this year was credshyited by Father Thomas for Ule record expectations

Theme for the week The Challenge of the Council Pershyson Parish World was inshyspired by the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy enacted by the Second Vatican Council Father Thomas said

Changes in Worshilt

A number Qj convention events at Kiel AUditorium and downtown hotels will demonshystrate how the new changes in Catholic worship will be carried out in parishes throughout the nation Workshops exhibits general sessions and actual wor- ship services will help to show these reforms and explain theit purpose Father Thomas said

Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St Louis is host to the 1964 proshygram and Auxiliary Bishop George 1 Gottwald is the local chairman The sponsor of the week is the national Liturgical Conference which has headquar_ ters in Washington D C

Conversion Issue Stirs Israel

JmiddotERUSALEM (NC) - Strong support has been given in Isshyraels parliament for a bill introshyduced by the minister of justice that would prohibit use of dishyrect persuasion on minors to convert them to another reli shygion and would require conshysent of both parents to convershysion of minors

Some speakers took the posishytion that the bill was only a first step that did not go far enough to solve the problem of missionshyary activity in Israel

Avraham Shaki of the Nationshyal Religious party and Yaakov Katz of the Ultra Orthodox Workers party urged an outshyright ban on admission of any child to an institution in which instruction in another religion is given

Asks Court Approval Shaki contended that convershy

sions should not be ailowed even with parental consent but ~hould require court approval as well

Mrs Esther Raziel-Naor of the Nationalist party wanted an adoption law that prevents chil shydren from being ensnared by +he nets that are being cast for their souls The danger of the missions lay not in conversion alone she said but in the alien values being instilled in chil shydrens hearts

CarWash Members of St Josephs parish

baseball team Fall River will sponsor a car wash forn 10 to 3 Saturday July 18 in the schoolshyyard Proceeds will benefit the athletic equipment fund 4lff tbe 1eam

CHURCH IN THE HALFROUND Recently completeltHn the Diocese of Covington Ky is this ultra-modern ChuIch of St Catherine of Siena at Fort Thomas Statue of the patron saint surmounts the entrance NC Ph oto

THE ANCHOR - 15 Thurs July 16 1964

Prelate Advises PatienceTrust In Gods Church

MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal counseled Catholics here to be patient while the Church studies the different views on modern medical disshycoveries for family planning

Speaking to members of the Christian Family Movement the Cardinal said he did not intend to pronounce on such issues

The natural characteristics of marriage are not always easy to determine and we all know there is a great deal of discusshysion today on matters which pertain to the most intimate asshypects of family life

I am not going to argue for any of the different views on this matter because this is II

question for the Church as a whole to decide It is not a mat ter which can be judged by even the hierarchy of the COUll

middottry and certainly not by an indi- vidual bishop and much l~ss by an individual prieSt the Car dinal said

Teaches Truth I do ask you to be patient

The Churchs instinct in these matters of liVing we can nowOffer Sea View Tour of Homes Tuesday see has preceded often by censhyturies the findings of socioloshy

Wianno Residences Open to Visitors ~

gists and this instinct of expeshyrience about human nature wheft

Summer visitors parishioners Mr and Mrs Joseph Burke is e~iljnged ljving room Is probshy correlated with the inquiries of and other members of the Dioshy located on Seaview Avenue Wi- ably typical of the Twin Shops theologians and the teachings of cese have their calendars starred anno A spacious hallway and for which it was named our Faith and then defined and fur Tuesday July 21 when a green striped satin regency sofa Salt-Water Pool formalized by a council or bull sea View Tour of Homes -will beckon us onward to a colorful A salt-water swimming pool pope speaking as a universa-l be spOnSored from 11 to 4 by living room housing a 15th censhy if featured at the new home of teacher is a statement about Our Lady of the Assumption tury Madonna note tour organshy Mr and Mrs Joseph Spenlinshy man and his nature which we parish Osterville izers A magnificent dining hauer Jr If youre interested know to be true and we mug

S eve n outstanding Wianno room overlooks Nantucket Sound in seeing how an old home can Jive by truth he continued houses will be open to visitors and the gardens will also be be converted into a background 1ft saying this I am not arshyand refreshments will be served open to visitors of light and proportion how guing for any particular point at Our Lady of the Assumption On Eel River Road is the Coshy furniture can be made livable by of view nor disclosing what I hall from 2 to 5 with the award lonial home of Mr and Mrs artistic craftsmen in refinishing personally believe about this of prizes to take place at 430 Edmund Mauro A terrace garshy if you are interested in creative maiter except to counsel pashy

