11.18.65

20
ARCHITECTURAL CONCEPTION OF NEW BISHOP JAMES L. CONNOLLY HIGH SCHOOL FOR BOYS IN FALL RIVER School Construction Starts Next Week The The contracting firm of F. L. Collins & Sons, Ine., of Fall River announced today that it will commence the building of the new Bishop Connolly High School for Boys in Fall River next week. The successful low bidder currently is arranging for the pur J chase of material which will go into the secondary institution where the Society of Jesus will serve as in- has been filled and roughly sur- for easy transfer of pianos and structors. The entering faced, leading in from Elsbree other bulky paraphernalia of the ANCHOR Freshmen Class next Sept- .. Street on the west; there is an performing arts. ember will hold classes auxiliary approach road from Close to the stage and behind A.. A.wolor 0' ................ "'111 1'1'. PA... temporarily in the new CCD ,the north, off Langley Street. the auditorium there are dress- building at St. Williiam's parish As the visitor drives in off ing rooms, double-purpose facil- in Fall River. The smaller cate- Elsbree Street, he will first ap- ities both for stage service and Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Nov. 18, 1965 · chetical building is now under · proach the auditorium on the to accommodate visiting officiala construction and, will be ready west end of the complex, the at games in the adjacent gym- PRICE tOe for· the entering Freshmen next exterior stepped walls and slop- nasium. Vol. 9, No. 46 © ,1965 The Anchor $4.00 per Year Fall. ing roof suggesting, its function. Public entrance to the audito- . \ rium is through a spacious lobby, The buildings; all connected Within it will seat about 800 on a floor that slopes gracefully which also admits directly to the into one continuous structure, gymnasium through two broad will extend more than 900 feet downward toward the stage doorways to the banks of folding long in an approximately east- along carpeted aisles. bleachers on either side. When · west direction, and will be about The stage opening is a gener- Bishopls Boll Music these are extended for an exhi- 190 feet deep at the widest point. ous 50 feet wide, and corre- bition game, they wjll seat about · A large portion of the structure spondingly high. Steps -lead from 1000 spectators at a regulation- · will be single-story, settled com- it to the floor at each side, and size basketball court. When · fortably into the landscape. It · lead also to the front exits. Back ·By Vincent Lopez folded, they clear the floor for will look southward across a stage there is ample room for two practice courts. Locker The 11th annual Bishop's Charity Ball in January will · clearing dotted with OPen clus- action and storage, and for some rooms, with shower and dressing · terl! of trees to the traffic circle hoisting. Off at one side there is , have Vincent Lopez and his 'noted orchestra for dancing. ·rooms, storage space, and office 'and the exit ramp from. Route additional workspace, with 'di- . Lopez and his orchestra will interrupt a Las Vegas, en- space for coaches and staff, stllnd 24. ,rect access by large door from . gagement for. this single' eastern appearance. "It is an · The principal approach road · outside at loading-dock level- at each side behind the bleachers. Off the same lobby to 'the engagement", the famous right is the Office of the Dean ',orchestra leader said" "to . , of Men, who supervises which I have long been look- school athletics, together with ing forward. My orchestra Council Moves' Close the connected Health Rooms. , shares the anticipation of play- Directly beyond there is a medi- um-sized lecture room, seating ing New England's foremost so- It is now official. Pope Pa.l,ll will close the Second Vatican Oouncll on Wednesday, Dee. about 110. . , cial and charitable event." 8, during an outdoor ceremony which shall be attended by diplomatic missions, observers Academically, it is pianned for Scheduled for Wednesday, Jan. from various Christian and non-Christian denominations, and most of the world's bishops. some of the new experimental 12, 1966, at the Lincoln Park ballroom, the charity ball is not Today, after listening to the final tallies representing the Council Fathers' approval lecture work in group teaching; and otherwise, it will be avail- only an evening of joy for those 'of the Divine. Revelation and the Lay Apostolate Decrees, the Holy Father proclaimed able for smaller groups and attending but also brings' an .them as henceforth Catholic doctrine and practice. 'special functions that would be emotional uplift when all re- ,Tuesday, Dec. 7, will be the final council meeting' during which the same ceremony will lost in the large auditorium. At member that they are present be repeated for the remaining decrees: The Missions,· Priestly, Life and Ministry,Religious its front is a two-step platform in order to aid the exceptional or dais, for debaters or partici- Liberty and The Church in the Modern World. Turn to Page Twelve pants in forum discussions or other academic presentations. Today's Decrees Actual Voting 'Outside Business Turn to Page. Ten Clothing Appeal DIVINE MISSIONS LECTURES Reaches Total REVELATION PRIESTS RETREATS Doctor to Speak LAY APOSTOLATE CHURCH IN WORLD INDULGENCES Of 123'Tons To N'ew Bedford To the evident joy of many With most of the decrees hav- Only two weeks remain for Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, Protestant religions but with a ing come up for a final review the Bishops' stay in Rome. Al- pastor of St. Patrick's little disappointment too, the and the. Fathers having ex- ready some of them have be- Newman 'Club Church, Somerset, and direc- Church will now officially pro- pressed their thoughts on each gun to say their farewells to The Newman Club of claim her position not only in paragraph, all attention is now 'many they have gotten to know, tor of the Annual Thanks- Southeastern Massachusetts favor of the Bible but showing reverence and truly appreciate giving Clothing Drive, an- Turn to Page Eleven Technological Institute, New the Bible to be the sine-qua-non, and whom they realize they shall nounced today that the Drive the absolute necessity for all the meet again only in heaven. Bedford branch, will continue that took place. throughout the Church thinks or does. But Bishops have also been its series of lectures tonight with Diocese the week of Oct. 31st Actually, this is not something Dispensation .taking advantage of this meeting a talk on the Cursillo Movement netted just over 123 tons of us- very strange or different. It has The Chancery Office an- by discussing problems with the by William S. Downey, M.D. able clothing, bedding and shoes. always been so. However, to say nounces that the faithful are experts that are there in Rome, The schedule of future lec- The clothes have already been so in clear and most public dispensed from the law of ab- by attending lectures by. some of tures is as follows: shipped to warehouses on Long language is new. For too long it stinence on Friday, November the most reknown theologians, Dec. 2.-Rev. John R. FoIster, Island where they have been re- has been thought that the Bible 26, the day following Thanks- by making a retreat under Fr. ''The Council and New Develop- sorted, fumigated and baled for has taken a seat in the of the Dec. 16-Rev. Edward back giving J)aT. Lombardi Better World Turn to Page Ten Turn to Page Eleven Turn to Page Eleven Tum to Page Eleven

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Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Nov. 18, 1965 · chetical building is now under ·proach the auditorium on the to accommodate visiting officiala • LAY APOSTOLATE • CHURCH IN WORLD • INDULGENCES space for coaches and staff, stllnd 24. ,rect access by large door from the Bible to be the sine-qua-non, and whom they realize they shall nounced today that the Drive the absolute necessity for all the meet again only in heaven. engagement", the famous ing forward. My orchestra Turn to Page.Ten .

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 11.18.65

ARCHITECTURAL CONCEPTION OF NEW BISHOP JAMES L CONNOLLY HIGH SCHOOL FOR BOYS IN FALL RIVER

School Construction Starts Next WeekThe

The contracting firm of F L Collins amp Sons Ine of Fall River announced today that it will commence the building of the new Bishop Connolly High School for Boys in Fall River next week The successful low bidder currently is arranging for the purJ

chase of material which will go into the secondary institution where the Society of Jesus will serve as inshy has been filled and roughly surshy for easy transfer of pianos andstructors The entering faced leading in from Elsbree other bulky paraphernalia of theANCHOR Freshmen Class next Septshy Street on the west there is an performing arts ember will hold classes auxiliary approach road from Close to the stage and behindA Awolor 0 111 11 PA temporarily in the new CCD the north off Langley Street the auditorium there are dressshybuilding at St Williiams parish As the visitor drives in off ing rooms double-purpose facil shyin Fall River The smaller cate- Elsbree Street he will first ap- ities both for stage service and

Fall River Mass Thursday Nov 18 1965 middot chetical building is now under middot proach the auditorium on the to accommodate visiting officiala construction and will be ready west end of the complex the at games in the adjacent gymshy

PRICE tOe formiddot the entering Freshmen next exterior stepped walls and slopshy nasium

Vol 9 No 46 copy 1965 The Anchor $400 per Year Fall ing roof suggesting its function Public entrance to the auditoshy rium is through a spacious lobbyThe buildings all connected Within it will seat about 800 on

a floor that slopes gracefully which also admits directly to theinto one continuous structure gymnasium through two broadwill extend more than 900 feet downward toward the stage doorways to the banks of foldinglong in an approximately east- along carpeted aisles bleachers on either side Whenmiddot west direction and will be about The stage opening is a genershyBishopls Boll Music these are extended for an exhishy190 feet deep at the widest point ous 50 feet wide and correshybition game they wjll seat aboutmiddot A large portion of the structure spondingly high Steps -lead from 1000 spectators at a regulationshymiddot will be single-story settled com- it to the floor at each side and size basketball court Whenmiddot fortably into the landscape It middot lead also to the front exits BackmiddotBy Vincent Lopez folded they clear the floor forwill look southward across a stage there is ample room for two practice courts LockerThe 11th annual Bishops Charity Ball in January will middot clearing dotted with OPen clus- action and storage and for some rooms with shower and dressingmiddot terl of trees to the traffic circle hoisting Off at one side there is have Vincent Lopez and his noted orchestra for dancing middotrooms storage space and officeand the exit ramp from Route additional workspace with di shy Lopez and his orchestra will interrupt a Las Vegas enshy space for coaches and staff stllnd 24 rect access by large door from

gagement for this single eastern appearance It is an middot The principal approach road middotoutside at loading-dock level- at each side behind the bleachers Off the same lobby to theengagement the famous right is the Office of the Dean

orchestra leader said to

of Men who usua~ly superviseswhich I have long been lookshy school athletics together with ing forward My orchestra Council Moves Toward~ Close the connected Health Rooms

shares the anticipation of playshy Directly beyond there is a medishyum-sized lecture room seatinging New Englands foremost soshy It is now official Pope Palll will close the Second Vatican Oouncll on Wednesday Dee about 110 cial and charitable event 8 during an outdoor ceremony which shall be attended by diplomatic missions observers Academically it is pianned forScheduled for Wednesday Jan from various Christian and non-Christian denominations and most of the worlds bishops some of the new experimental12 1966 at the Lincoln Park

ballroom the charity ball is not Today after listening to the final tallies representing the Council Fathers approval lecture work in group teaching and otherwise it will be avail shyonly an evening of joy for those of the Divine Revelation and the Lay Apostolate Decrees the Holy Father proclaimed able for smaller groups andattending but also brings an them as henceforth offi~jal Catholic doctrine and practice special functions that would beemotional uplift when all reshy Tuesday Dec 7 will be the final council meeting during which the same ceremony will lost in the large auditorium Atmember that they are present be repeated for the remaining decrees The Missionsmiddot PriestlyLife and MinistryReligious its front is a two-step platformin order to aid the exceptional or dais for debaters or partici shyLiberty and The Church in the Modern World Turn to Page Twelve pants in forum discussions or other academic presentationsTodays Decrees Actual Voting Outside Business Turn to PageTenClothing Appeal

bull DIVINE bull MISSIONS bull LECTURESReaches Total REVELATION bull PRIESTS bull RETREATS Doctor to Speakbull LAY APOSTOLATE bull CHURCH IN WORLD bull INDULGENCESOf 123Tons To New BedfordTo the evident joy of many With most of the decrees havshy Only two weeks remain for

Rev Francis A McCarthy Protestant religions but with a ing come up for a final review the Bishops stay in Rome Alshypastor of St Patricks little disappointment too the and the Fathers having exshy ready some of them have beshy Newman Club Church Somerset and direcshy Church will now officially proshy pressed their thoughts on each gun to say their farewells to The Newman Club of

claim her position not only in paragraph all attention is now many they have gotten to knowtor of the Annual Thanksshy Southeastern Massachusetts favor of the Bible but showing reverence and truly appreciategiving Clothing Drive anshy Turn to Page Eleven Technological Institute Newthe Bible to be the sine-qua-non and whom they realize they shallnounced today that the Drive the absolute necessity for all the meet again only in heaven Bedford branch will continue

that took place throughout the Church thinks or does But Bishops have also been its series of lectures tonight withDiocese the week of Oct 31st

Actually this is not something Dispensation taking advantage of this meeting a talk on the Cursillo Movementnetted just over 123 tons of usshyvery strange or different It has The Chancery Office anshy by discussing problems with the by William S Downey MDable clothing bedding and shoes always been so However to say nounces that the faithful are experts that are there in Rome The schedule of future lecshy

The clothes have already been so in clear and most public dispensed from the law of abshy by attending lectures by some of tures is as follows shipped to warehouses on Long language is new For too long it stinence on Friday November the most reknown theologians Dec 2-Rev John R FoIsterIsland where they have been reshy has been thought that the Bible 26 the day following Thanksshy by making a retreat under Fr The Council and New Developshysorted fumigated and baled for has taken a seat in the of the opments~ Dec 16-Rev Edwardback giving J)aT Lombardi Better World

Turn to Page Ten Turn to Page Eleven Turn to Page Eleven Tum to Page Eleven

2 THE ANCHOR-Dioce~e of Fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196~

-Proper of the Mass Last Sundaymiddot After Pentecost

INTROIT The Lord says I thinlc thoughts of peace and not of affliction You shall call upon me and I will hear you and 1 will bring back your captivity from all places You have favored 0 Lord your land you have restored the well-being of Jacob Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen The Lord says I think thoughts of peace and not of affliction You shall call upon me and I will hear you and I will bring back your captivity from all places

GRADUAL You saved us 0 Lord from our foes and those who hated us you put to shame In God we gloried day by day You~ name we praised always Alleluia alleluia Out of the depths I cry to you 0 Lord Lord hear my prayer Alleluia

OFFERTORY Out of the depths r cry to you 0 Lord Lord hear my prayer Out of the depths I cry to you o Lord

COMMUNION Amen r say to you all things whatshyever you ask for in prayer believe that you shall receive and it shall be done to you

Please Clip and Bring to Church on Sunday

Bishop-Elect Says Appointment Tribute to Church Catholicity

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Bishshyop-elect Harold R Perry SVD said on his arrival here from Rome that he views his appointshyment as a tribute to the Cathoshylicity of the Church in America and to the Catholicity of the people of the New Orleans archshydiocese rather than tomiddot him personally

He asked for the good will understanding and prayers of

the people of New Orleans to help him serve them in faith and charity in the best way I know of

The veteran Louisiana priest the first Negro in modern times to be named a Catholic bishop in America saidmiddothe was grateful to Pope Paul for appointing him auxiliary bishop of New Orleans because I now enjoy the great privilege of being a successor of the Apostles

Father Perry was greeted at New Orleans International Airshyport by New Orleans archdiocshyesan officials friends and well shywishers and a volley of questions o~ civil rights by newsmen

ais arrival though publicized was -quiet and orderlY There were no demonstrators The orily placard was carried by a small boy It read

Greetings to Bishop-ele~

Harold Perry from cousins and friends

Father Perry took ~ in the

Project for Aged STOCKTON (NC)--Construcshy

tion was started here -on Casa Manana Inn a low cost housing project for aged with compleshytion expected in 1967 It will be a modern apartment-type building of 163 uDits open to

persons 62 years and older withshyout regard to race creed or color The projeCt was planned by the Catholic Mens Institute here in California

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Nov 21-8t Ann Raynham St John the Evangelist

Attleboro

TN AIlCKllll second Class Postage PaIG at Fan River

Mus Ublilhell lve T1IundIJ at 410 Hlplano Avenue Fill IlIver_ Mass_ 02722 1IIe CAtllollll Press IJf tile Diocese fJf faII Illf Sublcrlptlee 8iI 111 middot400-1III~ bull

installation of Archbishop Philip M Hannan of New Orleans and concelebrated the accompanying Mass with Archbishop Hannan Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi apshyostolic delegate in the United States and other prelates

He told a reporter that al shythough the location and date of his consecration as a bishop had not been determined he expectshyed it to take place in New Orshyleans probably after the first week in December when the Vatican council is scheduled to end

In reply to a question on the Churchs role in civil rights demonstrations Father Perry said he will have so many things to do as a Catholic bishop that I personally will not have time to be considered a civil rights leader

He said that clergy participashytion in civil rights demonstrashytions has been done successfully and he has middotno objections to such participation

In the archdiocese however I will be working under the sushypervision of Archbishop Hannan and naturally I will take my orders from him Whatever he approves or disapproves I will accept

MassOrdo FRIDAY-8t Elizabeth of Hunshy

gary Queen and Widow m Class White Mass Proper Gloria 2nd ColI St Pontianus Pope and Martyr no Creect Common Preface

SATURDAY-8t Felix of Valoshyis Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

SUNDAY-XXIV and Last Sunshyday After Pentecost II Class Green Mas Proper Gloria Creed Preface of Trinity

MONDAY-St Cecilia Virgin and Martyr ill Class Red Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY-St Clement I Pope and Martyr III Class Red

Mass Proper Gloria 2nd Coli St Felicitas Martyr no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY-8tmiddot John of the Cross Confessor and Doctor of the Church m Class White Mass Proper Gloria 2nd Coll St Chrysogonus Martyr DO

Creed Common Preface THURSDAY - St CatheriDe

Virgin and Martyr m CIua ~ Gloria no Creed ComshyJnOII PloeIaee

THE SAME THE WORLD OVER Kansha Bi is Thanksshygiving Day in Japan The name may be different but the custom of giving thanks is the same the world over Maryshyknoll Sister Martin Jerome and her kimonoed friends join in saying arigato for their many spiritual and material blessings

bull Lacking In Honesty Jesuit Declares Discussions About Sex

Confined to Narrow Scope CINCINNATI (NC) - Talk

about sex leads naturally to talk about marriage failures undershydeveloped nations inner city jungles population problem and human relations - when Father John L Thomas SJ is the speaker

The St Louis University socishyologist and veteran marriage counselor here for a lecture to X a vie r University students stressed in an interview his conshyviction that discussions about sex tend to be remote from realshyity lacking in honesty and conshyfiDed to a scope he considers too narrawbull

There is a great dealof vershybalizing about sex he said but not much facing of reality Even high school kids know all the terms

But this superficial approach isnt new to the present time or place he indicated No etJ1ture has dealt rationally with sex he said

But Im not entirely pessishymistic he added pointing out that in a few days he woUld be

Medal Award NEW YORK (NCl - Brother

Gregory FSC president of Manhattan C9llege here was guest sPeaker at the Founder Medal Award dinner-dance of the New York Association of Consulting Engineersbull Manhatshytan alumus William H Eipel head of his own engineering consultant firm was presented with the 1965 Founders Medal in appreciation of his work

OROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second Street Fan River Mass

OS 9-6072 MICHAel J McMAHON

licensed funeral Director Retist~ Imlilahner

attending an executive board meeting of the new Sex Inforshymation and Education Council of the U S (SIECUS) at New York-an organization of edushycators psychologists counselors and others deeply concerned about making a rational apshyproach to the subject possible

Mature Relationship Too much attention is given

to sexual relationship as someshything separate from the rest of life Father Thomas said It ought tomiddotbe treated as a mature relationship between two pershysons and one which in the Christian concept calls for control consideration and conshycern for the other partner he said

YoUng people in middottodays culshyture are exposed very early to social relationships with which they are too immature to cope he said ~

Because of our reticence they havent been given adequate preparation for sex and human relationships The result is conshyfusion and failure to realize the eonsequeDces of these ieiationshyahips Father Thbmas Ilaid

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Renewal Theme Of Conference

TORONTO (NC)-An intewshynational congress and institute to be held here in 1967 will aim at investigating changes in the Church of today in the light ~

theology according to Father Lawrence K Shook CSB chairman of the coordinatinl committee for the conference

Father Shook is also president of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies here wherti the sessions of the congress and institute will be held Aug 2Q to 26 1967

The conference is the project of the Catholic hierarchy of Enshyglish-speaking dioceses to mark the lOoth anniversary of Canadishyan confederation in 1867

Prelates to Speak

Theme of the meeting is the theology of the renewal of the Church Theologians and otheso scholars are currently being seshylected to read papers at the conference _

Among those on Fat1ler Shook list of prospective speakers ~ Franciskus Cardinal Koenig oC Vienna Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal Leo Cardinal Suenens of Malines-Brussels Belgium and Father BarnabU8 Ahearn CP a Scripture specishyalist

Necrology NOV 25

Rev Philias Jalbert 1948 Pastor Notre Dame Fall River

NOV 26 Rev James R Burns PR

1945 Pastor Sacred Heart Fall River

NOV Rt Rev Patrick E McGee

1948 Pastor St Mary No Ashytleboro

NOV 28 Rev Adrian A Gauthier 1951

Pastor St Roch Fall River NOV 30

Rev William J McCoomb 1895 Pastor Immaculate Conshyception No Easton

Rev CA Martens 1898 Founshyder Santo Christo Fall River

DEC 1 Rev Phillipe Ross 1958 Chapshy

lain Sacred Heart Home New Bedford

DEC Rev Arthur Savoie 1917 Pashy

tor St Hyacinth New Bedford Rev Dennis W Harrington

1958 Assistant 51 Mary TaUDshyton shy

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DD Sullivan ampSons FUNtRAL HOME 469 lOCUST STREET FAll RIVER MaSl

OS 2-3381 Wilfred C James E

DriscoR Sullivan Jr

AUBERTIHE Funeral Home Inc n Aubertine Brough

Walliarn H~ Aubertine Irian J Aubertine

Spacious Parking Area WY 2-2957 III It lew Betlafil

bull bull - -- -- -

3 THE ANCHOR-Priests middotReceive Guidelines Thurs Nov 18 196~

On Chrimiddotstian Unity Believe Freedom SAGINAW (NC)-DiHinity makes Christians shame- Long Way Offfaced before God and the world priests 0 fthe Saginaw dioshy

cese were told~ ata Christian unity workshop here Our In Red Areas division has led tl5 uncharity~nd in some cases inj Listice-WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Christianity h~ been at

A panel of speakers hasodds with itself said Fr eClmenical activities under the Edward M Egan of the com- guidance and direction of the agreed that communist reshy

mission on ecumenism of the bishop gimes have a long way to go archdiocese of Chicago Guard against disillusionment in the area of individual freedom

Father Egan proposed a We Americans like to see reshy but the chances of progress vary seven-point guide for promoting sulls but we must be reasonable from one communist country to

Reunification cannot be accom- anotherunity Learn to control fears about plished in the twinkling of an Robert V Daniel University

of Vermont history professorChristian unity but do not ig- eye speaking at a two-day confershynore them We must recognize Learn to pray not only with ence on religion in communistthe dangers in what we are un- but also for other Christians bloc countries at St Michaelsdertaking and still move for- You cannot long pray for a man College estimates chances forward without coming to love and trust progress are best in Eastern EushyDont compromise for unity him rope where Russian style desshyUnity like charity can never Another workshop speaker potism has never been particushybe bought at the expense of Dr Allan A Zaun pastor of a larly welcome even among comshytruth Detroit Presbyterian church munists He added that chancesNever engage in formal dia- said most Protestants are deshyfor progress are darkest in comshylogue without knowing middotthe sub- lighted at Catholic efforts at munist Chinaject well We must know our renewal