Organizers of the tour note den is enclosed by a picket innovations such as a venetian tience and confidence in God that it should prove a highlight fence and living and dining sconces in the kitchen a wood Church Cardinal Leger de of any Cape Cod vacation and rooms capture the beautiful appearing refrigerator and anmiddot clared state that tickets will be avail shy sunset view over the Eel River ultra family room then youable Tuesday at the homes to Also on Eel River is Twin should not miss this fascinatingbe visited and -at the church Ships the home of Mr and Mrs project just completed say One Mass in Latin

Twin Ships John P Birmingham where tour organizers SYDNEY (NC) - Despite the First on the list of homes is precise flower gardens and spashy Climaxing the tour will be a decision of the Australian bishshythat of Mr and Mrs Richard cious lawns frame a view of visit to The Foy House of Mr ops to permit a wide usage of Cain Wianno Avenue Ostershy river and ocean This beautiful and Mrs John Largay which English in the celebration of ville A Barnstable Colonial estate was originally planned offers the essence of seaside the Mass each parochial church house it-has a gambrel roof and by a naval officer and the ship living French doors open onto will have one Mass every Sunshyis surrounded by an old-fashshy Sancta Maria in the cathedral rolling lawns and finally the sea day in Latin it was announced ioned garden Water colors view here throughout the house were A large committee is responsishypainted by Mrs Cain and much German Translation ble for tour arrangements of the furniture refinishing and headed by Mrs Joseph E Burke AnLEBOROSOf Bible Under Wayall the braided rugs used in the and Mrs Bernard M OKeeffe Leading Garden Centerinterior decor are her work STUTTGART (NC) -A joint as co-chairmen shy

Crystal Tower the home of German language translation of CONLON Mr and Mrs Felix Mirando is the Bible supported by the Cathshysecond on the list of homes Its olic bishops of Germany Ausshy DONNELLYCAPE CODSgardens are its striking feature tria and the German-speakjng South Main amp Wall Sts highlighted by wildwood walks section of Switzerland is now LARGEST BANK to Crystal Lake and an exquisite under way here ATTLEBORO rose garden In announcing the project Dr PAYS CA 2-0234A vine-covered porch is also Otto Knoch director of the worthy of note and the dining Catholic Bible Institute here room mantle holds a handshy said that there had been some painted tray over 250 years old exploration of the feasibility of 4J296

Wyndecote belonging to making the new version acceptshy FAIRHAVEN Interest Compoundedand

Brother Continues Protestants able to both Catholics and LUMBERpayable quarterly on our

This was not found to be posshy Notice Savings Plan COMPANYAs University Head sible at present but many of the most important texts will useAUSTIN (NC)-Brother Rayshy Bass River anguage familiar to Protesshy Complete linemond Fleck CSC after two tants A joint version is foreseenterms as president of St Edshy Savings Bank Building Materials in the future Dr Knoch asshyserted

wards University here in Texas bull SOUTH YARMOUTI

on a continuing bamiddotsis has been reaSsigned to the office

bull SPIING ST FAIRHAVEN Brother John Baptist Titzer

bull DENNIS PORT bull HYANNIS

CSC provincial of the Southshy WYman 3-2611 west Province fYl the Brothers

of Holy Cr066 said Brother

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPINC PlAZAOFFICIAL WORLDS FAIR

Fleck has b~n relieved of his THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTSTRAVEL CENTERformer additional duties as reshy ANt OF PERPETUAL ADORAnON ligious superior of the communshy IIIwlle ItlIer_ IalIles )I til Indllll a lIee~TAUNTON TRAVEL

ttlillas life at lave Maratian anti raparatl II tllat s~ity to devote full time to the presidency ~I=S lI=ict1l=~~ tatIIe ldu~tlOll at atII retr Brother Romard -13arthe1

BUREAU r fllrtller lnformatiOl apply IIOne Church Green

CCC h8$ been Darned reUgioUl Sisters of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven MassTaunton Y1 _824middot7511aJperiol

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 16: 07.16.64

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~Thurs July 16 H64

Says Hospital Employees Have Right to Negotiate

By Msgr George G Higgins A prominent MD recently warned that the unionizshy

ation of hospital employees is a threat to the continued progress of American hospitals Speaking at the opening session of the 17th annual meeting of the Conference of Catholic Schools of Nursing

employees it seems to me areDr John C Leonard Direcshy entitled to negotiate an agreeshytor of Medical Education at mentmiddot with their employersshythe Hartford (Conn) Hosshy preferably I might add through pital maintained that the presshy a bona fide union of their own ent hospital atmosphere of high choice They also have a right morale wit h to ask that this agreement be the patient as put in writing so that there will the constant foshy be no reasonable doubt as to its eus of service meaning and scope In return is likely to disshy they can be expected to fore~o

appear or will the right to strike be seriously imshy Wages Are Costs paired if hosshy The usual argument against pitals are subshy collective bargaining for hogtshyjected to unionshy pital employees is that hospitals ization whereby as non-profit institutions are Iii sense of reshy faced with peculiar financial sPOnsibility disshy problems which differ in kind appears in the from the financial problems of face of demands for selfish () profit-making institutions rights and privileges While it is true of course

A similar warning against the that hospitals are faced witl unionization of hospital employshy special financial problems I ees is going the rounds these do not see the relevance of these days in the form of a 28-point problems to the question of mimeographed memshy written versus non-written colshyorandum drafted by the Secreshy lective bargaining contract tary of Hospitals in a Midwestshy Wages are costs which must be ern diocese considered among the necessary

T his avowedly anti-union operating expenses of a hospita l memorandum which warns its They are not shares of profits readers to plan as though the hence the non-profit character worst could occur and advises of hospitals or similar institushytitem it could happen here tions is an irrelevant factor was presumably meant for pri shy Nor is the uncertainty of hosshyvate circulation among hospitall pital income a determining facmiddotmiddot administrators tor Corporations and other busshy

Inevitably however it has iness firms which are run for come to the attention of a numshy profit also have uncertain in-shyber of interested labor leaders comes Income prospects ma~r

and needless to add has disshy and should often be considered turbed them no end They rightshy in negotiating wages ly object not only to the subshy But doubts in this regard ar~~

stance of the document but also no reason to refuse a written to its consistently anti-union and stable wage agreement II rhetoric adjustments need to be mad~

Employees Committee during the term of the collectiv( The memorandum in question bargaining contract because oE

advises hospital administrators insufficient income procedure who are faced with an organizshy for making such adjustments ing drive among their employees should be part of the mutuallJ -to settle for a so-called employshy agreed upon contract ees committee as the lesser of Contract for Supplies two evils The purpose of such It should be pointed out in a committee it points out is to this connection that no othel

-present the employees problems cost factor in the operation of ll

grievances or suggestion hospital is contingent upon in- But the memorandum hastens come Medical supplies fuel

flO add with underscoring for drugs appliances insurance and emphasis that it is not a conshy the like must be bought and paid sulting committee and definite for at the going rate and freshyly it neither renders decisions quently the hospital must sign nor concurs in them written agreements with the

The memorandum concludes suppliers of these goods and sershy8S follows Our employees have vices Why should hospital emshytheir rights which we are ployees be put in a less advanshyobliged to respect But labor tageous position than the seller unions and social justice are of these supplies and impersonal Dot synonymous Social justice services may be had without unions Our It is pertinent to note in conshyresponsibility is not to unionize clusion that many other nonshybut to practice social justice profit organizations both Cathshytowards our employees olic and non-sectarian have

Written Agreement long since negotiated written Whether or not social justice collective bargaining contracts

requires the unionization of hosshy with their employees Catholic pital employees is a case which cemeteries are a good case ill in my judgement cannot be anshy point swered across the board with an As a matter of fact there Is llnqualified yes or no even one Chancery office ill

But prescinding from this which the clerical employees point for present purposes I with the encouragement and

would argue that a so-called blessing of the Archbishop beshyemployees committee of the long to a bona fide union and type referred to above is really have signed a written contract 110thing more than a company with their employer union And a company union in my judgment leaves much to o Joint Meetingbe desired from the point ()f KURESEONG (NC)-A joint9iew of social justice Catholic-Protestant meeting on

At the very least hospital Christian social action problems was held at St Marys Institute

Abbot Heads College here in India operated by the BELMONT (NC) - Abbott Jesuit Fathers The 15-man

Walter A Coggin DSB of Protestant delegation was led Belmont Abbey will take over by Prof Clifford J Hindley of the duties of president of Belshy Serampore College and Kenyon mont Abbey College here in E Wright of the Calcutta EcushyNorth Carolina for a year beginshy menical Social and Industrial InshyDing Aug 1 8titute

STAINLESS STEEL This sixmiddotfoot four-inch high stainshyles~ steel statue of the Jesuit missionary and explorer Fr Jacques Marquette has been pre3ented to J~hn Carroll University conducted by the Jesuit Fathers in Cleveland Ohio NC Photo

CCltholic Students GE~t CSF Aid

C~ltholic school students have participated in all facets of Fall Rivers Citizens Scholarshyship Foundation notedDr Irvshying A Fradkin founder of the nationally famous organization in a report on the seventh annushyal seholarship awards proglam