The future of religion under own theology well but we must Discussing areas of common communism depends mainly onalso know the theology of the agreement Dr Zaun noted both the future of totalitarianismother side Protestants and Catholics use Daniels said

Restrict yourself to the speci- substantially the same Bible and On this question there arefic geographical area involved cited progress being made many guesses but little agreeshyTechniques which work well in toward a common Bible ment Some will say Soviet totalshyone area may not work in anshy

itarianism will never ease upother he said He also noted general acceptshyenough to permit real religiousCatholics must conduct their ance of the Apostles Creed the MAKES VISITATION Mother Virginia Bento left freedom Some may argue thatNicene Creed Baptism Commushy

North American Provincial for the Sisters of St DorQthy totalitarianism already has beennion and the common use ofMiami See Has done away with by de-Stalinizashytion and that religion has all the

hymns welcomes Mother Marie DePiro Vicar General on canonical visitation to Villa Fatima Taunton communitys provincialEducational TV freedom it needs in the commushyhouse Mother DePiro who formerly held Mother Bentos nist world My own estimation isMIAMI (NC) - More than position is now stationed in Rome She will attend a b~essshy middot that there is a long way to goExile Explains23000 Catholic school pupils in ing ceremony for a statue of the Immaculate Heart of MaryDade County Fla are -receiving

classroom instructions through Cubas Plight at Our Lady of Fatima High School Warren RI at 2 Library Scholarship the first multiple channel educashy Saturday afternoon Nov 20 Friends of the DorotheansSCHULENBURG (NC) - Dr The Catholic Library Associshytional broadcasting system in from the Fall River Diocese are invited to attend ation is offering a scholarship inHector J Remeo who fled hisuse in a Catholic diocese middot-library science for the academicnative Cuba in 1960 and now reshyUp to four programs can be

sides in Hallettsville Tex told year 1966 for graduate studybroadcast simultaneously on the

a Knights of Columbus m~eting toward a masters degree Inforshyclosed circuit TV system Alshy Questions Valuehere everyone in Cuba is forced middot mation is available from the asshythough only one of the four

to support the revolution and sociation at 461 West Lancasterchannels assigned by the Federshy

take a loyalty oath to Prime Minshy New Jersey Prelate Sees Little Advcintage Avenue Haverford Pa 19041

expects to have TV cameras and university in Havana was the and providing an effective mechshyother equipment necessary to training in human relations-andprime target of Red attacks until anism for avoiding or settling bull_---_produce its own programs Unshy in the channels already existing

it was seized by the Castro reshy disputes about police misconshy to process grievancestil then tapes and film will be middot shy

al Communications Commission ister Fidel Castro before beingis now in use Father Joseph H assigned to a job by the Red govshy In Establishing Police Review Boards

OShea director of the diocesan ernmentRadio and Television Commisshy POINT PLEASANT (NC)shy as postpone disputes and transshysion said all four will be in use All children must belong to The coordinator of interracial fer them to a higher level

programs for the Newark archshywithin two years the League of Rebel Pioneers He said civilian review boards diocese doubts the practicalityFather OShea also said the which begins communist regishy would also place board personshyof civilian revlew boards to inshysystem installed by the Radio mentation of youth at the age of nel in the target area of racial vestigate charges of police brushyCorporation of America will be seven he said He estimated counter-claims and harm the tality against minority groupsbroadened shortly to include there are 80000 political prisonshy morale of both police and offi shy

Suchboards cannot be rejected17000 more pupils in neighborshy ers on the island subjected to cial civil rights agencies on principle Msgr Aloysius Ting Broward and Palm Beach torture and living in concentrashy I would trust rather iIi preshyWelsh said But he addedtion campscounties ventive measures-the screeningWould such a board be advanshy

By next Spring the diocese of police candidates for prejushyDr Remeo said the Catholic tageous in settling racial tensions dice as a priority and their

gime He added that most of the duct used Protestant ministers have gone My own judgment he told

into exile and the number of the Northeast Institute on ComshyJews has been reduced to less munity Relations here in NewFrancis Lennon Head than 10 per cent of their former Jersey would be that a review

Of Legion of Mary number board would middotnotsettle so much

Francis Lennon st Michaels parish Fall River has been named president of the Diocesan Comitium of the Legion of Mary He was formerly Comitium viceshypresident and also served as vice-president of Gate of Heavshyen praesidium of the Legion his parish unit

The vice-presidential office of the Comitium is now open and all active senior Legionaries are eligible for the position Among candidates is Miss Mary Moniz of Fall River Central Praesishydium

The next Comitium meeting will be held Tuesday Dec 7 at St Michaels school hall at which time further names will be proposed and the office fill shyed

New Bedford Guild New Bedford Catholic Guild

for the Blind will meet at 8 toshynight in K of C Hall Mrs Evshyelyn Loranger is entertainment ehairman with Mrs Irene Danshysereau as co-chairman

~ - - - -- - - _- ---------- --_-------- -_ shy --~

DURFEEi NOW PLAYING

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Monday through Thursday 8 oclock PM Friday and Saturday 830 - Sunday 730

Matinee - Wed Sat Sunday and Thanksgiving Day - 2 oclock

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SPECIAL ATTENTION TO SCHOOL CYO CHURCH GROUPS

J B LUMBER CO bull So Dartmouth shy and Hyannis

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965 yenfarns of Vfaste National Official Urges AdministratorsE~ergence of Layman To Study Education Aid Bill Features

Has Limited -Significance BURLINGTON (NC)-A govshyBy Joseph T McGloin SJ ernment official cautions the

Federal Aid to Education BillBeing a kindly quiet peace-loving man I tend to supshyof 1965 will be a tremendous press any criticism of others particularly of that loveable waste unless teachers know the

group qualifying as Writers But since everyone who law and what they can do with writes no matter what is known as a writer someshy it

Philip H DesMarais deputytimes you come across an assistant secretary -for legislashymorning cup of coffeeitem so incredibly stupid So the priest gets a pretty tion ~f the Department of

that it demands some comshy good cross-section of the things Health Education and Welfare ment I should make it clear which can cause a marriage to outlined the Act at the Vermont first of all that far from being go wrong and the things which Catholic Educators Association against the emerging layman make it go right convention here

am all for the And hed have to be a pretty Stressing Title II of the Act laity to do just first-class idiot not to be able which provides aid for school that In fact I to put two and two together and libraries and instructional mashyknow many a say This is the sort of thing terial DesMarais said some pastor who has which almost always makes a 53 per cent of the public schools been trying to marriage fail or This is the in the U S have no library

sort of thing which keeps a marshyget his laity to Of some 14000 privateriage together just as heddo a little

In the mind of this emerging 1~~~8~~l~)~~~

lady the priest should not dare to do any marriage counseling since he is not himself married And this little bit of reasoning needs some exainining because it contains so mltlny inanities that its too soggy just to be tossed aside as it deserves

It should certainly be adshymitted first of all that it is quite true that some priests should not be marriage counselors

More Objective There are also some doctors

who should not be allowed to practice But as such the doctor with his training and objectivity and experience should be al shylowed to practice his own proshyfession-even if hes never himshyself had the disease hes treating

The fact is that having had or not had- a certain disease has nothing to do witl a doctors efficiency in treating it As a matter of fact he may be more objective about it and so do a better job if he hasnt had it

And the priest may well be a much more capable marriage counselor from the very fact that he is not married He has studied the sacrament and inshystitution of marriage from every angle

He has besides had to deal with more marriage problems per week than most married persons will encounter in a lifeshytime even by probing into the secrets of the couple next door over the back fence or over the

YOUTH PROGRAM Rev HOWTDPaul F McCarrick Fall Rivshyer area CYO and CYAO dishy BEArector will conduct a youth program for an open meeting MISSIONof Fall River District Counshycil of Catholic Women at 8 INVESTDRtonight at St Jean Baptiste Church Fall River Benedicshy THI HOLY ATHIRS MISSiON AID TO THI DRIINTAL CHURCH

GIfts to Pope PaUl Near East Missions feed the hungry train native prlesU and Sisters In _ 18 developing countries build churches and schools They also give you the satisfaction of bringing Christ to the poorbullbullbullbull Wise Investors ule theIr dollars where they buy the most Imagine for as little as $2900 you can build prlest~ houle with parish center In Edappelmiddot ayam In mountainous southern India where ragged pioneers are hacking out new farming colonlesl Name It for your favorite aalnt In memory of your loved onesbullbullbullbull Invest In hard wor~7 Laborers In ChaHah Lebanon are building their own parish church They have spent all their own monw for materialbullbull Now they need only $3100 to finish the Jobbullbullbullbull Make a sacrifice In any amount ($100 $78 $50 $35 $26 $20 $115 $10 $5 $2 $1) for Christ and the poor Dollars go far overseas Your gift will be a longmiddotterm nomiddotrlak Inveatment

A M Thoma defense minister of India reo cently pralaed native Catholic nuna aa angela of peace Mr Thomas II not a Catholic He spoke at the opening of bull new hospitalbullbullbullbull For very little money you can train another angel of peacamp-a alltermiddotln-tralnlng too poor to pay her own expensea It costs only $300 al told payable It you wish at $12150 bull month Your own adopted angel wlJl write to you and you may write to her Help bull IIlter In thanksglvlng7 bull

Gratltude aid at Ambrose Ia man first duty Thets why Americana on Thankaglving Day ay thanks to God for the blesslnga He Ihowers on all of UIbullbullbullbull Before Iltting down to turkey next Thursday people In your town will remember the hungry In the Holy Land For only $10 a month you can feed an entire family of refugeea during all of December To Ihow you we are grateful well lend you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land When you make your will remembr THI CATHOLIO NEAR EAsT WnFARI AasoCIATION

i~~--~-----~------INCLOSED PLEASI PIND $ _ rORr -

NAMI _

aTREET _

OlTy- ITATI ZIP CODL _

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOSEPH T RYAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 10017 Telephone 212YUkon 6-5840

schools about 6000 have De

libraries In other words some two million children in parochial schools have no access to Ii shylrary facilities DesMarais obshyserved

The government official -said the Act is designed to work with Americas pluralistic system of

education and improve schools wherever needed He noted the Act is only the beginning of a new program of federal support for education

I think from now on the country will expect overall supshyport of education as a part shynership between all levels of government No one segment of our society is in a position to support it all by itself

emerging for years And _ if the emershygence of the layman means that laymen- will become more expert in theology and contribute in every possible way to the life of the Church fine

On the other hand if the phrase means the layman withshyout study or experience but only by feeling or instinct or by subjective reasoning is conshysidered as knowledgeable and experienced in- theology moral and dOg)natic as the expert who has devoted his life and time and everything else to it then I want no more to do with the idea than I would want with the practice of an amateur physician whose hobby was surshygery

Emerging Lady And if the emergence of the

layman means that an irate lady miffed for her own reashysons at the Churchs doctrine on contraception can without background and without either knowledgeable or broad expeshyrience of married couples themshyselves (except of course those who may be very talkative inshydeed if they agree with her) re-write the natural and moral law as voided by the Church which Christ founded as the cusshytodian of that law then Im sorshyry but stop the train and In get off shy

have to be pretty dense too after his studies not to know Gods law concerning marriage

At least he ought to undershystand this better than someone who would base the law of morality in marriage only on his or her own preferences likes and dislikes

Unwanted Counsel Actually it is hard to avoid

the hunch that those who would bar the priest as such from counseling in marriage would do so because he is apt to state Gods law unequivocally in o the r words sometimes to counsel things which the counseled does not want to hear

In such a case of course no counselor in the world could help because such a person goes to a counselor not for advice but for confirmation Give that confirmation and youre a fine counselor indeed but try to give s)me other advice and youre not capable of counseling

As I say being a kindly quiet peaceful man it grieves me to call idiocy by its right name But lets not ruin a perfectly good term like the emergence of the layman by wrongly apshyplying it to the subjective ill shyconceived gripes

Lets keep it to mean what it should-a new life and energy in the Church and a more unishyversal consciousness of everyshyones share in the Mystical Body of- Christ

THE SISTERS OF MERCY announce their annual

Christmas_Sale and Bazaar

Wednesday Thursday Friday S~turday November 17 18 1920 - 10 am-l0 pm Do your Christmas shopping at one stop-NO PARKING PROBLEMS-A large variety of hand-made and carefully selected gifts to choose from Every need on your

shopping list can be satisfied

Exquisitely dressed DOLLS special feature

SNACK BAR open afternoons and evenings CAFETERIA open from 5 PM to 7 PM

All suppers $1 50

WEDNESDAY-Spaghetti and Meat Balls THURSDAY-Home-Made Chicken Pie FRIDAY-Seafood Specials SATURDAY-Baked Ham and Beans

On Saturday Evening the HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 1965 and special prizes will be awarded

ST MARYS ACADEMY 8ay View-3070 Pawtucket Ave Riverside

~~ ~- iW~llMtll -- -- -

THOUGHTS WHILE

CARVING A

TURKEY

Dear MonsIgnor Ryan

Pleal return coupon

with youroffering

tion in the church will be folshylowed by the program in the parish hall In charge of arshyrangements will be Mrs Henry Gillet district youth ch~irman

Vandals Desecrate Catholic Chapel

TOTOWA (NC)-Vandals enshytered a small Roman Catholic chapel here in New Jersey and destroyed the altar statues and several other articles

The chapel is one of seven in a 23-acre park and picnic grove owned by the St Michaels Catholic Benevolent Society

Police said the vandals enshytered by pushing through a panshyel in the front door and lifting the latch Then they smashed the altar and altar furnishings broke 13 statues into pieces and deshystroyed 75 vigils lights

nlE POOR

MANS INVESTMENT

GUIDI

1RAIN A

PEACEMAKER

5 THE ANCHORshyCathedral Hotef CCD Members of St Marys No Attleboro Thurs Nov 18 1965

During Blackout NEW YORK (NC)-The big To Sposor 75th AnniversarymiddotOpen House Maronite Pastor

blackout hit New York with some weird results It turnedSt Seventy-five years ago the lower church cornerstone of St Marys parish North To be WitnessPatricks cathedral Into a hotel Attleboro was laid In observance of the anniversary year Confraternity of Christianof sorts

Yes we stayed open an Doctrine-members are sponsoring an open house Sunday Dec 12 to which all area At Beatification Right explained Father John Barry of the cathedral staff The cathedral was nice and warm and comforting Our Ladys chapel was best with plush cushions on its seats

Did they stretch out and deep I asked

Of course only now they eouldnt blame it on anyones sermon And they werent all Catholics I heard one guy telling a group of girls Well you finshyally got me to visit your catheshydral I learned later he was an exec from Saks Fifth Avenue

How did they move around Well we placed large vigil

lights down the center aisle on each side It looked like a minshyiature runway The candlelight was sufficient and soothing

No mishaps of any kind No everyone behaved beaushy

tifully The only nuisance was the snoring Msgr Thomas McshyGovern kept walking through the cathedral up until four in the morning just in case anyone needed assistance of any kind Everyone slept and left at dawn

One visiting priest came over about 630 AM to say Mass He had been stranded since 530 PM on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building

Suppliers Support Fair Hiring Plan

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) More than 90 per cent of the suppliers of goods or services to Church institutions contacted to date within the archdiocese of San Francisco have signed forms agreeing to f a I r employment practices and returned them to the Archdiocesan Commission on Social Justice according to rather Eugene J Boyle chairshyman

The forms were mailed to IIOme 200 suppliers They were asked by Archbishop Joseph T McGucken to hire qualified pershylIOns from minority groups and to promote equal opportunities for them at all job levels

Many responses included enshythusiastic endorsement of the program which will continue until all church suppliers have been contacted

Conduct Interfaith Clothing Program

SANTA FE (NC)-In another ecumenical move the Santa Fe archdiocese will cooperate with the year-around New Mexico Council of Churches emphasis for collection of usable clotliing in the United Clothing Appeal program

Archbishop James P Davis Ramed Msgr William T Bradshyley archdiocesan director of Catholic Charities to head the 17th annual Thanksgiving Week Clothing Campaign of Catholic Relief Services-National Cathshyolic Welfare Conference

CRS-NCWC headquarters in New York has been informed of the united efforts of the archshydiocese and the Council of Churches united clothing appeal cooperation

Musical Festival Alumnae of Dominican Acashy

demy Fall River will sponsor a Fall festival of music at 8 tonight at the academy 37 Park Street Featured will be the Alshylegro Glee ClUb directed by Dr Normand O Paquin and Conrad P Fortier Tickets will be available at the door

residents have been invited Ceremonial vestments and the sacred vessels used in the celebration of Mass will be on display and attendants will be on hand to answer quesshytions or amplify the brief explanations to be placed near each exhibit Refreshments will be served in the school hall after the tour of the church

In sponsoring such an event the parish bears silent witness to the ecumenical climate of the 20th century and to the distance both it and the American Cathshyolic Church have come since the mid-nineteenth century

Know-Nothings The first Catholics came to

North Attleboro at a time when neither Catholics nor the Irish were popular in the area a time identified with the KnowshyNothing movement which atshytempted to prevent the settleshyment of both Catholics and forshyeign-born citizens

However in spite of hostility the group in North Attleboro became a mission of St Marys Parish Pawtucket and remained so under the pastorate of Father McNamee until 1856 At that time the mission was taken over by Father Gilleck pastor in Greenville who celebrated the first Mass in Attleboro in the home of a Mr Fallon on upper High Street now known as the golf grounds

Father Gillick built the first church in Attleboro Dedicated June 19 1859 it was located at the rock which is now Attleshyboro Falls It has since been conshyverted ~nto tenement houses By 1873 the North Attleboro misshysion had become much larger than tlat at Greenville and

Father Gillieck moved to Attleshyboro The following year he was succeeded by Rev Edward J Mongan who transferred the parish center to North Attleboro

Old Round House Father Mongan purchased the

Tifft estate with its existing buildings in 1877 The property at that time included the Old Round House a historic site and well known edifice built in 1856 and used as a rectory until 1959 the Old Octagon an eight-sided buildingmiddot another landmark in the area which served for many years as a church for St Marys parishionshyers and the famous Old Red Barn

During this period St Marys served as the mother church for missions in Attleboro which became a separate parish in 1883 St Marys Mansfield sepshyarated in 1894 anlt St Stephens Dodgeville which became a parish in 1880

The cornerstone of the new church was laid May 30 1890 and parishioners attended sershyvices in the basement church until the upper edifice was comshypleted and dedicated in 1901

In the meanwhile while the church was under construction several changes took place at St

Workers for Blind Have Poverty Role

NEWARK (NC)-Delegates to the annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for the Blind were briefed here on participation in anti-poverty programs

George L Haithcock a direcshytor of field services for the National Catholic Community Service in Washington D C and T George Silcott assistant reshygional director of the office of Economic Opportunity spoke on anti-poverty programs during the twoday meeting

Marys Rev John Hurley sucshyceeded Father Mongan in 1889 Two years later he died suddenshyly and Rev Charles Burns beshycame pastor for one year

The next pastor was Rev John McCarthy who came to North Attleboro in 1901 and was faced with the problem of reshyducing the parish debt for the purchase of the land and buildshying of the church He also purshychased a parish cemetery and completed the interiormiddot of the church erecting marble altars and installing chimes and stained glass windows

The next pastor was one whose name seems synonymous with the growth of the Church in Attleshyboro since he served in that area for decades Father later Monsignor P E McGee came to North Attleboro in 1911 and reshymained there until his death in 1948

Built School During this time he built the

school which now has the larg-

Bishop Hospitalized ROME (NC) - Bishop Joseph

P Dougherty middotof Yakima Wash has been admitted to Salvator Mundi Hospital here for rest and observation

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

Auxiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

ST MARYS CHURCH - NORTH ATTLEBORO

(Insert)-Rev Edward B Booth

est enrollment in the Diocese close to 770 pupils from kindershygraten through eighth grade and the convent which houses the Sisters of Mercy who staff the school These were constructed to complement the school as was the rectory after them and are located on the same site as the other church properties

Upon the death of Father McGee Father Considine served as administrator until Rev Francis Maloney was named pastor the following year Father Maloney added two classrooms to the school and started plans for a new rectory during his eight-year pastorate

In 1957 Rev Edward B Booth the present pastor took over the duties at St Marys The Old Round House was finshyally torn down A modern rectory erected on its site was completed in 1959 With 4500 to 5000 of the faithful in his parish Father Booth is assisted by Rev Armando Annunziato and Rev Daniel F Moriarty curates

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Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Maronite Rite Church in Fall River left for Rome Tuesday to be pr~sent at beati shyfication ceremonies Sunday Dec 5 for Father Sharbel the hershymit of Lebanon

The event will climax years of effort by Father Eid who is vice-postulator of Father Sha-rshybels cause for canonization in the Unitedmiddot States Most imporshytant of his works in behalf of Father Sharbel has been publicashytion and circulation of The Hermit of Lebanon Father Sharbel an account of the holy mans life and miracles

As the beatification solemnishyties are taking place in Rome St Anthony of the Desert pashyrishioners will hold a triduum of thanksgiving beginning Thursshyday Dec 2 and ending Sunday A large picture of Father Sharshybel will be brought from the parish center named in his honshyor to the church This ceremony will coincide with the display in St Peters Basilica of the hershymits likeness

Two Miracles Two m ira c I e s performed

through the intercession of Father Sharbel will be accepted in support of his beatification said Father Eid Both are disshycussed in his book One involves

the cure of a Lebanese nun healed of a longstanding stomach disorder the other that of a Lebanese blacksmith blind in one eye for 13 years who had his sight restored after persevershying prayer to the monk

Father Eid said that the Sacred Congregation of Rites will meet with Pope Paul Saturshyday to complete final details in connection with the beatification The Fall River pastor will use his time in Rome to gather mateshyrial for a new edition of his book on Father Sharbel and wiu also present an offering at St Peters on behalf of his parishshyioners and friends in Fall River

Dec 20 Ceremony DETROIT (NC)-Bishop-desshy

ignate Joseph M Breitenbeck will be consecrated auxiliary to Archbishop John F Dearden of Detroit on Monday Dec 20

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OIL HEAT

WYmaneatt 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

Iwflllektl~

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

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THE -ANCHOI- 5 7nbull Nov 18 196

Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

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NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 2: 11.18.65

2 THE ANCHOR-Dioce~e of Fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196~

-Proper of the Mass Last Sundaymiddot After Pentecost

INTROIT The Lord says I thinlc thoughts of peace and not of affliction You shall call upon me and I will hear you and 1 will bring back your captivity from all places You have favored 0 Lord your land you have restored the well-being of Jacob Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit as it was in the beginning is now and ever shall be world without end Amen The Lord says I think thoughts of peace and not of affliction You shall call upon me and I will hear you and I will bring back your captivity from all places

GRADUAL You saved us 0 Lord from our foes and those who hated us you put to shame In God we gloried day by day You~ name we praised always Alleluia alleluia Out of the depths I cry to you 0 Lord Lord hear my prayer Alleluia

OFFERTORY Out of the depths r cry to you 0 Lord Lord hear my prayer Out of the depths I cry to you o Lord

COMMUNION Amen r say to you all things whatshyever you ask for in prayer believe that you shall receive and it shall be done to you

Please Clip and Bring to Church on Sunday

Bishop-Elect Says Appointment Tribute to Church Catholicity

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Bishshyop-elect Harold R Perry SVD said on his arrival here from Rome that he views his appointshyment as a tribute to the Cathoshylicity of the Church in America and to the Catholicity of the people of the New Orleans archshydiocese rather than tomiddot him personally

He asked for the good will understanding and prayers of

the people of New Orleans to help him serve them in faith and charity in the best way I know of

The veteran Louisiana priest the first Negro in modern times to be named a Catholic bishop in America saidmiddothe was grateful to Pope Paul for appointing him auxiliary bishop of New Orleans because I now enjoy the great privilege of being a successor of the Apostles

Father Perry was greeted at New Orleans International Airshyport by New Orleans archdiocshyesan officials friends and well shywishers and a volley of questions o~ civil rights by newsmen

ais arrival though publicized was -quiet and orderlY There were no demonstrators The orily placard was carried by a small boy It read

Greetings to Bishop-ele~

Harold Perry from cousins and friends

Father Perry took ~ in the

Project for Aged STOCKTON (NC)--Construcshy

tion was started here -on Casa Manana Inn a low cost housing project for aged with compleshytion expected in 1967 It will be a modern apartment-type building of 163 uDits open to

persons 62 years and older withshyout regard to race creed or color The projeCt was planned by the Catholic Mens Institute here in California

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Nov 21-8t Ann Raynham St John the Evangelist

Attleboro

TN AIlCKllll second Class Postage PaIG at Fan River

Mus Ublilhell lve T1IundIJ at 410 Hlplano Avenue Fill IlIver_ Mass_ 02722 1IIe CAtllollll Press IJf tile Diocese fJf faII Illf Sublcrlptlee 8iI 111 middot400-1III~ bull

installation of Archbishop Philip M Hannan of New Orleans and concelebrated the accompanying Mass with Archbishop Hannan Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi apshyostolic delegate in the United States and other prelates

He told a reporter that al shythough the location and date of his consecration as a bishop had not been determined he expectshyed it to take place in New Orshyleans probably after the first week in December when the Vatican council is scheduled to end

In reply to a question on the Churchs role in civil rights demonstrations Father Perry said he will have so many things to do as a Catholic bishop that I personally will not have time to be considered a civil rights leader

He said that clergy participashytion in civil rights demonstrashytions has been done successfully and he has middotno objections to such participation

In the archdiocese however I will be working under the sushypervision of Archbishop Hannan and naturally I will take my orders from him Whatever he approves or disapproves I will accept

MassOrdo FRIDAY-8t Elizabeth of Hunshy

gary Queen and Widow m Class White Mass Proper Gloria 2nd ColI St Pontianus Pope and Martyr no Creect Common Preface

SATURDAY-8t Felix of Valoshyis Confessor III Class White Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

SUNDAY-XXIV and Last Sunshyday After Pentecost II Class Green Mas Proper Gloria Creed Preface of Trinity

MONDAY-St Cecilia Virgin and Martyr ill Class Red Mass Proper Gloria no Creed Common Preface

TUESDAY-St Clement I Pope and Martyr III Class Red

Mass Proper Gloria 2nd Coli St Felicitas Martyr no Creed Common Preface

WEDNESDAY-8tmiddot John of the Cross Confessor and Doctor of the Church m Class White Mass Proper Gloria 2nd Coll St Chrysogonus Martyr DO

Creed Common Preface THURSDAY - St CatheriDe

Virgin and Martyr m CIua ~ Gloria no Creed ComshyJnOII PloeIaee

THE SAME THE WORLD OVER Kansha Bi is Thanksshygiving Day in Japan The name may be different but the custom of giving thanks is the same the world over Maryshyknoll Sister Martin Jerome and her kimonoed friends join in saying arigato for their many spiritual and material blessings

bull Lacking In Honesty Jesuit Declares Discussions About Sex

Confined to Narrow Scope CINCINNATI (NC) - Talk

about sex leads naturally to talk about marriage failures undershydeveloped nations inner city jungles population problem and human relations - when Father John L Thomas SJ is the speaker

The St Louis University socishyologist and veteran marriage counselor here for a lecture to X a vie r University students stressed in an interview his conshyviction that discussions about sex tend to be remote from realshyity lacking in honesty and conshyfiDed to a scope he considers too narrawbull

There is a great dealof vershybalizing about sex he said but not much facing of reality Even high school kids know all the terms

But this superficial approach isnt new to the present time or place he indicated No etJ1ture has dealt rationally with sex he said

But Im not entirely pessishymistic he added pointing out that in a few days he woUld be

Medal Award NEW YORK (NCl - Brother

Gregory FSC president of Manhattan C9llege here was guest sPeaker at the Founder Medal Award dinner-dance of the New York Association of Consulting Engineersbull Manhatshytan alumus William H Eipel head of his own engineering consultant firm was presented with the 1965 Founders Medal in appreciation of his work

OROURKE Funeral Home

571 Second Street Fan River Mass

OS 9-6072 MICHAel J McMAHON

licensed funeral Director Retist~ Imlilahner

attending an executive board meeting of the new Sex Inforshymation and Education Council of the U S (SIECUS) at New York-an organization of edushycators psychologists counselors and others deeply concerned about making a rational apshyproach to the subject possible

Mature Relationship Too much attention is given

to sexual relationship as someshything separate from the rest of life Father Thomas said It ought tomiddotbe treated as a mature relationship between two pershysons and one which in the Christian concept calls for control consideration and conshycern for the other partner he said

YoUng people in middottodays culshyture are exposed very early to social relationships with which they are too immature to cope he said ~

Because of our reticence they havent been given adequate preparation for sex and human relationships The result is conshyfusion and failure to realize the eonsequeDces of these ieiationshyahips Father Thbmas Ilaid

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Renewal Theme Of Conference

TORONTO (NC)-An intewshynational congress and institute to be held here in 1967 will aim at investigating changes in the Church of today in the light ~

theology according to Father Lawrence K Shook CSB chairman of the coordinatinl committee for the conference

Father Shook is also president of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies here wherti the sessions of the congress and institute will be held Aug 2Q to 26 1967

The conference is the project of the Catholic hierarchy of Enshyglish-speaking dioceses to mark the lOoth anniversary of Canadishyan confederation in 1867

Prelates to Speak

Theme of the meeting is the theology of the renewal of the Church Theologians and otheso scholars are currently being seshylected to read papers at the conference _

Among those on Fat1ler Shook list of prospective speakers ~ Franciskus Cardinal Koenig oC Vienna Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger of Montreal Leo Cardinal Suenens of Malines-Brussels Belgium and Father BarnabU8 Ahearn CP a Scripture specishyalist

Necrology NOV 25

Rev Philias Jalbert 1948 Pastor Notre Dame Fall River

NOV 26 Rev James R Burns PR

1945 Pastor Sacred Heart Fall River

NOV Rt Rev Patrick E McGee

1948 Pastor St Mary No Ashytleboro

NOV 28 Rev Adrian A Gauthier 1951

Pastor St Roch Fall River NOV 30

Rev William J McCoomb 1895 Pastor Immaculate Conshyception No Easton

Rev CA Martens 1898 Founshyder Santo Christo Fall River

DEC 1 Rev Phillipe Ross 1958 Chapshy

lain Sacred Heart Home New Bedford

DEC Rev Arthur Savoie 1917 Pashy

tor St Hyacinth New Bedford Rev Dennis W Harrington

1958 Assistant 51 Mary TaUDshyton shy

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3 THE ANCHOR-Priests middotReceive Guidelines Thurs Nov 18 196~

On Chrimiddotstian Unity Believe Freedom SAGINAW (NC)-DiHinity makes Christians shame- Long Way Offfaced before God and the world priests 0 fthe Saginaw dioshy

cese were told~ ata Christian unity workshop here Our In Red Areas division has led tl5 uncharity~nd in some cases inj Listice-WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Christianity h~ been at

A panel of speakers hasodds with itself said Fr eClmenical activities under the Edward M Egan of the com- guidance and direction of the agreed that communist reshy

mission on ecumenism of the bishop gimes have a long way to go archdiocese of Chicago Guard against disillusionment in the area of individual freedom

Father Egan proposed a We Americans like to see reshy but the chances of progress vary seven-point guide for promoting sulls but we must be reasonable from one communist country to

Reunification cannot be accom- anotherunity Learn to control fears about plished in the twinkling of an Robert V Daniel University

of Vermont history professorChristian unity but do not ig- eye speaking at a two-day confershynore them We must recognize Learn to pray not only with ence on religion in communistthe dangers in what we are un- but also for other Christians bloc countries at St Michaelsdertaking and still move for- You cannot long pray for a man College estimates chances forward without coming to love and trust progress are best in Eastern EushyDont compromise for unity him rope where Russian style desshyUnity like charity can never Another workshop speaker potism has never been particushybe bought at the expense of Dr Allan A Zaun pastor of a larly welcome even among comshytruth Detroit Presbyterian church munists He added that chancesNever engage in formal dia- said most Protestants are deshyfor progress are darkest in comshylogue without knowing middotthe sub- lighted at Catholic efforts at munist Chinaject well We must know our renewal

The future of religion under own theology well but we must Discussing areas of common communism depends mainly onalso know the theology of the agreement Dr Zaun noted both the future of totalitarianismother side Protestants and Catholics use Daniels said

Restrict yourself to the speci- substantially the same Bible and On this question there arefic geographical area involved cited progress being made many guesses but little agreeshyTechniques which work well in toward a common Bible ment Some will say Soviet totalshyone area may not work in anshy

itarianism will never ease upother he said He also noted general acceptshyenough to permit real religiousCatholics must conduct their ance of the Apostles Creed the MAKES VISITATION Mother Virginia Bento left freedom Some may argue thatNicene Creed Baptism Commushy

North American Provincial for the Sisters of St DorQthy totalitarianism already has beennion and the common use ofMiami See Has done away with by de-Stalinizashytion and that religion has all the

hymns welcomes Mother Marie DePiro Vicar General on canonical visitation to Villa Fatima Taunton communitys provincialEducational TV freedom it needs in the commushyhouse Mother DePiro who formerly held Mother Bentos nist world My own estimation isMIAMI (NC) - More than position is now stationed in Rome She will attend a b~essshy middot that there is a long way to goExile Explains23000 Catholic school pupils in ing ceremony for a statue of the Immaculate Heart of MaryDade County Fla are -receiving

classroom instructions through Cubas Plight at Our Lady of Fatima High School Warren RI at 2 Library Scholarship the first multiple channel educashy Saturday afternoon Nov 20 Friends of the DorotheansSCHULENBURG (NC) - Dr The Catholic Library Associshytional broadcasting system in from the Fall River Diocese are invited to attend ation is offering a scholarship inHector J Remeo who fled hisuse in a Catholic diocese middot-library science for the academicnative Cuba in 1960 and now reshyUp to four programs can be

sides in Hallettsville Tex told year 1966 for graduate studybroadcast simultaneously on the

a Knights of Columbus m~eting toward a masters degree Inforshyclosed circuit TV system Alshy Questions Valuehere everyone in Cuba is forced middot mation is available from the asshythough only one of the four

to support the revolution and sociation at 461 West Lancasterchannels assigned by the Federshy

take a loyalty oath to Prime Minshy New Jersey Prelate Sees Little Advcintage Avenue Haverford Pa 19041

expects to have TV cameras and university in Havana was the and providing an effective mechshyother equipment necessary to training in human relations-andprime target of Red attacks until anism for avoiding or settling bull_---_produce its own programs Unshy in the channels already existing

it was seized by the Castro reshy disputes about police misconshy to process grievancestil then tapes and film will be middot shy

al Communications Commission ister Fidel Castro before beingis now in use Father Joseph H assigned to a job by the Red govshy In Establishing Police Review Boards

OShea director of the diocesan ernmentRadio and Television Commisshy POINT PLEASANT (NC)shy as postpone disputes and transshysion said all four will be in use All children must belong to The coordinator of interracial fer them to a higher level

programs for the Newark archshywithin two years the League of Rebel Pioneers He said civilian review boards diocese doubts the practicalityFather OShea also said the which begins communist regishy would also place board personshyof civilian revlew boards to inshysystem installed by the Radio mentation of youth at the age of nel in the target area of racial vestigate charges of police brushyCorporation of America will be seven he said He estimated counter-claims and harm the tality against minority groupsbroadened shortly to include there are 80000 political prisonshy morale of both police and offi shy

Suchboards cannot be rejected17000 more pupils in neighborshy ers on the island subjected to cial civil rights agencies on principle Msgr Aloysius Ting Broward and Palm Beach torture and living in concentrashy I would trust rather iIi preshyWelsh said But he addedtion campscounties ventive measures-the screeningWould such a board be advanshy

By next Spring the diocese of police candidates for prejushyDr Remeo said the Catholic tageous in settling racial tensions dice as a priority and their

gime He added that most of the duct used Protestant ministers have gone My own judgment he told

into exile and the number of the Northeast Institute on ComshyJews has been reduced to less munity Relations here in NewFrancis Lennon Head than 10 per cent of their former Jersey would be that a review

Of Legion of Mary number board would middotnotsettle so much

Francis Lennon st Michaels parish Fall River has been named president of the Diocesan Comitium of the Legion of Mary He was formerly Comitium viceshypresident and also served as vice-president of Gate of Heavshyen praesidium of the Legion his parish unit

The vice-presidential office of the Comitium is now open and all active senior Legionaries are eligible for the position Among candidates is Miss Mary Moniz of Fall River Central Praesishydium

The next Comitium meeting will be held Tuesday Dec 7 at St Michaels school hall at which time further names will be proposed and the office fill shyed

New Bedford Guild New Bedford Catholic Guild

for the Blind will meet at 8 toshynight in K of C Hall Mrs Evshyelyn Loranger is entertainment ehairman with Mrs Irene Danshysereau as co-chairman

~ - - - -- - - _- ---------- --_-------- -_ shy --~

DURFEEi NOW PLAYING

TOOI)AOmiddot COLOR If IJc Llu

Monday through Thursday 8 oclock PM Friday and Saturday 830 - Sunday 730

Matinee - Wed Sat Sunday and Thanksgiving Day - 2 oclock

Tickets on sale in New Bedford at the Merri-Card Shop

SPECIAL ATTENTION TO SCHOOL CYO CHURCH GROUPS

J B LUMBER CO bull So Dartmouth shy and Hyannis

_ So Dartmouth WY 79384_- bull Hyannis 2921 _ -~------__-----_ shy

RETREATS Single Girls-Ages l8-25-Nov 26 27 28

SINGLE MEN-Ages 18-25-Dec 3 4 5

I(NGAGED COUPLES-Dec 10 11 12

fOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS

REV GILES GENEST MS

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Tri-City Office Equip 427 Second St Cor Morgan

Ed McGinn Prop

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Tel 679-6712 675-7806 -7807

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965 yenfarns of Vfaste National Official Urges AdministratorsE~ergence of Layman To Study Education Aid Bill Features

Has Limited -Significance BURLINGTON (NC)-A govshyBy Joseph T McGloin SJ ernment official cautions the

Federal Aid to Education BillBeing a kindly quiet peace-loving man I tend to supshyof 1965 will be a tremendous press any criticism of others particularly of that loveable waste unless teachers know the

group qualifying as Writers But since everyone who law and what they can do with writes no matter what is known as a writer someshy it

Philip H DesMarais deputytimes you come across an assistant secretary -for legislashymorning cup of coffeeitem so incredibly stupid So the priest gets a pretty tion ~f the Department of

that it demands some comshy good cross-section of the things Health Education and Welfare ment I should make it clear which can cause a marriage to outlined the Act at the Vermont first of all that far from being go wrong and the things which Catholic Educators Association against the emerging layman make it go right convention here

am all for the And hed have to be a pretty Stressing Title II of the Act laity to do just first-class idiot not to be able which provides aid for school that In fact I to put two and two together and libraries and instructional mashyknow many a say This is the sort of thing terial DesMarais said some pastor who has which almost always makes a 53 per cent of the public schools been trying to marriage fail or This is the in the U S have no library

sort of thing which keeps a marshyget his laity to Of some 14000 privateriage together just as heddo a little

In the mind of this emerging 1~~~8~~l~)~~~

lady the priest should not dare to do any marriage counseling since he is not himself married And this little bit of reasoning needs some exainining because it contains so mltlny inanities that its too soggy just to be tossed aside as it deserves

It should certainly be adshymitted first of all that it is quite true that some priests should not be marriage counselors

More Objective There are also some doctors

who should not be allowed to practice But as such the doctor with his training and objectivity and experience should be al shylowed to practice his own proshyfession-even if hes never himshyself had the disease hes treating

The fact is that having had or not had- a certain disease has nothing to do witl a doctors efficiency in treating it As a matter of fact he may be more objective about it and so do a better job if he hasnt had it

And the priest may well be a much more capable marriage counselor from the very fact that he is not married He has studied the sacrament and inshystitution of marriage from every angle

He has besides had to deal with more marriage problems per week than most married persons will encounter in a lifeshytime even by probing into the secrets of the couple next door over the back fence or over the

YOUTH PROGRAM Rev HOWTDPaul F McCarrick Fall Rivshyer area CYO and CYAO dishy BEArector will conduct a youth program for an open meeting MISSIONof Fall River District Counshycil of Catholic Women at 8 INVESTDRtonight at St Jean Baptiste Church Fall River Benedicshy THI HOLY ATHIRS MISSiON AID TO THI DRIINTAL CHURCH

GIfts to Pope PaUl Near East Missions feed the hungry train native prlesU and Sisters In _ 18 developing countries build churches and schools They also give you the satisfaction of bringing Christ to the poorbullbullbullbull Wise Investors ule theIr dollars where they buy the most Imagine for as little as $2900 you can build prlest~ houle with parish center In Edappelmiddot ayam In mountainous southern India where ragged pioneers are hacking out new farming colonlesl Name It for your favorite aalnt In memory of your loved onesbullbullbullbull Invest In hard wor~7 Laborers In ChaHah Lebanon are building their own parish church They have spent all their own monw for materialbullbull Now they need only $3100 to finish the Jobbullbullbullbull Make a sacrifice In any amount ($100 $78 $50 $35 $26 $20 $115 $10 $5 $2 $1) for Christ and the poor Dollars go far overseas Your gift will be a longmiddotterm nomiddotrlak Inveatment

A M Thoma defense minister of India reo cently pralaed native Catholic nuna aa angela of peace Mr Thomas II not a Catholic He spoke at the opening of bull new hospitalbullbullbullbull For very little money you can train another angel of peacamp-a alltermiddotln-tralnlng too poor to pay her own expensea It costs only $300 al told payable It you wish at $12150 bull month Your own adopted angel wlJl write to you and you may write to her Help bull IIlter In thanksglvlng7 bull

Gratltude aid at Ambrose Ia man first duty Thets why Americana on Thankaglving Day ay thanks to God for the blesslnga He Ihowers on all of UIbullbullbullbull Before Iltting down to turkey next Thursday people In your town will remember the hungry In the Holy Land For only $10 a month you can feed an entire family of refugeea during all of December To Ihow you we are grateful well lend you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land When you make your will remembr THI CATHOLIO NEAR EAsT WnFARI AasoCIATION

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NAMI _

aTREET _

OlTy- ITATI ZIP CODL _

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOSEPH T RYAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 10017 Telephone 212YUkon 6-5840

schools about 6000 have De

libraries In other words some two million children in parochial schools have no access to Ii shylrary facilities DesMarais obshyserved

The government official -said the Act is designed to work with Americas pluralistic system of

education and improve schools wherever needed He noted the Act is only the beginning of a new program of federal support for education

I think from now on the country will expect overall supshyport of education as a part shynership between all levels of government No one segment of our society is in a position to support it all by itself

emerging for years And _ if the emershygence of the layman means that laymen- will become more expert in theology and contribute in every possible way to the life of the Church fine

On the other hand if the phrase means the layman withshyout study or experience but only by feeling or instinct or by subjective reasoning is conshysidered as knowledgeable and experienced in- theology moral and dOg)natic as the expert who has devoted his life and time and everything else to it then I want no more to do with the idea than I would want with the practice of an amateur physician whose hobby was surshygery

Emerging Lady And if the emergence of the

layman means that an irate lady miffed for her own reashysons at the Churchs doctrine on contraception can without background and without either knowledgeable or broad expeshyrience of married couples themshyselves (except of course those who may be very talkative inshydeed if they agree with her) re-write the natural and moral law as voided by the Church which Christ founded as the cusshytodian of that law then Im sorshyry but stop the train and In get off shy

have to be pretty dense too after his studies not to know Gods law concerning marriage

At least he ought to undershystand this better than someone who would base the law of morality in marriage only on his or her own preferences likes and dislikes

Unwanted Counsel Actually it is hard to avoid

the hunch that those who would bar the priest as such from counseling in marriage would do so because he is apt to state Gods law unequivocally in o the r words sometimes to counsel things which the counseled does not want to hear

In such a case of course no counselor in the world could help because such a person goes to a counselor not for advice but for confirmation Give that confirmation and youre a fine counselor indeed but try to give s)me other advice and youre not capable of counseling

As I say being a kindly quiet peaceful man it grieves me to call idiocy by its right name But lets not ruin a perfectly good term like the emergence of the layman by wrongly apshyplying it to the subjective ill shyconceived gripes

Lets keep it to mean what it should-a new life and energy in the Church and a more unishyversal consciousness of everyshyones share in the Mystical Body of- Christ

THE SISTERS OF MERCY announce their annual

Christmas_Sale and Bazaar

Wednesday Thursday Friday S~turday November 17 18 1920 - 10 am-l0 pm Do your Christmas shopping at one stop-NO PARKING PROBLEMS-A large variety of hand-made and carefully selected gifts to choose from Every need on your

shopping list can be satisfied

Exquisitely dressed DOLLS special feature

SNACK BAR open afternoons and evenings CAFETERIA open from 5 PM to 7 PM

All suppers $1 50

WEDNESDAY-Spaghetti and Meat Balls THURSDAY-Home-Made Chicken Pie FRIDAY-Seafood Specials SATURDAY-Baked Ham and Beans

On Saturday Evening the HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 1965 and special prizes will be awarded

ST MARYS ACADEMY 8ay View-3070 Pawtucket Ave Riverside

~~ ~- iW~llMtll -- -- -

THOUGHTS WHILE

CARVING A

TURKEY

Dear MonsIgnor Ryan

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with youroffering

tion in the church will be folshylowed by the program in the parish hall In charge of arshyrangements will be Mrs Henry Gillet district youth ch~irman

Vandals Desecrate Catholic Chapel

TOTOWA (NC)-Vandals enshytered a small Roman Catholic chapel here in New Jersey and destroyed the altar statues and several other articles

The chapel is one of seven in a 23-acre park and picnic grove owned by the St Michaels Catholic Benevolent Society