HE noted that Catholic stushydent have aided in the clerical work necessary to keep the foun lation functioning and that Catholic schools and churches in aleas throughout the country where the program has been inshytroduced have been outstanding in their efforts to aid deserving young men and women

At one time he said inquiries to the Fall River national headshyquaeers of the CSF reached Ii

total of 5000 weekly and stushydent1 from area schools were inshyvalmible in their assistance to the clerical staff

Currently receiving scholarshyship aid from the foundation are 33 graduates of Fall River Cathshyolic ~gh schools Twenty-three students are attending Catholic colleges and schools of nursing

Assert Racial Bias HUImiddotts All Children

WASHINGTON (NC) - Racshyial discrimination hurts white childlen as well as Negro chil shydren and white parents must taketeps to protect their chil shydren from its evil influence

This stand was taken by one of 10 commissions which diampshycussed the rights of children i various areas during the 29th national convention sponsored by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfale Conference

The commission on the right of th1~ child to emotional and physieal well being was the one which stressed the duty of white parens to keep their children from being influenced by prejshyudice Special efforts along this line are needed in the largely all-white suburbs where chil shydren have little or no contact with members of minorit groupli the group said

Super-Right Quality

RIB Roast 3rd to 6th Rib

REG TRIM 59~ (OVIN RIADY 18 6)

Freh Tender Meaty

Chicken ~

Quarters LEGOI BREAST 33~

JANI PARKER LARGII LII Ol REGUlARlY 5c

Angel Food RING 39~

SAve 20 lach JANI PARKER WorlmiddotINCH 1 LI IOl RIG 69c

Blueberry Pbull18 5SCSAVI

IAmiddot 14c

ytlOW AND IIIRM

Bananas Pr__ III fill If IlIrI Sot Mr I

It ALL AM _til III IMI _ 111 ticbull

Your dreams PLAID ST1AMPS come true with 11

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 17: 07.16.64

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1HE AMCftOR Diocese of Fan Irwer-Thurs july 16 )964 17

l~ ~)

OFF TO CATHOLIC BOYS DAY CAMP

Boys 7 to 14 enjoy a day of wimming - Hiking - Sports - Artcraft

in the beautiful countryside of Adamsville

Leave by bus every morning at 8-Return every afternoon at 430

Bring Your Own Lunch Contact Catholic Boysmiddot Camp Milk and Cookies Provided 410 Highland Avenue Fall River

Tuition $750 per week P O Box 1470 - Tel 676-8943 __ -This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals

and Business Concerns 11 Greater Fall River

Ann Dale Products Inc International Ladies R A McWhirr Company Brady Electric Supply Co Garment Workers Union Plymouth Printing Co Inc Cascade Drug Co Sobiloff Brothers

MacKenzie amp Winslow IncEnterprise Brewing Co Sterling Beverages Inc Mason Furniture Showrooms Gold Medal Bread Textile Workers

Globe Manufacturing Co Gerald E McNally Contractor Union of America AFLmiddotCIO Hutchinson Oil Co George R Montie Plumber Yellow Cab Company _ _ _ _ ___

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 18: 07.16.64

18 rHE ANCHORshyThurs July 16 1964

Bible Teaching Continued from Page One

eut that Pope Pius XII in the encyclical Divino Afflante Spir_ itu called it the supreme norm of interpretation

Cardinal Bea made his points in Civilta Cattolica a fortnightl review of the Rome province of the Society of Jesus His article dealt principally with the Gosshypels of SS Matthew Mark and Luke

He warned against trying to reconcile differences among the Gospels by seeking to extract their essential religious elements and regarding the rest as mere dressing Aside from the pracshytical difficulties of attempting such distinctions he said there would be a risk of abandoning facts and particulars that might be very important simply beshycause the exegete momentarily does not see their connection with faith and morals or with the essential points of the faith

Primitive Passages He also warned against giving

more theological weight to Bibshylical passages which scientific criticism indicates are more primitive The more primitive passages deal more directly with events or with the words of Christ while the less primitive passages are explanation furshynished by the Evangelists for a particular public

Such distinctions said the carshydinal must not give rise to confusion as if what is less primitive had less theological value were less the Word of God less genuine and less faithful to the tliought of Jesus This might perhaps be said by those who consider the Gospels purely from the humanshyistic-historical point of view not by those who consider them as the inspired Word of God

Spirit of God Cardinal Bea began his article

by pointing out that while the Gospels are inspired by God the human who is used by the Holy Ghost as His instrument still makes use of all his facultiesshyef intellect of imagination and of will-no less than any other human author