Police said the vandals enshytered by pushing through a panshyel in the front door and lifting the latch Then they smashed the altar and altar furnishings broke 13 statues into pieces and deshystroyed 75 vigils lights

nlE POOR

MANS INVESTMENT

GUIDI

1RAIN A

PEACEMAKER

5 THE ANCHORshyCathedral Hotef CCD Members of St Marys No Attleboro Thurs Nov 18 1965

During Blackout NEW YORK (NC)-The big To Sposor 75th AnniversarymiddotOpen House Maronite Pastor

blackout hit New York with some weird results It turnedSt Seventy-five years ago the lower church cornerstone of St Marys parish North To be WitnessPatricks cathedral Into a hotel Attleboro was laid In observance of the anniversary year Confraternity of Christianof sorts

Yes we stayed open an Doctrine-members are sponsoring an open house Sunday Dec 12 to which all area At Beatification Right explained Father John Barry of the cathedral staff The cathedral was nice and warm and comforting Our Ladys chapel was best with plush cushions on its seats

Did they stretch out and deep I asked

Of course only now they eouldnt blame it on anyones sermon And they werent all Catholics I heard one guy telling a group of girls Well you finshyally got me to visit your catheshydral I learned later he was an exec from Saks Fifth Avenue

How did they move around Well we placed large vigil

lights down the center aisle on each side It looked like a minshyiature runway The candlelight was sufficient and soothing

No mishaps of any kind No everyone behaved beaushy

tifully The only nuisance was the snoring Msgr Thomas McshyGovern kept walking through the cathedral up until four in the morning just in case anyone needed assistance of any kind Everyone slept and left at dawn

One visiting priest came over about 630 AM to say Mass He had been stranded since 530 PM on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building

Suppliers Support Fair Hiring Plan

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) More than 90 per cent of the suppliers of goods or services to Church institutions contacted to date within the archdiocese of San Francisco have signed forms agreeing to f a I r employment practices and returned them to the Archdiocesan Commission on Social Justice according to rather Eugene J Boyle chairshyman

The forms were mailed to IIOme 200 suppliers They were asked by Archbishop Joseph T McGucken to hire qualified pershylIOns from minority groups and to promote equal opportunities for them at all job levels

Many responses included enshythusiastic endorsement of the program which will continue until all church suppliers have been contacted

Conduct Interfaith Clothing Program

SANTA FE (NC)-In another ecumenical move the Santa Fe archdiocese will cooperate with the year-around New Mexico Council of Churches emphasis for collection of usable clotliing in the United Clothing Appeal program

Archbishop James P Davis Ramed Msgr William T Bradshyley archdiocesan director of Catholic Charities to head the 17th annual Thanksgiving Week Clothing Campaign of Catholic Relief Services-National Cathshyolic Welfare Conference

CRS-NCWC headquarters in New York has been informed of the united efforts of the archshydiocese and the Council of Churches united clothing appeal cooperation

Musical Festival Alumnae of Dominican Acashy

demy Fall River will sponsor a Fall festival of music at 8 tonight at the academy 37 Park Street Featured will be the Alshylegro Glee ClUb directed by Dr Normand O Paquin and Conrad P Fortier Tickets will be available at the door

residents have been invited Ceremonial vestments and the sacred vessels used in the celebration of Mass will be on display and attendants will be on hand to answer quesshytions or amplify the brief explanations to be placed near each exhibit Refreshments will be served in the school hall after the tour of the church

In sponsoring such an event the parish bears silent witness to the ecumenical climate of the 20th century and to the distance both it and the American Cathshyolic Church have come since the mid-nineteenth century

Know-Nothings The first Catholics came to

North Attleboro at a time when neither Catholics nor the Irish were popular in the area a time identified with the KnowshyNothing movement which atshytempted to prevent the settleshyment of both Catholics and forshyeign-born citizens

However in spite of hostility the group in North Attleboro became a mission of St Marys Parish Pawtucket and remained so under the pastorate of Father McNamee until 1856 At that time the mission was taken over by Father Gilleck pastor in Greenville who celebrated the first Mass in Attleboro in the home of a Mr Fallon on upper High Street now known as the golf grounds

Father Gillick built the first church in Attleboro Dedicated June 19 1859 it was located at the rock which is now Attleshyboro Falls It has since been conshyverted ~nto tenement houses By 1873 the North Attleboro misshysion had become much larger than tlat at Greenville and

Father Gillieck moved to Attleshyboro The following year he was succeeded by Rev Edward J Mongan who transferred the parish center to North Attleboro

Old Round House Father Mongan purchased the

Tifft estate with its existing buildings in 1877 The property at that time included the Old Round House a historic site and well known edifice built in 1856 and used as a rectory until 1959 the Old Octagon an eight-sided buildingmiddot another landmark in the area which served for many years as a church for St Marys parishionshyers and the famous Old Red Barn

During this period St Marys served as the mother church for missions in Attleboro which became a separate parish in 1883 St Marys Mansfield sepshyarated in 1894 anlt St Stephens Dodgeville which became a parish in 1880

The cornerstone of the new church was laid May 30 1890 and parishioners attended sershyvices in the basement church until the upper edifice was comshypleted and dedicated in 1901

In the meanwhile while the church was under construction several changes took place at St

Workers for Blind Have Poverty Role

NEWARK (NC)-Delegates to the annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for the Blind were briefed here on participation in anti-poverty programs

George L Haithcock a direcshytor of field services for the National Catholic Community Service in Washington D C and T George Silcott assistant reshygional director of the office of Economic Opportunity spoke on anti-poverty programs during the twoday meeting

Marys Rev John Hurley sucshyceeded Father Mongan in 1889 Two years later he died suddenshyly and Rev Charles Burns beshycame pastor for one year

The next pastor was Rev John McCarthy who came to North Attleboro in 1901 and was faced with the problem of reshyducing the parish debt for the purchase of the land and buildshying of the church He also purshychased a parish cemetery and completed the interiormiddot of the church erecting marble altars and installing chimes and stained glass windows

The next pastor was one whose name seems synonymous with the growth of the Church in Attleshyboro since he served in that area for decades Father later Monsignor P E McGee came to North Attleboro in 1911 and reshymained there until his death in 1948

Built School During this time he built the

school which now has the larg-

Bishop Hospitalized ROME (NC) - Bishop Joseph

P Dougherty middotof Yakima Wash has been admitted to Salvator Mundi Hospital here for rest and observation

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est enrollment in the Diocese close to 770 pupils from kindershygraten through eighth grade and the convent which houses the Sisters of Mercy who staff the school These were constructed to complement the school as was the rectory after them and are located on the same site as the other church properties

Upon the death of Father McGee Father Considine served as administrator until Rev Francis Maloney was named pastor the following year Father Maloney added two classrooms to the school and started plans for a new rectory during his eight-year pastorate

In 1957 Rev Edward B Booth the present pastor took over the duties at St Marys The Old Round House was finshyally torn down A modern rectory erected on its site was completed in 1959 With 4500 to 5000 of the faithful in his parish Father Booth is assisted by Rev Armando Annunziato and Rev Daniel F Moriarty curates

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Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Maronite Rite Church in Fall River left for Rome Tuesday to be pr~sent at beati shyfication ceremonies Sunday Dec 5 for Father Sharbel the hershymit of Lebanon

The event will climax years of effort by Father Eid who is vice-postulator of Father Sha-rshybels cause for canonization in the Unitedmiddot States Most imporshytant of his works in behalf of Father Sharbel has been publicashytion and circulation of The Hermit of Lebanon Father Sharbel an account of the holy mans life and miracles

As the beatification solemnishyties are taking place in Rome St Anthony of the Desert pashyrishioners will hold a triduum of thanksgiving beginning Thursshyday Dec 2 and ending Sunday A large picture of Father Sharshybel will be brought from the parish center named in his honshyor to the church This ceremony will coincide with the display in St Peters Basilica of the hershymits likeness

Two Miracles Two m ira c I e s performed

through the intercession of Father Sharbel will be accepted in support of his beatification said Father Eid Both are disshycussed in his book One involves

the cure of a Lebanese nun healed of a longstanding stomach disorder the other that of a Lebanese blacksmith blind in one eye for 13 years who had his sight restored after persevershying prayer to the monk

Father Eid said that the Sacred Congregation of Rites will meet with Pope Paul Saturshyday to complete final details in connection with the beatification The Fall River pastor will use his time in Rome to gather mateshyrial for a new edition of his book on Father Sharbel and wiu also present an offering at St Peters on behalf of his parishshyioners and friends in Fall River

Dec 20 Ceremony DETROIT (NC)-Bishop-desshy

ignate Joseph M Breitenbeck will be consecrated auxiliary to Archbishop John F Dearden of Detroit on Monday Dec 20

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

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Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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Day of Prayer JOHNSON CITY (N e )

President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

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SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 3: 11.18.65

bull bull - -- -- -

3 THE ANCHOR-Priests middotReceive Guidelines Thurs Nov 18 196~

On Chrimiddotstian Unity Believe Freedom SAGINAW (NC)-DiHinity makes Christians shame- Long Way Offfaced before God and the world priests 0 fthe Saginaw dioshy

cese were told~ ata Christian unity workshop here Our In Red Areas division has led tl5 uncharity~nd in some cases inj Listice-WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Christianity h~ been at

A panel of speakers hasodds with itself said Fr eClmenical activities under the Edward M Egan of the com- guidance and direction of the agreed that communist reshy

mission on ecumenism of the bishop gimes have a long way to go archdiocese of Chicago Guard against disillusionment in the area of individual freedom

Father Egan proposed a We Americans like to see reshy but the chances of progress vary seven-point guide for promoting sulls but we must be reasonable from one communist country to

Reunification cannot be accom- anotherunity Learn to control fears about plished in the twinkling of an Robert V Daniel University

of Vermont history professorChristian unity but do not ig- eye speaking at a two-day confershynore them We must recognize Learn to pray not only with ence on religion in communistthe dangers in what we are un- but also for other Christians bloc countries at St Michaelsdertaking and still move for- You cannot long pray for a man College estimates chances forward without coming to love and trust progress are best in Eastern EushyDont compromise for unity him rope where Russian style desshyUnity like charity can never Another workshop speaker potism has never been particushybe bought at the expense of Dr Allan A Zaun pastor of a larly welcome even among comshytruth Detroit Presbyterian church munists He added that chancesNever engage in formal dia- said most Protestants are deshyfor progress are darkest in comshylogue without knowing middotthe sub- lighted at Catholic efforts at munist Chinaject well We must know our renewal

The future of religion under own theology well but we must Discussing areas of common communism depends mainly onalso know the theology of the agreement Dr Zaun noted both the future of totalitarianismother side Protestants and Catholics use Daniels said

Restrict yourself to the speci- substantially the same Bible and On this question there arefic geographical area involved cited progress being made many guesses but little agreeshyTechniques which work well in toward a common Bible ment Some will say Soviet totalshyone area may not work in anshy

itarianism will never ease upother he said He also noted general acceptshyenough to permit real religiousCatholics must conduct their ance of the Apostles Creed the MAKES VISITATION Mother Virginia Bento left freedom Some may argue thatNicene Creed Baptism Commushy

North American Provincial for the Sisters of St DorQthy totalitarianism already has beennion and the common use ofMiami See Has done away with by de-Stalinizashytion and that religion has all the

hymns welcomes Mother Marie DePiro Vicar General on canonical visitation to Villa Fatima Taunton communitys provincialEducational TV freedom it needs in the commushyhouse Mother DePiro who formerly held Mother Bentos nist world My own estimation isMIAMI (NC) - More than position is now stationed in Rome She will attend a b~essshy middot that there is a long way to goExile Explains23000 Catholic school pupils in ing ceremony for a statue of the Immaculate Heart of MaryDade County Fla are -receiving

classroom instructions through Cubas Plight at Our Lady of Fatima High School Warren RI at 2 Library Scholarship the first multiple channel educashy Saturday afternoon Nov 20 Friends of the DorotheansSCHULENBURG (NC) - Dr The Catholic Library Associshytional broadcasting system in from the Fall River Diocese are invited to attend ation is offering a scholarship inHector J Remeo who fled hisuse in a Catholic diocese middot-library science for the academicnative Cuba in 1960 and now reshyUp to four programs can be

sides in Hallettsville Tex told year 1966 for graduate studybroadcast simultaneously on the

a Knights of Columbus m~eting toward a masters degree Inforshyclosed circuit TV system Alshy Questions Valuehere everyone in Cuba is forced middot mation is available from the asshythough only one of the four

to support the revolution and sociation at 461 West Lancasterchannels assigned by the Federshy

take a loyalty oath to Prime Minshy New Jersey Prelate Sees Little Advcintage Avenue Haverford Pa 19041

expects to have TV cameras and university in Havana was the and providing an effective mechshyother equipment necessary to training in human relations-andprime target of Red attacks until anism for avoiding or settling bull_---_produce its own programs Unshy in the channels already existing

it was seized by the Castro reshy disputes about police misconshy to process grievancestil then tapes and film will be middot shy

al Communications Commission ister Fidel Castro before beingis now in use Father Joseph H assigned to a job by the Red govshy In Establishing Police Review Boards

OShea director of the diocesan ernmentRadio and Television Commisshy POINT PLEASANT (NC)shy as postpone disputes and transshysion said all four will be in use All children must belong to The coordinator of interracial fer them to a higher level

programs for the Newark archshywithin two years the League of Rebel Pioneers He said civilian review boards diocese doubts the practicalityFather OShea also said the which begins communist regishy would also place board personshyof civilian revlew boards to inshysystem installed by the Radio mentation of youth at the age of nel in the target area of racial vestigate charges of police brushyCorporation of America will be seven he said He estimated counter-claims and harm the tality against minority groupsbroadened shortly to include there are 80000 political prisonshy morale of both police and offi shy

Suchboards cannot be rejected17000 more pupils in neighborshy ers on the island subjected to cial civil rights agencies on principle Msgr Aloysius Ting Broward and Palm Beach torture and living in concentrashy I would trust rather iIi preshyWelsh said But he addedtion campscounties ventive measures-the screeningWould such a board be advanshy

By next Spring the diocese of police candidates for prejushyDr Remeo said the Catholic tageous in settling racial tensions dice as a priority and their

gime He added that most of the duct used Protestant ministers have gone My own judgment he told

into exile and the number of the Northeast Institute on ComshyJews has been reduced to less munity Relations here in NewFrancis Lennon Head than 10 per cent of their former Jersey would be that a review

Of Legion of Mary number board would middotnotsettle so much

Francis Lennon st Michaels parish Fall River has been named president of the Diocesan Comitium of the Legion of Mary He was formerly Comitium viceshypresident and also served as vice-president of Gate of Heavshyen praesidium of the Legion his parish unit

The vice-presidential office of the Comitium is now open and all active senior Legionaries are eligible for the position Among candidates is Miss Mary Moniz of Fall River Central Praesishydium

The next Comitium meeting will be held Tuesday Dec 7 at St Michaels school hall at which time further names will be proposed and the office fill shyed

New Bedford Guild New Bedford Catholic Guild

for the Blind will meet at 8 toshynight in K of C Hall Mrs Evshyelyn Loranger is entertainment ehairman with Mrs Irene Danshysereau as co-chairman

~ - - - -- - - _- ---------- --_-------- -_ shy --~

DURFEEi NOW PLAYING

TOOI)AOmiddot COLOR If IJc Llu

Monday through Thursday 8 oclock PM Friday and Saturday 830 - Sunday 730

Matinee - Wed Sat Sunday and Thanksgiving Day - 2 oclock

Tickets on sale in New Bedford at the Merri-Card Shop

SPECIAL ATTENTION TO SCHOOL CYO CHURCH GROUPS

J B LUMBER CO bull So Dartmouth shy and Hyannis

_ So Dartmouth WY 79384_- bull Hyannis 2921 _ -~------__-----_ shy

RETREATS Single Girls-Ages l8-25-Nov 26 27 28

SINGLE MEN-Ages 18-25-Dec 3 4 5

I(NGAGED COUPLES-Dec 10 11 12

fOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS

REV GILES GENEST MS

LA SALETTE RETREAT HOUSE ATTLEBORO MASS 02703 Tel 617-222-8530

Tri-City Office Equip 427 Second St Cor Morgan

Ed McGinn Prop

OLIVETTI Calculators-Adding ampmiddotAcet

Ma-hines We Do Dulicating

Tel 679-6712 675-7806 -7807

bullbull

4

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965 yenfarns of Vfaste National Official Urges AdministratorsE~ergence of Layman To Study Education Aid Bill Features

Has Limited -Significance BURLINGTON (NC)-A govshyBy Joseph T McGloin SJ ernment official cautions the

Federal Aid to Education BillBeing a kindly quiet peace-loving man I tend to supshyof 1965 will be a tremendous press any criticism of others particularly of that loveable waste unless teachers know the

group qualifying as Writers But since everyone who law and what they can do with writes no matter what is known as a writer someshy it

Philip H DesMarais deputytimes you come across an assistant secretary -for legislashymorning cup of coffeeitem so incredibly stupid So the priest gets a pretty tion ~f the Department of

that it demands some comshy good cross-section of the things Health Education and Welfare ment I should make it clear which can cause a marriage to outlined the Act at the Vermont first of all that far from being go wrong and the things which Catholic Educators Association against the emerging layman make it go right convention here

am all for the And hed have to be a pretty Stressing Title II of the Act laity to do just first-class idiot not to be able which provides aid for school that In fact I to put two and two together and libraries and instructional mashyknow many a say This is the sort of thing terial DesMarais said some pastor who has which almost always makes a 53 per cent of the public schools been trying to marriage fail or This is the in the U S have no library

sort of thing which keeps a marshyget his laity to Of some 14000 privateriage together just as heddo a little

In the mind of this emerging 1~~~8~~l~)~~~

lady the priest should not dare to do any marriage counseling since he is not himself married And this little bit of reasoning needs some exainining because it contains so mltlny inanities that its too soggy just to be tossed aside as it deserves

It should certainly be adshymitted first of all that it is quite true that some priests should not be marriage counselors

More Objective There are also some doctors

who should not be allowed to practice But as such the doctor with his training and objectivity and experience should be al shylowed to practice his own proshyfession-even if hes never himshyself had the disease hes treating

The fact is that having had or not had- a certain disease has nothing to do witl a doctors efficiency in treating it As a matter of fact he may be more objective about it and so do a better job if he hasnt had it

And the priest may well be a much more capable marriage counselor from the very fact that he is not married He has studied the sacrament and inshystitution of marriage from every angle

He has besides had to deal with more marriage problems per week than most married persons will encounter in a lifeshytime even by probing into the secrets of the couple next door over the back fence or over the

YOUTH PROGRAM Rev HOWTDPaul F McCarrick Fall Rivshyer area CYO and CYAO dishy BEArector will conduct a youth program for an open meeting MISSIONof Fall River District Counshycil of Catholic Women at 8 INVESTDRtonight at St Jean Baptiste Church Fall River Benedicshy THI HOLY ATHIRS MISSiON AID TO THI DRIINTAL CHURCH

GIfts to Pope PaUl Near East Missions feed the hungry train native prlesU and Sisters In _ 18 developing countries build churches and schools They also give you the satisfaction of bringing Christ to the poorbullbullbullbull Wise Investors ule theIr dollars where they buy the most Imagine for as little as $2900 you can build prlest~ houle with parish center In Edappelmiddot ayam In mountainous southern India where ragged pioneers are hacking out new farming colonlesl Name It for your favorite aalnt In memory of your loved onesbullbullbullbull Invest In hard wor~7 Laborers In ChaHah Lebanon are building their own parish church They have spent all their own monw for materialbullbull Now they need only $3100 to finish the Jobbullbullbullbull Make a sacrifice In any amount ($100 $78 $50 $35 $26 $20 $115 $10 $5 $2 $1) for Christ and the poor Dollars go far overseas Your gift will be a longmiddotterm nomiddotrlak Inveatment

A M Thoma defense minister of India reo cently pralaed native Catholic nuna aa angela of peace Mr Thomas II not a Catholic He spoke at the opening of bull new hospitalbullbullbullbull For very little money you can train another angel of peacamp-a alltermiddotln-tralnlng too poor to pay her own expensea It costs only $300 al told payable It you wish at $12150 bull month Your own adopted angel wlJl write to you and you may write to her Help bull IIlter In thanksglvlng7 bull

Gratltude aid at Ambrose Ia man first duty Thets why Americana on Thankaglving Day ay thanks to God for the blesslnga He Ihowers on all of UIbullbullbullbull Before Iltting down to turkey next Thursday people In your town will remember the hungry In the Holy Land For only $10 a month you can feed an entire family of refugeea during all of December To Ihow you we are grateful well lend you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land When you make your will remembr THI CATHOLIO NEAR EAsT WnFARI AasoCIATION

i~~--~-----~------INCLOSED PLEASI PIND $ _ rORr -

NAMI _

aTREET _

OlTy- ITATI ZIP CODL _

IA8T WILARI AbullbullaaIATlaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOSEPH T RYAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 10017 Telephone 212YUkon 6-5840

schools about 6000 have De

libraries In other words some two million children in parochial schools have no access to Ii shylrary facilities DesMarais obshyserved

The government official -said the Act is designed to work with Americas pluralistic system of

education and improve schools wherever needed He noted the Act is only the beginning of a new program of federal support for education

I think from now on the country will expect overall supshyport of education as a part shynership between all levels of government No one segment of our society is in a position to support it all by itself

emerging for years And _ if the emershygence of the layman means that laymen- will become more expert in theology and contribute in every possible way to the life of the Church fine

On the other hand if the phrase means the layman withshyout study or experience but only by feeling or instinct or by subjective reasoning is conshysidered as knowledgeable and experienced in- theology moral and dOg)natic as the expert who has devoted his life and time and everything else to it then I want no more to do with the idea than I would want with the practice of an amateur physician whose hobby was surshygery

Emerging Lady And if the emergence of the

layman means that an irate lady miffed for her own reashysons at the Churchs doctrine on contraception can without background and without either knowledgeable or broad expeshyrience of married couples themshyselves (except of course those who may be very talkative inshydeed if they agree with her) re-write the natural and moral law as voided by the Church which Christ founded as the cusshytodian of that law then Im sorshyry but stop the train and In get off shy

have to be pretty dense too after his studies not to know Gods law concerning marriage

At least he ought to undershystand this better than someone who would base the law of morality in marriage only on his or her own preferences likes and dislikes

Unwanted Counsel Actually it is hard to avoid

the hunch that those who would bar the priest as such from counseling in marriage would do so because he is apt to state Gods law unequivocally in o the r words sometimes to counsel things which the counseled does not want to hear

In such a case of course no counselor in the world could help because such a person goes to a counselor not for advice but for confirmation Give that confirmation and youre a fine counselor indeed but try to give s)me other advice and youre not capable of counseling

As I say being a kindly quiet peaceful man it grieves me to call idiocy by its right name But lets not ruin a perfectly good term like the emergence of the layman by wrongly apshyplying it to the subjective ill shyconceived gripes

Lets keep it to mean what it should-a new life and energy in the Church and a more unishyversal consciousness of everyshyones share in the Mystical Body of- Christ

THE SISTERS OF MERCY announce their annual

Christmas_Sale and Bazaar

Wednesday Thursday Friday S~turday November 17 18 1920 - 10 am-l0 pm Do your Christmas shopping at one stop-NO PARKING PROBLEMS-A large variety of hand-made and carefully selected gifts to choose from Every need on your

shopping list can be satisfied

Exquisitely dressed DOLLS special feature

SNACK BAR open afternoons and evenings CAFETERIA open from 5 PM to 7 PM

All suppers $1 50

WEDNESDAY-Spaghetti and Meat Balls THURSDAY-Home-Made Chicken Pie FRIDAY-Seafood Specials SATURDAY-Baked Ham and Beans

On Saturday Evening the HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 1965 and special prizes will be awarded

ST MARYS ACADEMY 8ay View-3070 Pawtucket Ave Riverside

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THOUGHTS WHILE

CARVING A

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Dear MonsIgnor Ryan

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with youroffering

tion in the church will be folshylowed by the program in the parish hall In charge of arshyrangements will be Mrs Henry Gillet district youth ch~irman

Vandals Desecrate Catholic Chapel

TOTOWA (NC)-Vandals enshytered a small Roman Catholic chapel here in New Jersey and destroyed the altar statues and several other articles

The chapel is one of seven in a 23-acre park and picnic grove owned by the St Michaels Catholic Benevolent Society

Police said the vandals enshytered by pushing through a panshyel in the front door and lifting the latch Then they smashed the altar and altar furnishings broke 13 statues into pieces and deshystroyed 75 vigils lights

nlE POOR

MANS INVESTMENT

GUIDI

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5 THE ANCHORshyCathedral Hotef CCD Members of St Marys No Attleboro Thurs Nov 18 1965

During Blackout NEW YORK (NC)-The big To Sposor 75th AnniversarymiddotOpen House Maronite Pastor

blackout hit New York with some weird results It turnedSt Seventy-five years ago the lower church cornerstone of St Marys parish North To be WitnessPatricks cathedral Into a hotel Attleboro was laid In observance of the anniversary year Confraternity of Christianof sorts

Yes we stayed open an Doctrine-members are sponsoring an open house Sunday Dec 12 to which all area At Beatification Right explained Father John Barry of the cathedral staff The cathedral was nice and warm and comforting Our Ladys chapel was best with plush cushions on its seats

Did they stretch out and deep I asked

Of course only now they eouldnt blame it on anyones sermon And they werent all Catholics I heard one guy telling a group of girls Well you finshyally got me to visit your catheshydral I learned later he was an exec from Saks Fifth Avenue

How did they move around Well we placed large vigil

lights down the center aisle on each side It looked like a minshyiature runway The candlelight was sufficient and soothing

No mishaps of any kind No everyone behaved beaushy

tifully The only nuisance was the snoring Msgr Thomas McshyGovern kept walking through the cathedral up until four in the morning just in case anyone needed assistance of any kind Everyone slept and left at dawn

One visiting priest came over about 630 AM to say Mass He had been stranded since 530 PM on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building

Suppliers Support Fair Hiring Plan

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) More than 90 per cent of the suppliers of goods or services to Church institutions contacted to date within the archdiocese of San Francisco have signed forms agreeing to f a I r employment practices and returned them to the Archdiocesan Commission on Social Justice according to rather Eugene J Boyle chairshyman

The forms were mailed to IIOme 200 suppliers They were asked by Archbishop Joseph T McGucken to hire qualified pershylIOns from minority groups and to promote equal opportunities for them at all job levels

Many responses included enshythusiastic endorsement of the program which will continue until all church suppliers have been contacted

Conduct Interfaith Clothing Program

SANTA FE (NC)-In another ecumenical move the Santa Fe archdiocese will cooperate with the year-around New Mexico Council of Churches emphasis for collection of usable clotliing in the United Clothing Appeal program

Archbishop James P Davis Ramed Msgr William T Bradshyley archdiocesan director of Catholic Charities to head the 17th annual Thanksgiving Week Clothing Campaign of Catholic Relief Services-National Cathshyolic Welfare Conference

CRS-NCWC headquarters in New York has been informed of the united efforts of the archshydiocese and the Council of Churches united clothing appeal cooperation

Musical Festival Alumnae of Dominican Acashy

demy Fall River will sponsor a Fall festival of music at 8 tonight at the academy 37 Park Street Featured will be the Alshylegro Glee ClUb directed by Dr Normand O Paquin and Conrad P Fortier Tickets will be available at the door

residents have been invited Ceremonial vestments and the sacred vessels used in the celebration of Mass will be on display and attendants will be on hand to answer quesshytions or amplify the brief explanations to be placed near each exhibit Refreshments will be served in the school hall after the tour of the church

In sponsoring such an event the parish bears silent witness to the ecumenical climate of the 20th century and to the distance both it and the American Cathshyolic Church have come since the mid-nineteenth century

Know-Nothings The first Catholics came to

North Attleboro at a time when neither Catholics nor the Irish were popular in the area a time identified with the KnowshyNothing movement which atshytempted to prevent the settleshyment of both Catholics and forshyeign-born citizens

However in spite of hostility the group in North Attleboro became a mission of St Marys Parish Pawtucket and remained so under the pastorate of Father McNamee until 1856 At that time the mission was taken over by Father Gilleck pastor in Greenville who celebrated the first Mass in Attleboro in the home of a Mr Fallon on upper High Street now known as the golf grounds

Father Gillick built the first church in Attleboro Dedicated June 19 1859 it was located at the rock which is now Attleshyboro Falls It has since been conshyverted ~nto tenement houses By 1873 the North Attleboro misshysion had become much larger than tlat at Greenville and

Father Gillieck moved to Attleshyboro The following year he was succeeded by Rev Edward J Mongan who transferred the parish center to North Attleboro

Old Round House Father Mongan purchased the

Tifft estate with its existing buildings in 1877 The property at that time included the Old Round House a historic site and well known edifice built in 1856 and used as a rectory until 1959 the Old Octagon an eight-sided buildingmiddot another landmark in the area which served for many years as a church for St Marys parishionshyers and the famous Old Red Barn

During this period St Marys served as the mother church for missions in Attleboro which became a separate parish in 1883 St Marys Mansfield sepshyarated in 1894 anlt St Stephens Dodgeville which became a parish in 1880

The cornerstone of the new church was laid May 30 1890 and parishioners attended sershyvices in the basement church until the upper edifice was comshypleted and dedicated in 1901

In the meanwhile while the church was under construction several changes took place at St

Workers for Blind Have Poverty Role

NEWARK (NC)-Delegates to the annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for the Blind were briefed here on participation in anti-poverty programs

George L Haithcock a direcshytor of field services for the National Catholic Community Service in Washington D C and T George Silcott assistant reshygional director of the office of Economic Opportunity spoke on anti-poverty programs during the twoday meeting

Marys Rev John Hurley sucshyceeded Father Mongan in 1889 Two years later he died suddenshyly and Rev Charles Burns beshycame pastor for one year

The next pastor was Rev John McCarthy who came to North Attleboro in 1901 and was faced with the problem of reshyducing the parish debt for the purchase of the land and buildshying of the church He also purshychased a parish cemetery and completed the interiormiddot of the church erecting marble altars and installing chimes and stained glass windows

The next pastor was one whose name seems synonymous with the growth of the Church in Attleshyboro since he served in that area for decades Father later Monsignor P E McGee came to North Attleboro in 1911 and reshymained there until his death in 1948

Built School During this time he built the

school which now has the larg-

Bishop Hospitalized ROME (NC) - Bishop Joseph

P Dougherty middotof Yakima Wash has been admitted to Salvator Mundi Hospital here for rest and observation

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll

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BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

ST MARYS CHURCH - NORTH ATTLEBORO

(Insert)-Rev Edward B Booth

est enrollment in the Diocese close to 770 pupils from kindershygraten through eighth grade and the convent which houses the Sisters of Mercy who staff the school These were constructed to complement the school as was the rectory after them and are located on the same site as the other church properties

Upon the death of Father McGee Father Considine served as administrator until Rev Francis Maloney was named pastor the following year Father Maloney added two classrooms to the school and started plans for a new rectory during his eight-year pastorate

In 1957 Rev Edward B Booth the present pastor took over the duties at St Marys The Old Round House was finshyally torn down A modern rectory erected on its site was completed in 1959 With 4500 to 5000 of the faithful in his parish Father Booth is assisted by Rev Armando Annunziato and Rev Daniel F Moriarty curates

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Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Maronite Rite Church in Fall River left for Rome Tuesday to be pr~sent at beati shyfication ceremonies Sunday Dec 5 for Father Sharbel the hershymit of Lebanon

The event will climax years of effort by Father Eid who is vice-postulator of Father Sha-rshybels cause for canonization in the Unitedmiddot States Most imporshytant of his works in behalf of Father Sharbel has been publicashytion and circulation of The Hermit of Lebanon Father Sharbel an account of the holy mans life and miracles

As the beatification solemnishyties are taking place in Rome St Anthony of the Desert pashyrishioners will hold a triduum of thanksgiving beginning Thursshyday Dec 2 and ending Sunday A large picture of Father Sharshybel will be brought from the parish center named in his honshyor to the church This ceremony will coincide with the display in St Peters Basilica of the hershymits likeness

Two Miracles Two m ira c I e s performed

through the intercession of Father Sharbel will be accepted in support of his beatification said Father Eid Both are disshycussed in his book One involves

the cure of a Lebanese nun healed of a longstanding stomach disorder the other that of a Lebanese blacksmith blind in one eye for 13 years who had his sight restored after persevershying prayer to the monk

Father Eid said that the Sacred Congregation of Rites will meet with Pope Paul Saturshyday to complete final details in connection with the beatification The Fall River pastor will use his time in Rome to gather mateshyrial for a new edition of his book on Father Sharbel and wiu also present an offering at St Peters on behalf of his parishshyioners and friends in Fall River

Dec 20 Ceremony DETROIT (NC)-Bishop-desshy

ignate Joseph M Breitenbeck will be consecrated auxiliary to Archbishop John F Dearden of Detroit on Monday Dec 20

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OIL HEAT

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CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

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Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 4: 11.18.65

bullbull

4

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965 yenfarns of Vfaste National Official Urges AdministratorsE~ergence of Layman To Study Education Aid Bill Features

Has Limited -Significance BURLINGTON (NC)-A govshyBy Joseph T McGloin SJ ernment official cautions the

Federal Aid to Education BillBeing a kindly quiet peace-loving man I tend to supshyof 1965 will be a tremendous press any criticism of others particularly of that loveable waste unless teachers know the

group qualifying as Writers But since everyone who law and what they can do with writes no matter what is known as a writer someshy it

Philip H DesMarais deputytimes you come across an assistant secretary -for legislashymorning cup of coffeeitem so incredibly stupid So the priest gets a pretty tion ~f the Department of

that it demands some comshy good cross-section of the things Health Education and Welfare ment I should make it clear which can cause a marriage to outlined the Act at the Vermont first of all that far from being go wrong and the things which Catholic Educators Association against the emerging layman make it go right convention here

am all for the And hed have to be a pretty Stressing Title II of the Act laity to do just first-class idiot not to be able which provides aid for school that In fact I to put two and two together and libraries and instructional mashyknow many a say This is the sort of thing terial DesMarais said some pastor who has which almost always makes a 53 per cent of the public schools been trying to marriage fail or This is the in the U S have no library

sort of thing which keeps a marshyget his laity to Of some 14000 privateriage together just as heddo a little

In the mind of this emerging 1~~~8~~l~)~~~

lady the priest should not dare to do any marriage counseling since he is not himself married And this little bit of reasoning needs some exainining because it contains so mltlny inanities that its too soggy just to be tossed aside as it deserves

It should certainly be adshymitted first of all that it is quite true that some priests should not be marriage counselors

More Objective There are also some doctors

who should not be allowed to practice But as such the doctor with his training and objectivity and experience should be al shylowed to practice his own proshyfession-even if hes never himshyself had the disease hes treating

The fact is that having had or not had- a certain disease has nothing to do witl a doctors efficiency in treating it As a matter of fact he may be more objective about it and so do a better job if he hasnt had it

And the priest may well be a much more capable marriage counselor from the very fact that he is not married He has studied the sacrament and inshystitution of marriage from every angle

He has besides had to deal with more marriage problems per week than most married persons will encounter in a lifeshytime even by probing into the secrets of the couple next door over the back fence or over the

YOUTH PROGRAM Rev HOWTDPaul F McCarrick Fall Rivshyer area CYO and CYAO dishy BEArector will conduct a youth program for an open meeting MISSIONof Fall River District Counshycil of Catholic Women at 8 INVESTDRtonight at St Jean Baptiste Church Fall River Benedicshy THI HOLY ATHIRS MISSiON AID TO THI DRIINTAL CHURCH

GIfts to Pope PaUl Near East Missions feed the hungry train native prlesU and Sisters In _ 18 developing countries build churches and schools They also give you the satisfaction of bringing Christ to the poorbullbullbullbull Wise Investors ule theIr dollars where they buy the most Imagine for as little as $2900 you can build prlest~ houle with parish center In Edappelmiddot ayam In mountainous southern India where ragged pioneers are hacking out new farming colonlesl Name It for your favorite aalnt In memory of your loved onesbullbullbullbull Invest In hard wor~7 Laborers In ChaHah Lebanon are building their own parish church They have spent all their own monw for materialbullbull Now they need only $3100 to finish the Jobbullbullbullbull Make a sacrifice In any amount ($100 $78 $50 $35 $26 $20 $115 $10 $5 $2 $1) for Christ and the poor Dollars go far overseas Your gift will be a longmiddotterm nomiddotrlak Inveatment

A M Thoma defense minister of India reo cently pralaed native Catholic nuna aa angela of peace Mr Thomas II not a Catholic He spoke at the opening of bull new hospitalbullbullbullbull For very little money you can train another angel of peacamp-a alltermiddotln-tralnlng too poor to pay her own expensea It costs only $300 al told payable It you wish at $12150 bull month Your own adopted angel wlJl write to you and you may write to her Help bull IIlter In thanksglvlng7 bull

Gratltude aid at Ambrose Ia man first duty Thets why Americana on Thankaglving Day ay thanks to God for the blesslnga He Ihowers on all of UIbullbullbullbull Before Iltting down to turkey next Thursday people In your town will remember the hungry In the Holy Land For only $10 a month you can feed an entire family of refugeea during all of December To Ihow you we are grateful well lend you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land When you make your will remembr THI CATHOLIO NEAR EAsT WnFARI AasoCIATION

i~~--~-----~------INCLOSED PLEASI PIND $ _ rORr -

NAMI _

aTREET _

OlTy- ITATI ZIP CODL _

IA8T WILARI AbullbullaaIATlaN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President MSGR JOSEPH T RYAN National Secretary Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 10017 Telephone 212YUkon 6-5840

schools about 6000 have De

libraries In other words some two million children in parochial schools have no access to Ii shylrary facilities DesMarais obshyserved

The government official -said the Act is designed to work with Americas pluralistic system of

education and improve schools wherever needed He noted the Act is only the beginning of a new program of federal support for education

I think from now on the country will expect overall supshyport of education as a part shynership between all levels of government No one segment of our society is in a position to support it all by itself

emerging for years And _ if the emershygence of the layman means that laymen- will become more expert in theology and contribute in every possible way to the life of the Church fine

On the other hand if the phrase means the layman withshyout study or experience but only by feeling or instinct or by subjective reasoning is conshysidered as knowledgeable and experienced in- theology moral and dOg)natic as the expert who has devoted his life and time and everything else to it then I want no more to do with the idea than I would want with the practice of an amateur physician whose hobby was surshygery

Emerging Lady And if the emergence of the

layman means that an irate lady miffed for her own reashysons at the Churchs doctrine on contraception can without background and without either knowledgeable or broad expeshyrience of married couples themshyselves (except of course those who may be very talkative inshydeed if they agree with her) re-write the natural and moral law as voided by the Church which Christ founded as the cusshytodian of that law then Im sorshyry but stop the train and In get off shy

have to be pretty dense too after his studies not to know Gods law concerning marriage

At least he ought to undershystand this better than someone who would base the law of morality in marriage only on his or her own preferences likes and dislikes

Unwanted Counsel Actually it is hard to avoid

the hunch that those who would bar the priest as such from counseling in marriage would do so because he is apt to state Gods law unequivocally in o the r words sometimes to counsel things which the counseled does not want to hear

In such a case of course no counselor in the world could help because such a person goes to a counselor not for advice but for confirmation Give that confirmation and youre a fine counselor indeed but try to give s)me other advice and youre not capable of counseling

As I say being a kindly quiet peaceful man it grieves me to call idiocy by its right name But lets not ruin a perfectly good term like the emergence of the layman by wrongly apshyplying it to the subjective ill shyconceived gripes

Lets keep it to mean what it should-a new life and energy in the Church and a more unishyversal consciousness of everyshyones share in the Mystical Body of- Christ

THE SISTERS OF MERCY announce their annual

Christmas_Sale and Bazaar

Wednesday Thursday Friday S~turday November 17 18 1920 - 10 am-l0 pm Do your Christmas shopping at one stop-NO PARKING PROBLEMS-A large variety of hand-made and carefully selected gifts to choose from Every need on your

shopping list can be satisfied

Exquisitely dressed DOLLS special feature

SNACK BAR open afternoons and evenings CAFETERIA open from 5 PM to 7 PM

All suppers $1 50

WEDNESDAY-Spaghetti and Meat Balls THURSDAY-Home-Made Chicken Pie FRIDAY-Seafood Specials SATURDAY-Baked Ham and Beans

On Saturday Evening the HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 1965 and special prizes will be awarded

ST MARYS ACADEMY 8ay View-3070 Pawtucket Ave Riverside

~~ ~- iW~llMtll -- -- -

THOUGHTS WHILE

CARVING A

TURKEY

Dear MonsIgnor Ryan

Pleal return coupon

with youroffering

tion in the church will be folshylowed by the program in the parish hall In charge of arshyrangements will be Mrs Henry Gillet district youth ch~irman

Vandals Desecrate Catholic Chapel

TOTOWA (NC)-Vandals enshytered a small Roman Catholic chapel here in New Jersey and destroyed the altar statues and several other articles

The chapel is one of seven in a 23-acre park and picnic grove owned by the St Michaels Catholic Benevolent Society

Police said the vandals enshytered by pushing through a panshyel in the front door and lifting the latch Then they smashed the altar and altar furnishings broke 13 statues into pieces and deshystroyed 75 vigils lights

nlE POOR

MANS INVESTMENT

GUIDI

1RAIN A

PEACEMAKER

5 THE ANCHORshyCathedral Hotef CCD Members of St Marys No Attleboro Thurs Nov 18 1965

During Blackout NEW YORK (NC)-The big To Sposor 75th AnniversarymiddotOpen House Maronite Pastor

blackout hit New York with some weird results It turnedSt Seventy-five years ago the lower church cornerstone of St Marys parish North To be WitnessPatricks cathedral Into a hotel Attleboro was laid In observance of the anniversary year Confraternity of Christianof sorts

Yes we stayed open an Doctrine-members are sponsoring an open house Sunday Dec 12 to which all area At Beatification Right explained Father John Barry of the cathedral staff The cathedral was nice and warm and comforting Our Ladys chapel was best with plush cushions on its seats

Did they stretch out and deep I asked

Of course only now they eouldnt blame it on anyones sermon And they werent all Catholics I heard one guy telling a group of girls Well you finshyally got me to visit your catheshydral I learned later he was an exec from Saks Fifth Avenue

How did they move around Well we placed large vigil

lights down the center aisle on each side It looked like a minshyiature runway The candlelight was sufficient and soothing

No mishaps of any kind No everyone behaved beaushy

tifully The only nuisance was the snoring Msgr Thomas McshyGovern kept walking through the cathedral up until four in the morning just in case anyone needed assistance of any kind Everyone slept and left at dawn

One visiting priest came over about 630 AM to say Mass He had been stranded since 530 PM on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building

Suppliers Support Fair Hiring Plan

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) More than 90 per cent of the suppliers of goods or services to Church institutions contacted to date within the archdiocese of San Francisco have signed forms agreeing to f a I r employment practices and returned them to the Archdiocesan Commission on Social Justice according to rather Eugene J Boyle chairshyman

The forms were mailed to IIOme 200 suppliers They were asked by Archbishop Joseph T McGucken to hire qualified pershylIOns from minority groups and to promote equal opportunities for them at all job levels

Many responses included enshythusiastic endorsement of the program which will continue until all church suppliers have been contacted

Conduct Interfaith Clothing Program

SANTA FE (NC)-In another ecumenical move the Santa Fe archdiocese will cooperate with the year-around New Mexico Council of Churches emphasis for collection of usable clotliing in the United Clothing Appeal program

Archbishop James P Davis Ramed Msgr William T Bradshyley archdiocesan director of Catholic Charities to head the 17th annual Thanksgiving Week Clothing Campaign of Catholic Relief Services-National Cathshyolic Welfare Conference

CRS-NCWC headquarters in New York has been informed of the united efforts of the archshydiocese and the Council of Churches united clothing appeal cooperation

Musical Festival Alumnae of Dominican Acashy

demy Fall River will sponsor a Fall festival of music at 8 tonight at the academy 37 Park Street Featured will be the Alshylegro Glee ClUb directed by Dr Normand O Paquin and Conrad P Fortier Tickets will be available at the door

residents have been invited Ceremonial vestments and the sacred vessels used in the celebration of Mass will be on display and attendants will be on hand to answer quesshytions or amplify the brief explanations to be placed near each exhibit Refreshments will be served in the school hall after the tour of the church

In sponsoring such an event the parish bears silent witness to the ecumenical climate of the 20th century and to the distance both it and the American Cathshyolic Church have come since the mid-nineteenth century

Know-Nothings The first Catholics came to

North Attleboro at a time when neither Catholics nor the Irish were popular in the area a time identified with the KnowshyNothing movement which atshytempted to prevent the settleshyment of both Catholics and forshyeign-born citizens

However in spite of hostility the group in North Attleboro became a mission of St Marys Parish Pawtucket and remained so under the pastorate of Father McNamee until 1856 At that time the mission was taken over by Father Gilleck pastor in Greenville who celebrated the first Mass in Attleboro in the home of a Mr Fallon on upper High Street now known as the golf grounds

Father Gillick built the first church in Attleboro Dedicated June 19 1859 it was located at the rock which is now Attleshyboro Falls It has since been conshyverted ~nto tenement houses By 1873 the North Attleboro misshysion had become much larger than tlat at Greenville and

Father Gillieck moved to Attleshyboro The following year he was succeeded by Rev Edward J Mongan who transferred the parish center to North Attleboro

Old Round House Father Mongan purchased the

Tifft estate with its existing buildings in 1877 The property at that time included the Old Round House a historic site and well known edifice built in 1856 and used as a rectory until 1959 the Old Octagon an eight-sided buildingmiddot another landmark in the area which served for many years as a church for St Marys parishionshyers and the famous Old Red Barn