Cardinal Bea said the special influence of the Holy Ghost leads the author to write preshyeisely what the Spirit of God wants and in the manner He wants

After pointing out that the Evangelists gave varying acshycounts of the life of Christ beshycause of their human differences and their different aims Carshydinal Bea commented

We may even add a word reshygarding the advantages of these differences If the Apostles had not offered usmiddot a preaching which varied in the aspects it presented to us in its emphasis and its manner of presentation we might wonder why Jesus chose 12 of them and 12 of such yarying temperaments as they reveal themselves in the Gospels

It is clear instead that Jesus desired that the infinite light of His life and His doctrine filtershying through the life character and preaching of the Apostles should be divided like sunlight in a prism into so many colors of the spectrum and should reshyveal itself as fully as possible in its abundance and its riches

Reparation Day TRICHUR (NC) -A day of

reparation for a recent series of clturch desecrations in Kerala was observed here in Indias largest diocese Following a reshyquest by Bishop George Alapatt of Trichur shops owned by Catholics and Church schools remained closed throughout the diocese while reparation services were held in churches along with processio1li and mee~

FATHER LE MAY FATHER BLANCHET

La Salette Assignments Continued from Page One studies at Fribourg Switzershy

Regional Superior and Viceshy land Provincial He now resides at Following ordination in 1946the General House in Rome the new secretary general reshy

Father LeMay mained in Europe and obtainedFather LeMay superior of the a Doctorate of Sacred Theology

La Salette Major Seminary AtshyUeboro for the past six year Returning to the United States is the son of Adelard LeMay and in 1951 Father LeMay taught the late Mrs LeMay of Manshy moral theology at the La Salette chester N H He was educate Serr inary Attleboro and was at the minor seminary Enfield appointed superior in 1958 the major seminary in Attlebow Flither LeMay will report to and completed his theological Rome Aug 10

Privileged Coml1nunications Case Reaches U S Court of Appeals

WATERLOO (NC)-The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit here in Iowa has been asked to reverse a lower couril ruling that statements to SL

Church tribunal are privilegecil communications not subject tel an action for defamation

Eberhard F Cimijotti hali asked the appeals court to reshyview a June 3 decision by a U S district court dismissing his suit against his former wife Lauretta N Cimijotti and two other women for allegedly conshyspiring to damage hiin through statements to a Church tribunal

Mrs Cimijotti had gone before the tribunal for permission to file a civil action of separatioll and the two other women apshypeared as witnesses in support of her testimony

In dismissing Cimijottis 9Uit last month District Court Judge William C Hanson held that

testhmony before a Church tri shybuna falls within the category of a legally privileged communishycation as do matters told to a priest by a penitent in the conshyfessional

IClites First Amendment Judge Hanson bll6ed his rulshy

ing both on common law and the religous Uberty guarantees of the First Amendment f9 the Cons ~itution

He said that to allow slander motions to be based solely upon statements made to the Church before its recognized officials and under its disciplines and regulations would be a violation of th~ First Amendment

A person must be free to say anyth ing and everything to his Church at least so long as it ia said ill a recognized and required proceltiing of the religion and t a re(raquognized official Olf the reshyligion he held

BIIING

Advance Test Case on Legality Of Tax Exemptions for Churches

BALTIMORE (NC) -Parties to a test case on the constitushytionality of tax exemptions for church and rectory property have been given until Septemshyber to file briefs

Judge Wilson K Barnes took this action after a day-long hearing on the pros and cons of tax exemption for church propshyerty

The suit filed last October was brought by Mrs Madalyn Murray widely publicized Balti shymore atheist against city and state taxing officials Religious groups including the archdioshycese of Baltimore have also entered the case

Mrs Murray was represented at the hearing by attorney Leonard J Kerpelman who conshytended that the exemption for church property is an unconsti shy

tutional establishment of reUshygion He said the exemption reshysults in loss of $78 million yearly in potential tax revenueli in Baltimore alone

Turns Down Appeal Francis X Gallagher lawyer

for the Baltomore archdiocese said the state has a right to choose whom it will and will not tax In exempting church property on a non-discriminashytory basis it is exercising this right he said

The Rhode Island Supreme Court in 1961 upheld the consti shytutionality of exempting church property from taxation and the U S Supreme Court turned down an appeal from its ruling for want of a substantial Federal question

A similar test case is now pending in Illinois

IRAN MEET SISTER POUILART IN IRAN (ancient Persia) the city of ISFAHAN is famous for its mosques its bazaar and the Persian carpets it produces Its

atmosphere is exotic old-world Moslem-And then shockingly you meet Sister Pouilart bull bull bull Wiry and vivacious with exhaustion in her eyes French born Sister Pouilan loves the sick The reason it you ask fa simple Our Lord loved them she says bull bull bull She tells you how you can help the sick She shows you long lines of ragged halfshystarved youngsters waiting ia the