During this period St Marys served as the mother church for missions in Attleboro which became a separate parish in 1883 St Marys Mansfield sepshyarated in 1894 anlt St Stephens Dodgeville which became a parish in 1880

The cornerstone of the new church was laid May 30 1890 and parishioners attended sershyvices in the basement church until the upper edifice was comshypleted and dedicated in 1901

In the meanwhile while the church was under construction several changes took place at St

Workers for Blind Have Poverty Role

NEWARK (NC)-Delegates to the annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for the Blind were briefed here on participation in anti-poverty programs

George L Haithcock a direcshytor of field services for the National Catholic Community Service in Washington D C and T George Silcott assistant reshygional director of the office of Economic Opportunity spoke on anti-poverty programs during the twoday meeting

Marys Rev John Hurley sucshyceeded Father Mongan in 1889 Two years later he died suddenshyly and Rev Charles Burns beshycame pastor for one year

The next pastor was Rev John McCarthy who came to North Attleboro in 1901 and was faced with the problem of reshyducing the parish debt for the purchase of the land and buildshying of the church He also purshychased a parish cemetery and completed the interiormiddot of the church erecting marble altars and installing chimes and stained glass windows

The next pastor was one whose name seems synonymous with the growth of the Church in Attleshyboro since he served in that area for decades Father later Monsignor P E McGee came to North Attleboro in 1911 and reshymained there until his death in 1948

Built School During this time he built the

school which now has the larg-

Bishop Hospitalized ROME (NC) - Bishop Joseph

P Dougherty middotof Yakima Wash has been admitted to Salvator Mundi Hospital here for rest and observation

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est enrollment in the Diocese close to 770 pupils from kindershygraten through eighth grade and the convent which houses the Sisters of Mercy who staff the school These were constructed to complement the school as was the rectory after them and are located on the same site as the other church properties

Upon the death of Father McGee Father Considine served as administrator until Rev Francis Maloney was named pastor the following year Father Maloney added two classrooms to the school and started plans for a new rectory during his eight-year pastorate

In 1957 Rev Edward B Booth the present pastor took over the duties at St Marys The Old Round House was finshyally torn down A modern rectory erected on its site was completed in 1959 With 4500 to 5000 of the faithful in his parish Father Booth is assisted by Rev Armando Annunziato and Rev Daniel F Moriarty curates

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Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Maronite Rite Church in Fall River left for Rome Tuesday to be pr~sent at beati shyfication ceremonies Sunday Dec 5 for Father Sharbel the hershymit of Lebanon

The event will climax years of effort by Father Eid who is vice-postulator of Father Sha-rshybels cause for canonization in the Unitedmiddot States Most imporshytant of his works in behalf of Father Sharbel has been publicashytion and circulation of The Hermit of Lebanon Father Sharbel an account of the holy mans life and miracles

As the beatification solemnishyties are taking place in Rome St Anthony of the Desert pashyrishioners will hold a triduum of thanksgiving beginning Thursshyday Dec 2 and ending Sunday A large picture of Father Sharshybel will be brought from the parish center named in his honshyor to the church This ceremony will coincide with the display in St Peters Basilica of the hershymits likeness

Two Miracles Two m ira c I e s performed

through the intercession of Father Sharbel will be accepted in support of his beatification said Father Eid Both are disshycussed in his book One involves

the cure of a Lebanese nun healed of a longstanding stomach disorder the other that of a Lebanese blacksmith blind in one eye for 13 years who had his sight restored after persevershying prayer to the monk

Father Eid said that the Sacred Congregation of Rites will meet with Pope Paul Saturshyday to complete final details in connection with the beatification The Fall River pastor will use his time in Rome to gather mateshyrial for a new edition of his book on Father Sharbel and wiu also present an offering at St Peters on behalf of his parishshyioners and friends in Fall River

Dec 20 Ceremony DETROIT (NC)-Bishop-desshy

ignate Joseph M Breitenbeck will be consecrated auxiliary to Archbishop John F Dearden of Detroit on Monday Dec 20

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

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Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

Sponsored by ~~e Bureau of Health and Hospitals of the Nashy NEW ENGLANDS LARGEST RETAILER OE FINE FOODS tional Catholic Welfare Conshyference the azciiltiOll will

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 5: 11.18.65

5 THE ANCHORshyCathedral Hotef CCD Members of St Marys No Attleboro Thurs Nov 18 1965

During Blackout NEW YORK (NC)-The big To Sposor 75th AnniversarymiddotOpen House Maronite Pastor

blackout hit New York with some weird results It turnedSt Seventy-five years ago the lower church cornerstone of St Marys parish North To be WitnessPatricks cathedral Into a hotel Attleboro was laid In observance of the anniversary year Confraternity of Christianof sorts

Yes we stayed open an Doctrine-members are sponsoring an open house Sunday Dec 12 to which all area At Beatification Right explained Father John Barry of the cathedral staff The cathedral was nice and warm and comforting Our Ladys chapel was best with plush cushions on its seats

Did they stretch out and deep I asked

Of course only now they eouldnt blame it on anyones sermon And they werent all Catholics I heard one guy telling a group of girls Well you finshyally got me to visit your catheshydral I learned later he was an exec from Saks Fifth Avenue

How did they move around Well we placed large vigil

lights down the center aisle on each side It looked like a minshyiature runway The candlelight was sufficient and soothing

No mishaps of any kind No everyone behaved beaushy

tifully The only nuisance was the snoring Msgr Thomas McshyGovern kept walking through the cathedral up until four in the morning just in case anyone needed assistance of any kind Everyone slept and left at dawn

One visiting priest came over about 630 AM to say Mass He had been stranded since 530 PM on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building

Suppliers Support Fair Hiring Plan

SAN FRANCISCO (NC) More than 90 per cent of the suppliers of goods or services to Church institutions contacted to date within the archdiocese of San Francisco have signed forms agreeing to f a I r employment practices and returned them to the Archdiocesan Commission on Social Justice according to rather Eugene J Boyle chairshyman

The forms were mailed to IIOme 200 suppliers They were asked by Archbishop Joseph T McGucken to hire qualified pershylIOns from minority groups and to promote equal opportunities for them at all job levels

Many responses included enshythusiastic endorsement of the program which will continue until all church suppliers have been contacted

Conduct Interfaith Clothing Program

SANTA FE (NC)-In another ecumenical move the Santa Fe archdiocese will cooperate with the year-around New Mexico Council of Churches emphasis for collection of usable clotliing in the United Clothing Appeal program

Archbishop James P Davis Ramed Msgr William T Bradshyley archdiocesan director of Catholic Charities to head the 17th annual Thanksgiving Week Clothing Campaign of Catholic Relief Services-National Cathshyolic Welfare Conference

CRS-NCWC headquarters in New York has been informed of the united efforts of the archshydiocese and the Council of Churches united clothing appeal cooperation

Musical Festival Alumnae of Dominican Acashy

demy Fall River will sponsor a Fall festival of music at 8 tonight at the academy 37 Park Street Featured will be the Alshylegro Glee ClUb directed by Dr Normand O Paquin and Conrad P Fortier Tickets will be available at the door

residents have been invited Ceremonial vestments and the sacred vessels used in the celebration of Mass will be on display and attendants will be on hand to answer quesshytions or amplify the brief explanations to be placed near each exhibit Refreshments will be served in the school hall after the tour of the church

In sponsoring such an event the parish bears silent witness to the ecumenical climate of the 20th century and to the distance both it and the American Cathshyolic Church have come since the mid-nineteenth century

Know-Nothings The first Catholics came to

North Attleboro at a time when neither Catholics nor the Irish were popular in the area a time identified with the KnowshyNothing movement which atshytempted to prevent the settleshyment of both Catholics and forshyeign-born citizens

However in spite of hostility the group in North Attleboro became a mission of St Marys Parish Pawtucket and remained so under the pastorate of Father McNamee until 1856 At that time the mission was taken over by Father Gilleck pastor in Greenville who celebrated the first Mass in Attleboro in the home of a Mr Fallon on upper High Street now known as the golf grounds

Father Gillick built the first church in Attleboro Dedicated June 19 1859 it was located at the rock which is now Attleshyboro Falls It has since been conshyverted ~nto tenement houses By 1873 the North Attleboro misshysion had become much larger than tlat at Greenville and

Father Gillieck moved to Attleshyboro The following year he was succeeded by Rev Edward J Mongan who transferred the parish center to North Attleboro

Old Round House Father Mongan purchased the

Tifft estate with its existing buildings in 1877 The property at that time included the Old Round House a historic site and well known edifice built in 1856 and used as a rectory until 1959 the Old Octagon an eight-sided buildingmiddot another landmark in the area which served for many years as a church for St Marys parishionshyers and the famous Old Red Barn

During this period St Marys served as the mother church for missions in Attleboro which became a separate parish in 1883 St Marys Mansfield sepshyarated in 1894 anlt St Stephens Dodgeville which became a parish in 1880

The cornerstone of the new church was laid May 30 1890 and parishioners attended sershyvices in the basement church until the upper edifice was comshypleted and dedicated in 1901

In the meanwhile while the church was under construction several changes took place at St

Workers for Blind Have Poverty Role

NEWARK (NC)-Delegates to the annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for the Blind were briefed here on participation in anti-poverty programs

George L Haithcock a direcshytor of field services for the National Catholic Community Service in Washington D C and T George Silcott assistant reshygional director of the office of Economic Opportunity spoke on anti-poverty programs during the twoday meeting

Marys Rev John Hurley sucshyceeded Father Mongan in 1889 Two years later he died suddenshyly and Rev Charles Burns beshycame pastor for one year

The next pastor was Rev John McCarthy who came to North Attleboro in 1901 and was faced with the problem of reshyducing the parish debt for the purchase of the land and buildshying of the church He also purshychased a parish cemetery and completed the interiormiddot of the church erecting marble altars and installing chimes and stained glass windows

The next pastor was one whose name seems synonymous with the growth of the Church in Attleshyboro since he served in that area for decades Father later Monsignor P E McGee came to North Attleboro in 1911 and reshymained there until his death in 1948

Built School During this time he built the

school which now has the larg-

Bishop Hospitalized ROME (NC) - Bishop Joseph

P Dougherty middotof Yakima Wash has been admitted to Salvator Mundi Hospital here for rest and observation

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll

SULLIVAN BROS PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant 95 Bridge St Lowell Mass

Tel 458-6333

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BOSTON CAMDEN N J OCEANPORT N J MIAMI PAWTUCKET R1 PHILADELPHIA

ST MARYS CHURCH - NORTH ATTLEBORO

(Insert)-Rev Edward B Booth

est enrollment in the Diocese close to 770 pupils from kindershygraten through eighth grade and the convent which houses the Sisters of Mercy who staff the school These were constructed to complement the school as was the rectory after them and are located on the same site as the other church properties

Upon the death of Father McGee Father Considine served as administrator until Rev Francis Maloney was named pastor the following year Father Maloney added two classrooms to the school and started plans for a new rectory during his eight-year pastorate

In 1957 Rev Edward B Booth the present pastor took over the duties at St Marys The Old Round House was finshyally torn down A modern rectory erected on its site was completed in 1959 With 4500 to 5000 of the faithful in his parish Father Booth is assisted by Rev Armando Annunziato and Rev Daniel F Moriarty curates

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Chor-Bishop Joseph Eid pastor of St Anthony of the Desert Maronite Rite Church in Fall River left for Rome Tuesday to be pr~sent at beati shyfication ceremonies Sunday Dec 5 for Father Sharbel the hershymit of Lebanon

The event will climax years of effort by Father Eid who is vice-postulator of Father Sha-rshybels cause for canonization in the Unitedmiddot States Most imporshytant of his works in behalf of Father Sharbel has been publicashytion and circulation of The Hermit of Lebanon Father Sharbel an account of the holy mans life and miracles

As the beatification solemnishyties are taking place in Rome St Anthony of the Desert pashyrishioners will hold a triduum of thanksgiving beginning Thursshyday Dec 2 and ending Sunday A large picture of Father Sharshybel will be brought from the parish center named in his honshyor to the church This ceremony will coincide with the display in St Peters Basilica of the hershymits likeness

Two Miracles Two m ira c I e s performed

through the intercession of Father Sharbel will be accepted in support of his beatification said Father Eid Both are disshycussed in his book One involves

the cure of a Lebanese nun healed of a longstanding stomach disorder the other that of a Lebanese blacksmith blind in one eye for 13 years who had his sight restored after persevershying prayer to the monk

Father Eid said that the Sacred Congregation of Rites will meet with Pope Paul Saturshyday to complete final details in connection with the beatification The Fall River pastor will use his time in Rome to gather mateshyrial for a new edition of his book on Father Sharbel and wiu also present an offering at St Peters on behalf of his parishshyioners and friends in Fall River

Dec 20 Ceremony DETROIT (NC)-Bishop-desshy

ignate Joseph M Breitenbeck will be consecrated auxiliary to Archbishop John F Dearden of Detroit on Monday Dec 20

SAVE MONEY ON YOUR OIL HEAT

WYmaneatt 3-6592

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254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

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THE -ANCHOI- 5 7nbull Nov 18 196

Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

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Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 6: 11.18.65

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 19656 father Sharbel

Freedom of the Press A curious case has just been reported from Manhatshy

tan College in New York Several staff members of the college newspaper have resigned in protest against faculty seizure of about half the copies of an issue containing an article critical of Cardinal Spellman The members who resigned did so because they were convinced that their concept of freedom of the press had been violated by colshylege authorities The authorities in turn stated that the articles was in poor taste and was factually inaccurate The surprising element of the case is that the staff memshybers involved readily admitted this to be so Still they felt that freedom of the press had been violated br the action of college authorities

The student newspaper involved seemed to miss the primary duty of every newspaperman-to tell the truth and to do this with good taste Freedom of the press should not be invoked to offset the penalties resulting from poor taste-no press should be free for example

to refer to Negroes and Jews in derogatory epithetsFreeshydom of the press does not protect falsehood-no press should be free to print what is not true And if newspapermen do descend into bad taste or do print falsehood-either from ignorance or stupidity or ill wiU-then they should

The just shall flourish like the palm tree he shall growbe prepared to take the consequences like the cedar of Libanus (Ps xci 13)This business of doing as one wills and doing someshy

thing in poor taste or with inaccuracies and then wrapshyping oneself in the mantle of press freedom is an act of Church Has Much to Gainirresponsibility Too many newspapermen have fought and struggled and suffered to insure true freedom of the press By Cooperating With Pressto have the term and the ideal misused to cover up irreshysponsible and adolescent behavior By MsgrGeorge G~ Higgins

(Director Social Action Dept NCWC) Lack of Hope 0 0

Many words have been written and some arguments As I try to sort out my impJessions of the council at bave resulted from two tragic incidents-the acts of selfshy the fag end of its fourth and final session I am struck immolation by burning of a young Catholic and a Quaker in particular by the thought that this is really the first as protestatiops against war council in the entire history of the Church which the

These young individuals deserve all the charity and people of the world have prayers that their undoubted sincerity and anguish of been able to follow in detail tions

Moreover I can personallyspirit call for It is easy to believe that they were truly on a day-to-day basis - the vouch for the fact that the secushy

overwhelmed by the brutality of war and ernestly sought first council in other words lar reporters have taken their that has been covered by theto object to it But it is just as true that their method of assignment to the council very press The importance of this factprotesting revealed emotional imbalance What they did seriously Indeed I have never can hardly be met a more conscientious group-self-destruction-brought only further anguish to their overesti shy of reporters

families and served little the cause of peace mated Literally Reasonably AdequateThe tragedy of their act is that they were pushed to millions of peoshy

Perhaps their greatest serviceple in all partssuch a desperate extreme It is indeed sad that there was to the Church was their doggedof the worldno one they felt they could turn to no sense of optimism insistence from the very outsetnon-Catholics as for the survival of the human race no feeling that pershy well as Cathoshy that they be permitted to cover

the council openly and aboveshyhaps decency and justice will prevail in a world of men lics have been exposed during board instead of being forced toAs our ambassador to the United Nations commentshy rely on second-hand rumors orthe past foured perhaps the United Nations has failed to some degree backstairs gossip By sticking to

in communicating its high aims its lofty purpose the stint of serious years to a daily

their guns on this point they genuine devotion of so many of its members to tbe search reading in theshy managed in the end to win

ology thanks to the remarkably the day- 0 ~for peace Perhaps these tragic individuals would then Even at this bite date ofeffective work of the secular as ha~e not felt so alone in th~ face of the truly monumental course few if any of them arewell as the Catholic press completeiy satisfied with o theevil that fac~s the timesan evil in truth that has conshy As one who has been privishy press s~t-up at the coincil but-ironted in various guisel ~veryage This may be an age leged to work very closely with

~6st ~f tlemo i suspect would that i~ markeifjlot for its lack middotampffaith or love but for its the correspondents accredited to at Jeast Peprepared Jo amit i

the Council I must say 0 that Ilack of hope that all ihings considered it is haVemiddot the highest possible admi- reaspmi~IY adequate and irianyration forthe way in which theyPersonal Relationship ventva~ily supeJior tomiddot th~pol-have carried out their extremely ic~ 9f almost complete seCJecyLast weeks power blackout revealed that most Amershy difficult assignment which Wllsthf ord~rof the ~dayicans have a good sense of humor a helpfulness in time Admittedly some of them have when they first took up theirflubbed a s~ory now and thenof need and an ability to adjust quickly to emergencymiddot assignment in 1962 but by and large they have done8ituations The lack of lights slowed down modern civilishy In gradually and cautiously0great honormiddotmiddot to their profession

zation and gave these virtues an opportunity to show them- and in the precess have also oreversing this self-def~atiflg

done a tremendous service policy of almost complete seshyselves to0

crecy the council hopefully hallIt is to be hoped now that the virtues that glowed the Church

opened the way to a new era in 80 conspicuously in the dark can also assert themselves Unfair Criticism Church-press relations in more normal circumstances The person-to-person reshy I might add that in my judgshy I realize of course that some

ment much of the criticism dishy members of the council presslationships that existed during the blackout can do enorshyrected at the press during -the corps disagree with this judgshymous good if continued All too often an individual takes course of the Council has been ment They are convinced that

his middotfellow men en masse instead of one by one very superficial not to say inshy once the council has come to an temperate and unfair end Rome will go back to the

Some critics have even gone old policy of keeping reporters so far as to try to separate the at arms length or in other Catholic sheep from the secushy words of keeping them more or lar goats in the council press less in the dark I think they are corps and have advised their being too pessimistic in this people back at home to rely exshy regardrheANCHOR clusively on the so-called official For my own part I would be

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Catholic press for their informashy willing to bet that before very tion about the council and to long the Church at every level

Published weekly by The Ccitholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ignore or to take with a grain of finds it necessary to follow the 410 Highland Avenue salt what is being published in councils lead-not only necesshy

Fall River Moss 02722 675-715middot1 the secular press sary but highly advantageous This is very bad advice for for if the press set~up at VaticanPUBLISHER

the fact is that the coverage ofmiddot II has proved anything at all itMost Rev James L Connolly D~ PhD~ the council in the better secular it this that the Church has al-GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER publications has been on the most everything to gain and

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll average just as good and someshy practically nothing to lose by MANAGING EDITOR 0 times better than that of soshy cooperating with the press-on its

Hugh J Golden ealled official ltatholic publica- own professional terms

Jesuit Suggests New Approaches For Apostolate

BOSTON (NC)-Bringing Ghrist to the w9rld requires a constant readiness to Jampo examine techniques and tty new approaches according to

_priest who is quietly revolutio izing Catholic Action in New England

Father Edward S Stanton J after six years of studyiDII and testing various forms of ~

ganization has formulated bull cell technique of putting Chrilll into contemporary life

It is reminiscent in form though not in spirit of the most spectacularly successful ideoshylogical movement of the cerituIY -communism The form and spirit and activities of small Catholic Action groups are outshylined by Father Stanton in a new booklet A Handbook of the Christian Action Movement

Action in Society Christs action in society

one way of describing the Chrisshytian Action apostolate the Jesshyuit priest said in an inter-view here and it is certainly the m()st important But this new movement ~lso provides both bull Christian and a 0 contemporarY definition of other points-the relation to society of each i_ dividual the balance betweell contemplation and action antI the rellltion between self-pershyfection and the perfection society

These points provide the key note for organization within the Christian Act ion Movement Each cell is a group of five to eight laymen with a priest serving as spiritual adviser The groups are formed freely on the basis of friendship and common interests not only in religion but in religions social role

Sodality Inspiration 0 The new movement derives much of its inspiration from the 400-year-old organization from which it sprang-the sodality It stresses the ideal of transshylating devotion into social acshytion and-a modern twist-has added action with and among other Christians to its traditional objectives 0

The formal organization of the Christian Action Movemen( beshy

gan i1 1959 amongmiddot CiltJiolie college students and obusij-Il~SIIJ

and ptofessionalmen ~ 0

itS slow growth refiects the O

highst~ridards of participatlOli and activity demanded We degarshyi~k~ng for men who are s~~~led in Jifealert and mildly an~ cl~rical~ Father Stanton soaid

Plan Monument To Poe John

VATiCAN CITY (NC) - A statue of Pope John XXIII will be erected at the entrance to the lagoon on which the city of Venshyice is built

The monument commemoratshying the former pontiff and patri shyrach of Venice will be inscribed with the words The shepherd goes before all [his sheep] He gives his life for his flock

The project was revealed in aft issue of Vatican Citys weekly LOsservatore della Domenica in an interview with Professor Eushygenio Bacchion president of the Venice Catholic Action organizashytion The professor is in the procshyess of organizing a library middotof the late popes writings and letters

The quotation to be inscribed on themiddot statue which will stand -in front of a new city hospital designed by the late French arshychitect Le Corbusier is taken from Pope Johns first statement on his rrival in Venice as patri shyarch on MarCh 15 1953

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY

273 CENTRAL AVE

WY 2-6216

NEW BEDFORD

WE WANT TRADING STAMPS We Need A- Bus

for-

Wheel Chair Patients

HELP THE MENTALLY ILL

TOREHABILITATE

Let Them See This Wonderful

World of Ours Again

PLEASE SEND STAMPS OR DONATfOJlS TO

VOLUNTEER BUS PROJECT - TAUNT~N STATE HOSPITAL

co MlS Grace Jerauld RN Taunton Mass

THE -ANCHOI- 5 7nbull Nov 18 196

Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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Day of Prayer JOHNSON CITY (N e )

President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

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SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 7: 11.18.65

Education Program Assists Pupils of Catholic Schools

CHICAGO (NC) - More than 12000 educationally deprived students from Catholic schools in low-income areas of Chicago are participating in a federally-financed proshygram of compensatory education They make up 15 per cent of the total number of educationally deprived chilshydren from Chicago schools being aided by theElemenshytary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 -

They and s~dents from prishy~ate and p~blic schools are g~t-tmg mtenslVe after school tramshy~g 10 many necessary ar~~ of supplementary education Ms~r William E MCdanus

archdiocesan school supenntendshyent said educationally deprived children arrive at our schools -and the publicmiddot schools - with serious deficiencies in reading readiness vocabulary and speech patterns

This publIc school program he said is not going to replace anything now going on in Cathshyolic schools but will supplement our excellent programs If we find that the program is not im proving the childs skills we will of course recommend that he drop it

Reading Class

The program is voluntary for all stUdents and only students in grades 3-8 are provided for in present Board of Education plans

First of the supplementary programs to begin are after-

Vatican Council Most Hopeful

KALAMAZOO (NC) - The Vatican Council is one of the most hopeful things to happen in our generation philosophershyauthor Michael Novak said here in Michigan

Novak whose many articles and books on Church reform have attracted national attenshytion said at Kalamazoo College that it has weakened the stresshyses between East and West and has brought Catholics and Pro~

testants immeasurably closer together in discussion inquiry and plain conversation

The council he said has brought new hope in human posshysibilities for people seem to think that if the Catholic Church can be renewed anything can

There is of course a con-shyservative back 1ash in the Church Novak said There are many who do notmiddot liKe renewal and reform The Vatican council represents the struggle for reshyformation within the Church The struggle will be a long one The Church straddles an imshymense spectrum of time and place

Protestant Council Praises Vatican II

BOSTON (NC)The second Vatican Council was lauded here for creating a new climate in Christian fellowship in a proshynouncement voted by the Masshysachusetts (Protestant) Counshycil of Churches

The document said the counshycils works have been further nourished by the brotherliness of Massachusetts own (Richard) Cardinal Cushing and many othshyers

The Protestant groups proshynouncement said the councils sessions have opened longshydosed doors to joint social acshytion programs study cnalogue at several levels exchange of speakers and common worship between Protestant Orthodox end Roman -catholic ChriatiaDL

school reading classes Other supplemental education eiasses are planned for the coming weeks -

Students fro m low-income areas who are one year or more below their grade level in readshying development are eligible to attend the 36-week after-school reading program conducted one hour each day four days a week

The classes are taught by speshycially-trained reading teachers from the Chicago public school system All classes take place in public school classrooms

Priest Addresses Baptist Meeting

SUNNYVALE (NC)-A Cathshyolic priest was a speaker at the first annual Reformation Sunshyday meeting of the American Baptist convention here attendshyed by 1000 members of the Bapshytist Churchmiddot of northern Cali shyfornia

Father Eugene I Boyle di shyrector of the San Francisco archshydiocesan commission on social justice was a panelist in a disshycussion on R e new a 1 in the Churchmiddot with the Rev lohn Arthur Western representative for Lutheran Campus Ministries and the Rev August MHintz pastor of First Baptist Church Seattle Washington The panelshyists each explained the current course of renewal in his own church

Father Boyle said many of the strongest and most valuable docshyuments being promulgated by the Second Vatican Council are results of many considerations

and movements that have been going on for years

He cautioned against applying protests of the 16th eentury to the Catholic Church of today

Both Catholics and Protes tants are at fault over the sepashyration Certainly Protestants have a brotherly right to expect a great deal from Catholics for the sake of reunion But Cathoshylics have a brotherly right to exshypect as much froin Protestants -self-examination and self-reshynewal in their Churches toomiddot Father Boyle said

Nun Cites Virtues For Modern Women

CmCAGO (NC)A nun col lege president called here for training for women better suited to the vistas of of the modern woman

Sister lacquellne Grennan spoke at DePaul Universitys Charles Carroll forum on the topic Women New Vistas in Our Changing Society

The Sister of Loretto who is president of Webster College in St Louis warned worn e n against using their sex as a crutch and declared that a woman is first of all a person The virtues in greatest demand from the modern educated woman are concern cOlnpasshysion and courage she declared

Chicagoan to Serve College for Deaf

WASHINGTON (NC) -Frank B Sullivan iDstructor at DePaul

University in Chicago w~o has been deaf since he was 10 years old has been named to the board of directors of Gallaudet College here the world on17 eolleie fortlle deaL

VETERANS DAY SERVICE At annual service at grave of Msgr Osias Boucher Notre Dame cemetery Fall River are from left Msgr Alfred J Gendreau Commander Helen A Lowe County Commander Bristol County Amershyican Legion Margaret White Past District Director Bristol County American Legio~ Auxiliary

American Dream Brings Disorders

COVINGTON (NC) - The American dream of a college education for everybody is a major factor in the emotional disorders of stUdents a psycho- logist said here in Kentucky

Pressure from parents leads to emotional problems for student$ who have no more right than the man in the moon to be in college Stanley Kuffel chairshyman of the psychology departshyment at Western Michigan Uni7 versity told the Louisville reshygion of the Society of Catholic College Teachers of Sacred Docshytrine

Kuffel also deplored the presshysure some parents put on their children to get into the right college- They must go to one_ that gives prestige so that mothshyer and dadcan vicariously enjoY the thrills that they were unable to experience themselves he said

Competition becomes so inshytense there is no joy in learning he said If you are forced to study somewhere you did not want to be in the first place you are going to be hostile aggressive and you are going to slump off

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY

273 CENTRAL AVE

WY 2-6216

NEW BEDFORD

WE WANT TRADING STAMPS We Need A- Bus

for-

Wheel Chair Patients

HELP THE MENTALLY ILL

TOREHABILITATE

Let Them See This Wonderful

World of Ours Again

PLEASE SEND STAMPS OR DONATfOJlS TO

VOLUNTEER BUS PROJECT - TAUNT~N STATE HOSPITAL

co MlS Grace Jerauld RN Taunton Mass

THE -ANCHOI- 5 7nbull Nov 18 196

Hold Interfaith Prayer Service In Missouri

KANSAS (NC)-A Festi val of Faith brought Cathoshylics and Protestants together in Municipal auditorium here for a joint worship service feashyturing hymns prayers and Scripture readings

About 4000 persons including about 120 clergymen took part in the service which was spon sored by the Kansas City Counshycil of Churches and the Catholic diocese of Kansas City-St Joshyseph

Msgr Richard Schumacher vicar general of the diocese of Kansas City-St loseph and Episcopal Bishop Edward R Welles of West Missouri led the Scripture readings

Encouraging Step Roman Catholics Orthodox

Protestants ADglicans are inshycomplete without each other without unity at the Lords table Bishop Welles said at the service

Thanks be to God our worshyship together here today is a historic encouraging step forshyward Let us go forth from this experience into our local neighborhoods resolved with Gods help to make deliberate

efforts to grow together in friendship and fellowship in love he said

Magazine Editor WASHINGTON (NC) -Clarshy

ence M Zens former managing editor of the Catholic Standard Washington archdiocesan newsshypaper has been appojnted manshyaging editor of US Commerce Departments weekly magazine International Commerce

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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Day of Prayer JOHNSON CITY (N e )

President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

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SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 8: 11.18.65

IHf ANCHOR~Dloeese of FQURtver-Phurbull Moot M middot18- - ~ - - -

E

Parents of Children in Religion Receive MoreThan They Give

By Mary Tinley Daly Recent eolumn about our Ginny joining the Sisters

ef Charity of St Elizabeth brought word from parents whose children are on their way toward the ~ligious life or contemplating such a step One reader sent a pamphlet Our Daughter Is a Nun

went to the llovitiate it was awritten by Julien Caestecker thrill to see our daughter comshyof Chicago with imprimashy ing to meet us her fac~ wreathed

tur of the late Samuel Cardshy in smiles Our trips home were mal Stritch The correspondent also a source of contentment who sentmiddot it noted that though because of the conviction she there i much had selected the right vocation bullbull written abo u t We know she was closely united religiouS vocashy to us and the entire family in tions fClr men her daily prayersthere lleems a (That face w rea the d in dearth of mashy smiles reminds us of visits to terial aimed at our own bouncy postulate--hershyhelping parents self tearing across the lawnshyunderstlln~ voshy black skirt black cape black eations given to veil flying Ya-hoo Good to see their daughters you Hows everybody)To sh are the From postulancy to fully proshy HONOR DIRECTOR Parishioners of St Michaels story of parents fessed nun is a long long way Church Fall River honor Mrs Joseph Ward retiring as eooperation daughterswith a but as the saying goes the longshyvocation we should like to call organist and choir director after 30 years of service From est journey starts with a singleattention to this si~cere ansi step left Mrs Cosmo Fedele Mrs Albert Domingos reception beautifully written script Back tQ Mr Caestecker We chairman and present choir director Mrs Ward Rev

At the age of 19 Mr Caesteckshy have never for a moment re- Joseph Oliveira curate ers daughter asked him to take gretted the decision given to a walk with her one evening our daughter during that eveshyDuring the walk she revealed ings walk a few years ago Toshyshe was seriously contemplating Favors Involvementday she is a happy Religious of beeoming a religious Mr Caeshy the Sacred Heart doing her partmker admits being surprised in the tremendous field of furshy Sociologist Suggests Outside Activities for Nunswith the electrifying news thering the Catholic education of but he was -not shocked or disshy youth We have not lost her love To Keep Abreast of Fast Changing World appointed hisNor was wife and affection rather she is more

Deep JOY To Us FORT WAYNE (NC) - Too convent-schoolchurch confineshystrongly attached to the familyThe quiet acceptance of Gods many Sisters live in a triangle ment if they are to understandand more deeply interested ill

will has brought deep joy to us the convent school and church whats taking place in the vastanything that concerns us than writes this father of a nun and thats a mighty small outside world that affects theirif she had married and had Mand to our entire family We world a sociologist has told the little triangle he assertedfamily problems of her own We ave back to God our daughter have no worries about her presshy annual Fort Wayne-South Bend Mundy said many past excuses a soul He had lent us for a while ent or her future surrounded Diocesan Teachers Institute for non-involvement are De to love and protect but still beshy as she is with a loving superior Paul Mundy chairman of the longer valid Those who do not longing to Him-and because arid community of devot~~ Sociology Department at Loyola posseSll skills can learn them He is God and can never be outshy friends Forour part af a result University Chicago said many those who would leave the jobdone in genorosity He has al shy of our daughters example and teachers fail to realize that the ~ somebody else must realize readymiddot rewarded us a middotthousand- prayers we feel that our faith local community is a human that they are tIfat somebody1f fold and the faith of our family haa meeting place You must not

The author tells of the weeks been deepened just enter he declared You pr~ceding their daughters deshy We are perfectly content must be involved College Events parture--so like our own experishy resting in the great providence Sisters must break out of tIli A French film Children ofence and that of other families ill of Our Lord-the Spouse of our Paradise will be shown inthat precious preparatory period nun daughter Miley Hall of Salve Regina ColshyHe also speaks of early visits No wonder 400000 copies of Nun Marks 20 Years lege Newport at 7 tonight Itwith their daughter at the novishy this pamphlet have been distribshy will be the first in a culturaltiate becoming absolutely conshy uted to all parts of the world As College President film series An on-campus exshyvinced that our daughter las during the past 10 years Some PURCHASE (HC) - A fourshy amination for the Peace Corpsin most sympathetic and loving typical comments An ideal day celebration including an will be administered at 915hands answer where parents bull are academic symposium lecture Saturday morning also in Miley Regretfully this father comshy a

puzzled by the Whole business and an open house marked the Hallments I am sorry to say that The article is beautifully WritIlOme parents were deliberately ten Last week we were pershy

20th anniversary of Mother E M OByrne as president of Manshystaying away from the novitiate mitted a second visit at the hattanville College of the Sacredbecause they did not approve of novitiate and came away feeling Heart here in New Yorktheir daughters decision to enshy that we had a sneak preview

ter the convent This feeling of Joseph T Geuting chairmallinto heaven Congratulationsseparati6n from family caused for your deep faith and deeper of the board of trustees and genshytheir novice daughters many eral chairman of the four-daylove sad moments at a time when event said the Manhattanville 100 per cent moral support froJJl Couneo1 Asks Religious family wished to pay tribute home was most needed to a most remarkable woman

Occasionally I had an opshy Practices in Schools who has made ner mark not only portunity to spend a few moshy within her own family but in

FLINT (NC) -- The Greater the world of American edueashyments in conversation with these Flint Council of Churches rep- tiondisapproving parents My sugshy resentingmost Protestant faithsestion to them was Il1ways to in this Michigan city h~ en HighlightS of the four daysbe more objective--to think dorsed efforts to include in the were the symposium on the role more of their daughters happi- curricUlum of our schools and of liberal artsmiddot college in the Dess less about the~elves and in the civil ll1e of oure6inmiddotmiddot second half of the 20th centurymiddot

their own middotloneliness muliitY conSt1tutiohaI1y valia and a lecture on AlDerican nashy_ Loneliness Subsides bull religioUi practiceS Which ~eii tional experience by Daniel 3bull

bull bull I

1 bull The same refrain of 10rie1i- to ~rpetuate the rich lieritage Boorstin of the University middotaeSs for a child embark1nsoll we have received from Clul va- Chicago the religious life is echoed in ried tr3ditionsmiddot

CltherletterS sent this colllDUi In a middotStatement the councils We are cheered by Mr Cae- executive board middotsilld it opposesmiddot

-Meekers words Every time wfl ar1y efforbl deSigtted either tel ~ deny exposure of religioUll hert

1 0 Benefmiddott-middot HmiddotomiddotmiddotspomiddottaImiddotmiddot tilge otto give pref~fentiaJ treatment whicli tends to dis-Friends of St Annes Hospital criJilinateagainstor fllvorably

Fall River will hold a bridge establish one religion above anshyand whist party at 8 tonigat in other the nursing school auditorium The eouncll board said famous forProceeds will benefit the hospi~ llgiori is imbedded deeply ill tal building fund and will help national life No child the counshyreplace moneys ordinarily real- cll observedcan be fully ed~ QUALITY and ized by the hospitalmiddot gift shop cated iii American history wi~h

temporarily closed due to -COD- out strong emphasis on religioUl SERVICE atruction in its area motivations of past lenerati~

J

Film~ for Vrong Cites Poverty

DAYTON (NC)-A new sound filmstrip compiled here in Ohio documents for young people how poverty and prejudice blight t~

lives of their neighbors Entitled I Care the filmstrip

was produced by George A Pflaum publisher and is narshyrated by Franciscan Sister Claire Marie whose comments and seshylections of pictures are based 011 first-hand knowledge of malll areas depicted

A former director of educashytional services National Catholie Conference for Interracial Jusshytice Sister Claire Marie teaches sociology at Alverno College Milwaukee She is a member of the Milwaukee Catholic Intershyracial Council and of the Nashytional Conference Oil Religiltm

- and Race The 15-minute audio-visual

presentation is intended for showing to boys and girls aged 10 and up who have not been elloo posed to the conditions depicted in the filmstrip

Through exposition of what lit the antithesis of the America dream the filmstrip carries a message of hope that those now embittered by injustice and lack of basic necessities more fort nate people take for granted win enjoy a better life founded OIl the Christian concern and cODoo Bideration of their neighbors

Mission Club New officers of St Cec~liall

Mission Club associated with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Fall River are Mrs Aiserina Santos president Mrs MarY Furtado vice-president Mrs Mary Felix secretary Mig Irene Botelho treasurer The unit plans a penny sale Frida Dec 10 and a ruminage sale bull Jariuary Both will be held shy196 Whipple Str~et

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bank

9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

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Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 9: 11.18.65

9 Drying~rFreeing~ Thawing Take PlantToli During Winter

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

As I write this column the day is unseasonably wann and it has begun tQ drizzle This weather was preceded by three days of abnonnally low temperatures and by three days of high winds The problems for the garden resulting from this kind of weather drying winds and the second Monday in October

alternating freezing and and they too serve the traditionshyal turkey fresh vegetables and

thawing are typical of those fruit A little _to the south of confronted in Winter Contrary us the Virgin Islands have done to public opinion it is not cold us one better for they have two which kills plants in the Winter Thanksgivings one on the day but the combination of drying we set and the other OIl -October freezing and thawing 25 At the latter time the Island-

There is not much one can do ers give thanks if there have to prevent dryng When the been no hurricanes for a year winds begin to blow there is and pray there will be none bound to be some water loss the following year above ground and if the ground No matter where the day is is frozen the percentage of loss observed its purpose is to giye may be enough to kill the plant thanks for all Gods blessings One must think of the plant as during the past year In the sitting in a keg of ice Since a abundance and peace of this plants roots take in almost all land we have a tendency to acshyof its water they must have a- cept its comforts as our just vailable liquid in order to effect due How complacent I had beshycapillary action If the water come fully hit me recently when around the roots is frozen they in conversation with a young obviously cannot function woman from Egypt who is stay-

As far as drying is concerned ing in this country while her the gardener is left with several husband is doing his internship alternatives 1 one can attempt she spoke of this as a blessed to prevent freezing 2 spray with land Her words rang true anti-dessicants and 3 set up when I realized how truly wonshywind barriers to minimize plant derful this country must seem mrfaces directly exposed to to anyone who has viewed fightshywinds ingand bombed Out cities or liv-

The first of these alternatives ed without the freedom we take Is impractical in the North so casually for granted where the frost line is at least A r 0 u n d our Thanksgiving 18 inches below ground level table this year we have two exshyThe second alternative the use tra blessings for which to thank of anti-deasicants may be prac- the Lord Jason Griffin Roderick tical if one has valuable plants not quite two months old will which mm be protected regard- be the newest member of our less of cost The anti-dess1cants family to enjoy this day even are avallable commerdally in though his turkey ~ tie of aerosol bomb which are quite the strained varietyand secondshyexpensive if employed to any ly the Qldest generation of our great extent but are eertalilly clan will celebrate their 60th practical for limited use wedding anniversary the weekshy Wind barriers get the widest end of Thanksgiving use These may be any structure The majority of people will whieh breaks heavY winds agree on the fact that turkey Fences are effective in this re- will grace their table but there gard as well as sheets of canvas will be as many dressings as nailed to poles around the front there are cooks The following

1 of a garden plot I have found is a tasty dressing of Portuguese that discarded Christmas trees origin given to me by Mrs Alshyauit my purpose as well as any- bert Fournier of Our Lady of thing else Right after Christmas Health parish Fall River I usually pick up a few trees for Mothers Dressing the asking for windbreaks Giblets cooked and choppedThese can be tied loosely to a Z eggs climbing rose or placed on the 1 medium onion chopped surface of a flower bed 1 loaf Portuguese bread cut

This year plants will be par- up in small pieces ticularly susceptible to drying ~ pound chourico ground up After the drought of the last two ~ teaspoon all spice eeasons most plants are dry and yen4 teaspoon cinnamon if the Winter is at all severe we I1h cloves of garlic mineed een expect large numbers of 2 Tablespoons of p a rl e y plant losses For this reason it chopped may be wise to give valuable 2 Tablespoons vinegar plants a laquoood soaking before a White pepper to t~ soUd freeze sets in In my next 1) Soak bread in water until article I shall discuss the com- soft then drain panion problem of thawing and 2) Mix together bread ehopshyfreezing ped giblets andchourlco

In the Kitchen 3) Saute onions in butter and It was 102 years agoduring the cook until oniona are tender

third year of the Civil War that then add parsley Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a 4) Add bread mixture to onshynational Thanksgiving However ions Add spices and vinegar even though Congress didnt de- and continue cooking over low clare it a legal holiday until heat for about one hour Cool 1951 Thanksgiving haS been a and stuff lightly into caVit) of part of life in America 8in~ poultry

that first harvest in 1621 In 1907 O Henry expreJSed the feelings of Americans toward interf~ith Cotnmittee thiS celebration when hewrote FindsHomef~ 15 There is one day that is ours rhere is one day when aU we GlLMANTON (NC)-Through Americans who are not selfshy the efforts of an interfaith conishy

made go back to the old home mittee temporary housing was to eat saleratW biscuits and secured here in New Hampshire marvel how much neaferto the for a faniilY of 15 who had been porch ttle Qld pumplookf than living in a three-room trailer it used to Thankgiving Day for 16 monthes

is the one day that l$ purely Meanwhile a longe-range prOshyAmerican gram is underway to raise apshy

Even thougbO Hem7 felt proximately $3000 to provide that tht day waa exclusive) permanent living quarters flr eurn Canadians have long celeshy tile family which has lID ashybrated ThankselviDI Dq tlemeq Hmited incomea _

tHE ANCHOR- Thurs Nov 18 1965

College Presents Meda I Degrees

MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Th6 mother general of the _Adrian Dominican Sister and five Cathshyolic lay women were honored during the silver anniversary

celebration of Barry College here

The colleges Laudare Medal was presented to Mother Mary Genevieve head of the Adrian Dominican Sisters who conduct the college

Honorary doctor of letters deshygrees were conferred on Dr Frances H Smith gastroenteroshylogist at the Lahey Clinic Pat CaiToII Beverly Hills Calif television performer Mrs Denis V Renuart past president of the St Augustine Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and past national chairman of the Nationshyal Council of Catholic Women subcommittee on international relations and Mrs Michael 0 Neil member of the board of the Manhattanville College Alumnae Association

An honorary doctorate of laws was conferred on Genevieve Blatt Secretary of Internal Afshy

~ _ __ ltoJ _~ _I~ __ fairs for the Commonwealth ofJ1 1

Pennsylvaniasession at Nazareth Hall Fall River at wh~ch Sister Shawn OSF of St Colettas School Hanover discussed guidance and fonnation of exceptional children From left Mr and Milwaukee Hospital Mrs John C Kirkman with Sister Shawn The speaker Plans Rhythm Clinic emphasized role of love in training children to behave acshy MILWAUKEE (NC)-Instrucceptably in society noting that parents must be consistent tion on the rhythm method of and finn while mRkiTl~ clear to children what is expected family planning will become a of them major part of birth control sershy

vices ayailable at Milwaukee county general hospital when a new clinic is opened next weekHospital Helistop The instruction will be offered only to married women living

California Institution in Mountainous Region with their husbands and who are eligible for county care TheNow Has Landing Area for Copters rhythm method is the means of family limitation a~ptable toREDDING (NC)-Mercy Hos- age with the dedication of a heIshythe Catholic Churchpltal has stepped into the jet icopter landing area located

Commenting in the name ofliear the -hospital emergency the Catholic Family Life proshyroom in this California commushySee- Plans to Restore nity graM Father John B Litzau asshysistant director said We are

220-Year-Old Convent Easily identified from the air ple~ to see this service is it has a huge red cross set on being made available to CathoshyNEW ORLEANS (NC)-A 220shya white background with a white lics of the community As weyear-old former Ursuline conshyH in the middle of the cross understand it will be a far morevent oldest structui-e in the MIsshy

effective approach to the w~olesissippi Valley will be restored Sister Mary Bernatdine hosshy matter of spacing childrenby the archdiocese of New Orshy pital administrator said duringleans Archbishop Philip II the past two years five patientsHannan has announced arrived by helicopter at Mercy Fund Raisers

The building was constructed Hospital pointing up the need A Christmas party will be in the late 1740s as a convent for a licensed lending facility held Tuesday Dec 14 at Blinshyfor the first nunS in Louisiana strubs restaurant Boston bythe Ursuliness who came to New In tm mountainous region St Catherines Fund-RaisingOrleans in 1727 the helicopter is an ideal rescue Committee of Dominican Acashy