~ heat outdoors for medicines Innocushy~ D Hoi PI MWW1f AU lations sometimes food bull You go

lor Ib 0 CIJlmb with her into an old building the property of the Sisters of Charity which she hopes to eonven Into a clinio for expectant mothers With vel1 mtle money ahe says we oan save hundreds of lives just by eivin Cpectshyant mothers the proper eare We ean save the inf~ i too U the best way to show Moslems that Christians love them bullbullbull Will you help Sister Pouilartl No ritt ($1 $2 $5 $11) II too small-but Sr Pouilart needs large rifts too A sanital1 bathroom for Instanoe will eost $250 The entire elinie an Ilxcellent memorial for a loved one will eost $2800 bull bull U hard to refuse Sister PouUart She hu exhaustion In her elea bullbullbull Please do au TOO ean

A LOT FOR ALlTILE WHAT IN THE WORLD can you get forIT In New York

Chicago San Francisco $1 wont buy much In IRAN (only 18 hours from New York by air) however l-a-day supports a priest or Sister bull If you cant go to the missions yourself you

ean adopt a missionary for a day a week ($7) a month ($301 Youll share personally in the lood h (or she does Write te now

fiSSION MUSTS [] NATIVR PltIESTS The boy ill INDIA lets sal whe

wantsmiddot te 1Ht a priest Ia aD exeellent inYestment $IM a year ($SOO altogether) pays the _t of b edueaUoa Would TOD like ~ IPOnllor

~ MASS STIPENDS The otferin TCMI make whe Y811 uk bull mlsllional1 pest te llelebrateMus for Tour intenshytion laUteraOT a Godse send _ TOur Mus btteashytI_

[] CHAPEL ARTICLES Mission ehapels eo be antU theyre properll equipped Why not ri a Mus

Kit ($100) aD Allar ($15) Vestments ($50) bull Chalice ($tO) or bull Sanctual1 Bell ($5) ta Itonor bull trleDdf Well ten Toa where h Deeded

WHEN ST CLEMENT HOFBAUER ONCIl ASKED for help M feed orphans in b care an atheist spat in his face That was for me tbe lIint said quietly Now live me somethinl for my orphansmiddot bull $l-a-month gives you membership ia our ORPHANS BREAD olub fIO-a-month feeds and clothes all orphan

Dear MOllsipOi ayaDI

nelotet raquoIe_ ftncI ~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull fer bullbull ee

Name - Street - CIt bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ZOB8 bullbullbullbullbullbull state bullbullbullbullbullbullbull

ltt12ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN Preident

Msg Jo T -rCIII Natl Sec eI all COftllllalllcatloll1 to

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION no Mad_ AYe at 42ac1 St New Yo N Y 10017

1~~5~IIN ---

YOUR COIIPONS

You alway do better at your

Stop amp Shop

you reeeived in lie mallfroJn Stop t Shop

START YOUR SIT OF 6 FREE BEVE~IAGE LASSES

1 Glass free each week with coupon and $5 purchase

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 19: 07.16.64

Training Camps Bustling Pro Elevens Invade N E

By Jack Kineavy The sports significance Of early July has broadened

yet lessened in the past few years Before the expansion of the major leagues and the consequent lengthening of the schedule baseballs respective leaders on July 4th were acknowledged the teams desshytined to cop the pennant Strangely enough this trashyditional assessment bore up more otten than DOt In recent year5 however early July has become noted for the start of the professional football trainshytng season )ootball in the middle of Sumshyme used to have little Ol

ultl appeal for the aportsmindshyed American 1crtainly nothshying comparable to baseballs Spring drills Then came the impact of pro-footbalI via television

Now youll begin to find the sports pages across the nation heralding the advent of grid camps The progress of highlyshytouted All-Americans will be duly chronicled The same obshyscure figures from some equally obscure school will quietly move on the scene and be usually proves to be tire guy who is in there on opening day

Two of the middotNFLs brawny set are using N E college faeil shyities for their pre-season workshyouts The Giants are at Fairfieldmiddot University Fairfield Conn and the Pittsburgh Steelers are scheduled to check into South Kingston R I home of the University of Rhode Island some time this week

Pats At Andover The Boston Patriots Eastern

Division champions of the ranshykUy grOwing American FootbiR League will again train at

I Andover Academy Andover 1labbergasted bagtoter a $1000 Mass New England fans Im tip (first prize was only $4200) ll1re will endeavor to follow ~ony knoWli what its like to rlosely the fortunes of Jack need a dollar As a 15-year old (~ncannon former B C signaI- eacMie in ~ san Francisco city calleras h~strives for the No tourney be was outfitted with 1 spot with the Philadelphia his first pair of golf sp~es by Eas~ Jack was forced out of Mrs~ v~ (Kens mother) the rookie game at Buffalo a Who eouldnt bear to ~ Tony couple of weeks ago with a re- eompeting in sneakers~ curriDg hamstring pulL

10~=-~~~~~ Open Convention ~ans=rowemiddotWithPrayer the also expanding Atlantic $AN FRANCISCO (NC) shyCoMt League The Roller squad Archbishop Joseph T McGuckeJl opened drills in tate June on a opened the Republican national twice a week baSis at lIope High convention here with a prayer ill Providence The club bull fluit God illltminate the minds coached b Conrad Pensavalle and hearts of delegates former Dartmouth star ~ archbishop of San Fran-

A number of fOnD~ N E eo1- dsco prayed that ltlads guidance lege grJ~ starS areoD Ute JWterhelp l~ partisan spirit pershyinclucliDg Bob ~esex vert the order of justice or gshyHoly Cross end in his second lJOrcmee ~d us intomiddot error year with the team and Tony He prayEd that through the Abraham former B C pivotman conventions deliberations the who isroUildlng into playing countrys defenses ma)ltbe morshyeondition i1fier seVeralmiddot seasons ally aM physiCally Strong in the coaching ranks at Newmiddot He petitiOned that men disshyBedford Vocational The Roller cover the means by which every is llCheduled to open inexbibl- bre8d~ may get employshytion play later this month

Sox StGek

As baseball resumes after the

AIl-Star hiatus the Red Sox find themselves some four games behind a 500 pace and this considering the ineffectiveshyness of Bill Monbouquette is not too bad Monbo completed his first game of the 1964 seashyson last Monday in Washington when he shut om the lowly Sen-

Baseball Game Members of the Holy Name

Society of Sacred Heart parish North Attleboro will Mtend a Red Sox basebaD game Friday Bight Aug 14 ill Boston ear 1ril1 leave the praocWaI aboai JI84 11amp 130

t - Itt -

ment every worker a just reshyward all may obtain the full possessionofmiddottbeir human rights and that it be realized nations maymiddot no longer safely pursue their interests in isolation from one another

Golf Tournament A golf tournament for single

men under age 26 will be sponshysored Monday July 27 at Norton Country Club by the Attleboro area CYO Top two ill each of the tournaments three divisions will represent the area in-a Dishyocesan Golf Tournament at Poshycasset Country Club Monday Aug 3 Deadline for applications lor the Attleboro contea iI ~Juq2G

ators 1-0 1t was his 18th apshypearance of the season and his record now reads 4-8

A twenty game winner in 63 Monbo figures to come on strong over the second half and if he does you can look for the SOx to play better than 500 ball Bressoud and Malzone turned in fine first half efforts Tillman and COnigliaro amazed everyshyone Mantilla has given the club more than an occasional lift

Yastremzski has found the range Stuart is the enigma of the

club Author of most game winshyning hits thus far (9) the most d~gerous hitter in the lineup WIth men on he nevertheless creates a negative impression with his studied lassitude afield On occasion he even disdains passing the ball around the inshyfield He fails to run out ground balls to the infield-though Vic Power forced him to once by ~ply not tagging the bag until

Stuart made the entire trip These antics maki him the tarshyget of disapproving fans

Golf Leader Pro golfs current leader has

to be Tony Lema He came back from a near ltisaster to win the Cleveland Open in a suddenshy

death playoff with Arnold Palshy mer Tony had had the $20000 first prize all wrapped up in regulation time when to the amazement of all he blew a one foot putt on the final hole

Then on to Scotland and the British ~n title which he took handily despite a late but conshyeerted challenge by Jack Nickshylaus middotCbampagne Tony as he is affectionately known lauded his 28-year old caddy for his assistshyance then proceeded to give the

THE ANCHOR - 19 thurs July 16 1964

-Tokyo Prepares middotFor Olympics In October

TOKYO (NC) - Everywhere there is evidence that Tokyo is

middot preparing in earnest for the coming Olympics here this Octoshyber Signs publicize the Olymshypics banners are onmiddot sale in stores new hotels are rising and the roads are being torn up WOrkmen struggle round the clock seven days a week to finish the new highways Il()W under construction and Tokyo is likely to be oversupplied with hotel rooms once the Olympics are past because of the large new hotels being constructed

The visitor will find Tokyo a friendly city-a bit confusing perhaps till he gets acquainted but very friendly When he asks directions to a Catholic church at his hOtel he will receive a little slip of paper in English on one side and Japanese on the other telling him the hours of Mass and the location of the church On the reverse will be a map with directions in Japan~

These are for the benefit of the taxi driver who can then weave in and out of the many n1rrow streets to the nearest

ROOFTOP SCHOOL Sandwiched between a resettleshyment area and as yet unsettled squatters (background) is the St Peter in Chains roof top school in Hong Kong conducted by the Maryknoll Fathers Here children poor in financial means have a chance to become rich in education Father John Donovan MM Vicar General accompanied by Father Michael J Kiernan MM school supervisor and pastor of the nearby St Peter in Chains Church pay a visit to the school NC Phot~

Catholic College Stars Prominent middotIn Battle for Olympic Berths NEW YORK (NC)-Veteran Olympic team and even thfY stais Harold Connolly and Jerry l(Vi1l have to prove their condishy

Siebert of California and Ira tion at a Los Angeles meet in DaVis of Philadelphiamiddot qualified September The nex-t five place for the 1964 American Olympic winners in each event will be

team in trials at Randal1s Island at Los Angeles to battle for the Stadium here other middottwo places on the squad

C~mnoUY the Boston College alupmupound who won the19gt6

OlYmpic hammer thro title eo~ed hiSrciurntotop orm ashe t~ssed the 16--poqnd iron bal~ ~25 f~t ~ inches to ou~ class the field ~ustas he had done lass week In the national AA~U championships at New BnIDswick N J

Siebert University of Cali shytotnia graduate student made hiS second Olympic team as he won the 800 meters in 1472 faStest time in the world this ear The s~edst17 from Wilshylet~ Caif IS makIng ~~e- ba~k this season after -retirmg in 1963

tor Davis LaSalle College grqduate this will be the third OlYmpiad He first qualified in 19$1 as a 19year old college sophomore and placed fourth inthe triple jump at Rome In the trials here he led the field with a mark of 52 feet 10 inches

Only the winners here autoshymatically qualified for the

S~t Catholic Center For Communications

MEXICO CITY (NC) - A Catholic national center for mass communications media has been established here to deal with matters relating to the press motion pictures radio and teleshyvision

A committee including represhysentatives of the lay apostolate organizations such as Catholic ACtion Christian Family Moveshyment and Knights of Columbus was named to draw up the censhy~a constitution

Three Villanovans Among those who qualified for the Los AngeliS meet was Tommy Farrell of 8t Johns U

r~aica NY Nation11 Colleshygiate Athletic Association 800shypleter champion who placed fourth to Siebert in the 800 meters at 1475 the fastest time of his career

A neighbor of Farrell and forshymer high school rival Bill Boyle o Notre Dammiddote also piaced fourth in his event the 400 meters

Villanova saw three of its former stars qualify Vic ~woshyla~ a graduate placed foUrth

1n the 3OOO-niet~rSieeplechase at 8478 andltlaul Drayton and Don Webstertilrrmiddotthiid and fifth in the 200 meter dash

CASA BLANCA Just Across rlte

Coggeshall St Bridge

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STtAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

Americas Economy King

RAMBLER Ior the Best Deal Come To

Broadway Rambler INC

768 BROADWAY RAYNHAM MASS on Rt 138 CHARLES J DUMAIS Pres

ELECTRICAL ContractoN

944 County St New Bedford

famous for QUALITY and

SERVICEI

Catholic church

Cathedrl Dedication

Nearing completion by that time and scheduled for dediltashytion Dec 8 will be the beautiful

middot and impressive cathedral of the Immmiddotaculate Conception risiI1g high on a hill on the outskirts of Tokyo In the form of a hllge cross the cathedral is likely to be a tourist and architectural attraction when it is complet~

The hotels are unusually coshyoperative with the visitor Inshyformation desks willingly write in Japanese symbols the visitors

middotdestination so that he may give it to the taxi driver and thus ensure a cOJIlplete understanding of his directions

An unusual feature of Tokyos hotels restaurants and taxicamiddotbs is an effective no tipping policy -and apparently none is exshypected A 10 permiddot cent service charge is in lieu of the tips but in many countries the middotoutshy

middot stretched hand is still middotmucb in evidence-not so in Tokyo

middot That others middotwere preparing fOr the Olympics was shown in press reports that Tokyo police had arrested 24 men and women said to be mass-producing po~shynographic pictures dolls ornashyments etc tomiddot sell to foreign tourists coming for the Olympics

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~

Page 20: 07.16.64

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs July 16 196~~