During its long history the vehicle-and arnbulanle able to demy Fan River Busses will convent has served as the stateshy reach areas inaccessible to laRd leave the Dominican convent at

vehicles she saidhouse of -the Louisiana legislashy 630 ture ~ Catholic boys school The helistop wu planned bya public schooI the official resishy the FAA in conjunction with thedence of bishops and archbisshy United States Forest Servicehops middotof New Orleans and as a and Redding city officials diocesan seminary Since 11119 it has beenmiddotused as a rectory

by the Oblate Fathera who run adjoining St Mary chureh Montle Plumbing amp AVAILABLE FORbuilt in 1845

Banquets _ Testimonials JnterfaithConference

Heating Co middotInc Reg Master Plumber 2930 Fashion Shows GEORGE M MONTLE Special Parties On Chartging Religion Over 35 Years

LEXINGTON (NC)-An Inshy of Satisfied Service terfaithconference on changing WYman 9~C)84806 NO MAIN STREETpatternS of religion are being Fall River OS 5-7497 ormiddotMErcury 6-2744held at Lexington Theological Seminary her~in Kentucky on

three successive Tuesdays The s~nyenairp$ ~ providing

accurate lrifoiiIlation on the changing I paiterliso~ ~religion in BISAILLONSAiI)eric3n societY promoting better understariqing a m 0 n g Protestants Catholics ~~~ Jews GARAGE and strengthe~b1g~hetinity of religion as acure for the socil

ills of the U S ~ 24HourWrecker Service Among sponsors of the confershy

ence are the local council of the KnightS of Columbus and the ~shy 6~3 Washingto Street Fairhaven gional office of the- Nation~ WYman middot4-5058 i Conference of Cbiistiana ~ lews --

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

Sponsored by ~~e Bureau of Health and Hospitals of the Nashy NEW ENGLANDS LARGEST RETAILER OE FINE FOODS tional Catholic Welfare Conshyference the azciiltiOll will

S-Iow Self-Senb-ill All Our middotinnil~- twe ReMrYe lIwte LiIIiIguulmiddotIi-lpublish a manu- ~r chaplainsand sponsor a h ~ 11amp course eRective hit liVer and Som middot

THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

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-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 10: 11.18.65

Jm ANaroR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs Nov 18 196510

MASS FOR PEACE AT LA SALETTE SHRINE On Veterans Day Left Father Haas preaches Center the Providence College head distribushypeace-loving individuals from miles around crowded the Attleboro Shrine ted Holy Communion Right Part of the huge congregation that overshyfor a Mass offered by the Very Rev William P Haas OP president of flowed the outdoor shrine Rev Donald Paradis MS is the shrine Providence College for the intention of peace throughout the world director

Construction at High School for Boys Starts Next Week Contrnued from Page One Elsewhere will be a language project which may require use there are tiny chapels with Mass drive There is also a loop driYe

Cafeteria laboratory consisting of individshy of reference material that is not altars where the priests of the across much of the front ele- Close by and readily accessIshy ual booths fitted with tape reshy allowed to circulate outside of staff will say their daily MasseS vation of the structure from the

ble from the same lobby is the corders and connected to the the library Here also is the permanent office chapel and business lobby enshystudent cafeteria seating about master console at the lnstructors At the opposite end of the of the priest who will be Student trance past the lobby for the 300 It will be served by an adshy position these will serve the classroom complex from the Counselcr It connects with the auditorium and gyninasium jacent kitchen and double-line students for drill with the newshy student entrance and cafetelia is Guidance and Counselling Censhy rejoin the main drive serving counters supplied from est devices and recordings avail shy the administrative center and ter a common reading and -Alongside this main driVe delivery platform and storage able and under development for the business lobby Visitors will waiting room leading to five from Elsbree Street is the prin spaces at the rear Off the cafeshy accelerated learning of foreign approach this from the front of smaller offices intended for inshy cipal parking space for studentmiddot teria is a lunch room for the languages the building through entrance dividual consultation On this and for auditorium-gymnasiuMschool faculty and staff and a A photo darkroom and some vestibule to reception lobby and same floor is a Lounge Room to events it is also adjacent to the permanen~ book store Behind additional offices for student parlors serve the teaching staff between athletic fields Additiomil small all is the boiler room and workshy activities complete the first floor On one side is the telephone clases er parking areas are located near shop electric distribution panels and on the second there is a switchboard with information Faculty Residenee to the entrancesthey serve and emergency generator central control room for televishy desk on the other the central The Staff Residence is the The architects have estimatedNear the far end of the cafeshy sion master amplifiers These officemiddot with Principal Assistant final building in the complex at that the entire complex comshyteria is the principal student will receive signals from special clerical and work space and the far end of the site toward plises something over 130000entrance to the building via a antenna arrays on the roof and console for the public address Route 24 It is a three-story square feet of floor area _covered bus-loading platform on transmit them to outlets in all system Opposite is the Treasushy building for the accommodation aboutthree acresthe north side This leads past of the classrooms and in several rers Office and a conference of the Jesuit Priests and Schoshysome small rooms intended for other places throughout the room for staff meetings lastics who will staff the school student extracurricular or coshy complex Moreover wiring will Adjacent is the school Chapel It is entered on the first floor ciurricular activities and to the be provided for future developshy for visits of devotion confesshy from the reception lobby at the main corridor leading into the ment wherein the television sions special Masses and devo chapel and that floor contains classrooms program could originate in any tional meetings of limited groups additional parlor space a few

The classroom unit is two one of the rooms or the audishy such as sodalities It will accomshy infirmary or guest rooms storshystories high and provides basishy torium or the gymnasium and modate about 70 Masses for age and service areas tog~tler eally 23 classrooms of which be transmitted to the system larger groups of students such with the kitchen dining roomthree areclosely connected reshy Library as the Mass of the Holy Spjirit and commons for the Fathers and spectively with the Biology Off the classroom unit at its at the beginning of the school Scholastics Chemistry and Physics iabora center is the stub corridor leadshy year will be celebrated in the The second and third floors tories to serve as tiuir lecture ing to the library a unique cirshy auditorium or the gymnasium are given over to bedrooms rooms The laboratories wiil be cular building with fluted roof The main altar in the chapel which also serve as studies The equipped with usual experiment that stands apart to the north will have a reredos of Philipshy residence has living accommodashytables and utilities like water side It will be lighted by lancet pine mahogany and adjacent to ion for 34 gas and electric powetj and the windows on the sides and by a the chapel will be 16 altars for Parkinl Faeilitieslecture rooms will have demonshy circular clerestory at the center the priest faculty members for Driveway to the residence forstration tables for the instructor The portion of its interior deshy the offering of daily Mass deliveries and such approachesBetween the two for each scishy voted to reading and reference -Stations of the Cross will enshy from the rear off the bus service ence there will he a preparation will accommodate about 100 stushy circle the chapel room where the instructor can dents and the shelving round Outside standing directly on build and repair his apparatus the wall and elsewhere will acshy the ground and beside the and prepare his lecture demonshy cept upwards of 10000 volumes chapel will be an open frameshystrations Close to the entrance on one work tower supporting the

side will be the book charging chapel bell Clothing Drive desk a long circular or curved A small choir loft connects

counter balanced on the other with the floor above whereContinued from Page One scide by a similar counter for the

shipment overseas Some of storage and distribution of phoshythem will be arriving at ports in nograph recordings musical Says Older Citizens Europe any day now Represenshy dramatic and other Office and tatives of the Catholic Relief workrooms for the library staff Need Independence Services-National Cat hoi i c will be behind the first counter CHICAGO (NC)-Seniormiddot citi shyWelfare Conference will see that and behind the second will be zens need independence a panel the clothes reach the needy try-out storage and repair on Medical Care of the Aging without regard to race or creed space for the audio-visual equipshy agreed ata meeting sponsored

The breakdown of clothes by ment and supplies In the same by the National Federation of diocesan areas is as follows area is a small conference room Catholic Physicians Guilds

Fall River Area - 50000 for the use of a group of students The last place an older pershypounds who may be researching a deshy son should be is in an institushy

New Bedford Area -- 57000 bate or some other common tion said Msgr Wilbur F Suedshypounds kamp director of Catholic Charshy

Taunton Area-44000 pounds ities for the Detroit archdiocese Cape Cod Area-45OOO pounds Scholars Meet Pointing out that only six per Somerset-Swansea Are a - TOKYO (NC) - ]r~ur of the cent of those over 65 years live

20000 pounds Itatling (jatholic Scriptuze scholshy in institutions he said older Attleboro Area-17000 pounds ars in Japan joined Protestant people can maintain their inde North Attleboro Area - 9000 B~ble ~xpeits in a two-day ex~ pendence longer than ever beshy

Pounds change of views on Japanese fore The average in institushy 234 Seeorid Street Fall River Mansfield Area-5500 pouads translati9ns of tJle Bible - tions is 81 he ad~ed

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Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 11: 11.18.65

bull

Outside Business Continued fiom Page One

Movement The Holy Father has also deshy

termined to take advantage of this extraordinary congregation of Bishops He has met the assembled prelates of each counshytry and he has experimented a bit with this newly defined colshylegiality

In requests to the national conferences of bishops the Pope asked their individual and comshybined opinions concerning cershytain disciplines in the Church

Indulgences When there was suddenly

some free time in the council hall because the commission had not finished their tasks by the time the Fathers returned from their recess the Pope asked the opinion of theF~thers concernshying certain changes he intends to make in the granting of inshydulgences

The Council would not treat of this matter but it would only be a sounding board Thus repshyresentatives of various national bodies were asked to make their observations known in the counshycil hall if they wisheli or at least in writing

The granting of indulgences is based on two fun dam e n t a I truths 1 There is a state of purification after death 2 Souls in such a state can be helped by the prayers of the faithful This has always been true and will continue to be true till the end of time However todays use of the

prayers of the faithf)ll can give the wrong impression and acshyilordlng to the opinion of most bishops this is so Todays use - or misuse - of indulgences makes the Church s~em to be an unreformed legalistic medishyeval merit-machine said one of the experts An observer disshycounted the discussions as The Church puttinr her spiritual banking system in order

All of the prelates who took advantage of the Popes invitashytion said that there was some revi~ion needed The hierarchies of Spain middotand Italy gave gel)eral approval to the Popes plan as it was outlined to them

However the bishops of Poshyland Holland Germany Austria and the middotUS claimed that the middotPopes plan does not go far

enough Todays use of indulshygences is a danger of supersti shytution bymiddot the uneducated and neglect on the part of the edushycated one eardinal claimed

Two difficulties seemed to be pointed to by most of the preshylates who gave their opinions and who thought that the Popes plan was not enough

The first difficulty is that Inshydulgences were part of the Churchs middotold discipline concernshying the Sacrament of Penance when penances where prolonged and public When these penances were shortened and made pershysonal the Indulgences-or re~ mission of some of these penshyances-remained as they were Many bishops therefore want the whole theology of indulshygences first brought into line with modern theology and reshyligious practice

The second apparent difficulty is that the bad impression may be had by many This is not a matter of burning urgency as the American bishops said nor is it one for the council to decide The sounding board worked the Pope now has opinions on which He can base his future changes

Honors Primate ~AYONNE (NC)-Stefan Carshy

(hnal Wysznski Primate of Poshy land has been nam~d recipient of the fifth Ad Humanos Award of the Mt Carmel IIi ~itute oi Adult Education here in New Jersey

CCD EXHIBITION IN ROME Bishop Charles P Greco rig~t of Alexandia chairshyman of the Bishops CCD committee is about to show Rev RIchard MalOrIello left and Bishop John Russell of Richmond center an exhibition Of ~he works and programs of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine set up for the benefIt of the councIl Fathers

THE ANCHORshy 11 Thurs Nov 18 1965

Todays Decrees Continued from Page One

Catholic Church whereas it acshytually enlightened and guided an those whose apparent force came from Tradition

The only possible disappointshyment to some is that the Councll Fathers have sidetracked the question of the rellltion~~ip beshytween Bible and TradItIon It was thought that the matteI was not yet clear enough to be clearshyly proclaimed However this of itself was a great teaching takshying the wind out of extremists of both camps

The Church has officially backed modern biblical studies and their religious-historicalshyliterary methods The Church has urged further study and has showed that man has nothing to fear from the detailed study of humanitys understanding writing and transmission of Dishy Decree of Church in Modern World vinitys revelation

A great hope lighted by thePapal Proclamation Set for Dec 7 council Fathers has been the distinct possibility of a common

Continu~d from Page One proval or union of pastors but ative powers in the ProlJaganda Bible in the near future which

turned to the all-encompassing includes all priests TJlOse enshy The decree has also been given shall be a great incentive 10Church in the Modern World gaged in supra-parochial work an ecumenical importance in Christian Unity But all the imshyDecree are singled out for special attenshy that the missionaries have been portance of the Bible is not only

One decree has completely tion and merit and the place of told of the need for a unanimous to be found in this one decreefinished its route of possible the assistant prielt in the Church witness to Christ and a common This Divine Revelation Decreeamendments and is now awaiting and the diocese has received speshy witness of Christian life hasmiddot spilled over onto the other only its final printing betore a cial mention with the suggestion The councils call for col1~shy decrees Biblical patterns and final ceremonial vote Is taken that these also hold places of boration has been reinforced lessons r11 us t l ate the otherand the decree proclaimed This counsel before the Bishop Missionaries are asked to col-shy decrees In lists of importantis the Religious Liberty Declarashy Bishops are asked to look upon laborate with other Christian studies and preaching and dutiestion priests as not only friends but bodies in mission lands in the the Bible always takes first place

Two others are in the process 8S adults and to listen to them formation of a Christian comshy with other sacred things likeof being amended following the willingly munity This collaboration is divine worship sacraments etcFathers latest vote-suggestions The reasons for obedience the stressed not only on a personal falling in close behindThese are the Priestly Life and text points out go beyond the level but between Church bodies Ministry Schema and that eonshy as Lay Apostolatemere preservation of order and well cerning the Missions efficiency It must be active and For the first time in historJr Priestly Li(e and Ministry Church In Worldnot merely passive virtue that the Church has tackled the probshy

In the Councils words priests animates priests It leads to a On Monday the Fathers beshy lems of the laity in a separateare the Churchs ministers of gan to make their final sugshymature freedom It enioins the decree It is a new magna cartaChrist appointed to servemiddot the gestions for this text that waspriest to watch prudently for for the laymans active partici shyPeople of God by virtue of their new ways of achieving the good already revised accorliing to the pation in the spreading of theconsecration through the Sacrashy of the Church and to make the speeches that had been given in Gospel in todays worldment of Orders with the union st Peters and those submittedauthorities aware of the needs From the very beginning thisof the Holy Spirit and their reshy of their flocks in writing The controversial decree was not wrestled fromsulting configuration wit h sections of the schema toIn all the text it is collaboshy seem the Council Fathers but its veryChrist the Priest be those dealing with atheismration that is stressed more than title was not to be watered downThe text has been revised to marriage and warsubjugation because of an almost consecratedplace greater emphasis on the Some bishops while discusshy expression in the terminologyrole of the Eucharist in the A greater emphasis has been sing atheism demanded a forshy of the councilpriests life showing that his given to the multiple connections mal condemnation of Commushypersonal spirituality cannot be between celibacy and the priests nism by name in the text This During its long debate the separated from his work life and ministry layman was recognized as all imshywas voted down not becau~e the

There is a portant not only to the supportnow more precise Church has changed her attitudeThe Missionsstatement on the priests uniyershy of the Church but especially tetoward Communism but becausesal mission in the world in colshy the well being and efficiency ofThe last round of voting for it is not the intent of this deshylaboration with the hierarchy the Church His active place iftsuggested amendments to the cree or of this council to conshyHere the Council apparently Mission Schema produced 193 as but

the daily life of the Church candemn anything such to

backs the French experiment of suggestions for changes that not be taken by the most tal shyestablish a dialogue or an atshy

the worker priests whIch has so filled 550 printed pages Many of tempt at understanding and ented cleric or m~mber of the recently again received the Holy these of identical hierarchycourse were helping the world and its probshySees approval or in some way urged the same The finlll text of the decreelems

This the council points out by changes received some 750 suggestionsThe text does condemn clearshystating that unity in a diocese for improvement and 150A missioner has been defined ly all forms of atheism but itdepends not onlymiddot on the ap- changes in the final text were as anyone who in a mission refrains from condemning atheshy

made Final aproval was giventerritory announces the Gospel ists themslves Rather it suggests the text by the Fathers by a 2201 to those who are not of the fold amiddot dialogue be instituted withNewmariClub to 2 vote

However this did not please all them where possible respectingContinued from Page One Bishops since many think that their human dignity This whole CYO

J Mit~hen Papal Infallibility work in Christian lands like intent would be destroyed in One section dealing with Feb 3-Rev Rabbi Weinberg South America can also be the outset if-by name---certain youth was revised so that the The Jews and the Vatican termed missionary atheists were condemned It text now expressly recognizesCouncil Feb 17-A F Buckley would be playing their own game youths desire for responsibilityOriginally it was suggestedMD ~Marriage Sex and Birth instead of leading the atheist and that insistence on the exshythat there be no provision forControl March 3-Rev Richshy to God and showing him that pression of personality in socialhaving missionary bishops beard Kellaway Unitarian-Unishy he-yes even he-is genuinely and cultural life can make anpart of the Propagation of Faithversalism and the Catholic loved by the Church effective contribution to theIf some were consulted that wasChurch March 17-Atty Maushy The new draft also states that apostolate It also urges adultsall they -were-consulted Theyrice Downey An Approach to Catholics have the obligation to leave nothing undone to estabshywould not have a hand in policyChristian Unity to follow their consciences in lish a dialogue with the youngermaking as such

Speakers and subjects for family limitations but adds that generation April 14 and 28 will be anshy However the commission reshy they cannot practice methods of nounced later The series opened drafting the text stated that the birth prevention reproved by

bishop-members of the Propagashyon Oct 21 with a talk by Rev the Churchs teaching authorityJohn F Hogan tion of the Faith should be preshy DONNELLYStronger statements have beensented by the national episcopalThe clubs post-Lenten dance inserted on the right to strike

conferences but added in ais scheduled for April 16 and the and the immediate necessity to PAINTING manner and method to be deannual Communion breakfast at wipe out all racial discriminashytermined by the Roman Ponst Hedwigs Church on May 1 SERVICEtion tiff -

Officers are Lloyd Wajda One criticism of the decree is Commercial bull Industrtalpresident Robert Gillespie vic~shy In their f~nal attempt at tliat it is too Western i~ ttlstitutional president Lorraine Desrosiers amendments 712 Fathers apshy tliought To prevent this and to

Painting and De~oratin9secretary and Paulette Duval proved the commissions draft assure universal concern of the treasurer Professor Anthony J but oniy with reservations It universal Church a subcommis- Fall River OSbome2J911

JOhnis serving in his 12th year now seems that this is a call for sion has been formed madeup as faculty adyisor He is assisted strength_~ning rather than weak- mostly of Af~can Asian ~nd 7-4 WHliamsongtStreet ~ by Professor-Michael Crowley ening the missionaries deliber- Oceanic prelates

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

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St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

CASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest VClIriety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere AI SnAKS-CHOPSCHIfKEN

Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

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SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 12: 11.18.65

12 THE ANCHOR-Qi~~ of Fan River-ThursmiddotNov 18 1965 - I

Marykno Sister Writes Delightful Inspiring Book

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy J

Sister Maria del Rey has a knack of catching in words the joyous spirit of the Maryknoll Sisters The reason may be that she is herself one of their number At any rate in earlier books she has conveyed the combination of earnestness and gaietywhich characterizes her com- ment or prettification For anshy

other thing he is not raging or munity and she does it whining not bellowing that he again in NoT w 0 Ali k e is a victim not roaring for anyshy(Dodd Mead $5) This is a set ones blood Moreover it is apshyof sketches most of them deal- parent that he somehow survived ing with mem- this dreadful environment was bers of the sis- not destroyed by it but came terhood I say through to find a place as a most of them writer of whom much will asshybecause a turtle suredly be heard in the future gets a whole In reciting his own experience chapter to her- Mr Brown wants to acquaint self a Mary- us with the experience of the k noll turtle first Northern urban generation therefore a very of Negroes and with their

special turtle searching their dreams their And there is a sorrows their small and futile Ion g chapter rebellions and their endless given to the battle to establish their own improbable career of Nellie place in Americas greatest OHara a Maryknoll supernu- metropolis-and in America it shymerary self

The author breezily plunges UnfortUnately many will be into her stock of biographical drawn to this book for its senshygoodies and starts handing them sationalism for the kicks to be around There is no general in- had frC)m its uninhibited recital troduction no statement of pur- of an inhuman and amoral sort pose But one can readily see of existence But if the authormiddot that Sister Maria del Rey wants has any intention of shocking to show us the wide range of it is not so that cheap thrills may backgrounds from which the be dispensed Ilundreds of Maryknoll Sisters Rather it is that those of us come and the wide range of who are relatively prosperou places and tasks to which they and secure who have no conshymay be assigned ception of what it means to live

In one chapter we are in a as he and his contemporaries in rem 0 t e Guatemalan village Harlem have had to live may where the wretchedly poor pea- have our eyes opened pIe in desperate need of profes- This is a book often funnyo~al medical help are pleading but not really enjoyable nor with the visiting Mothermiddot Gen- was it meant to be It is distinctshyeral to send them a doctOr In ly unpleasant because ofmiddot the another chapter we are in a conditions it rehearses But it Mohammedan Village in Minda- has itS value and it is in its flao Philippine Islands where -peculiar way a testimonial to lOme sisters are conducting II the hardihood of middotthe human school and are congratulated by spirit the Mohammedan headman on Good Usalaquoe flot having been killei yet Theodore M Bernsteins The

Remarkable Woman Careful W r i t e r (AtheneUm To the Orient to Africa we $795) is subtitled A Modern

go wih these remarkable~ and Guide to English Usage It has remarkably cheerful women as the eminent merit of taking and they do such varied things as following as its criteria both Writing a doctoral dissertation good sense and good taste It while held in interment by the keeps to the middle way beshyJapanese giving advice on tween the extremes of stuffiness grooming to African teenagers and excessive conservatism on nursing lepers fixing balky the one hand and indiscriminate plumbing et acceptance of whatever is curshy

Sister Maria dey Rey writes rent on the other with a light hand andshows us We have suffered much from

~ the light heart which the Mary- both extremes Insistence on knoll Sisters have taken to many rigid conformity to old and forshya land and through many an or- mal usage together with adashydeal But a serious theme is con- mant exclusion of defensible and stantly sounded and although even admirable new developshynever hammered the theme that ments has brought into conshyis of love of God and of others tempt the law and order which for His sake shoulu govern our employment

Harlem ChUcI of the language Claude Browns personal story But quite as bad is the over-

Manchild in the Promised Land liberal not to say profligate at shy(McMillian $595) is both ap- titude which scorns all attempts palling and appealing to set norms and extravagantly

It is appalling on two scores countenances i n dee d encourshyThe first is its revelation of the ages abuses simply because a horrible jungle inwhi~ a Negro great many careless people inshychild gtows up in Harlem The dulge in them casual passerby and even the Mi Bernstein to sample hi white person who thinks him- mind does not approve the fasshyself fairly well acquainted with tidiousness forbidding use of

this major American ghetto has the wordmiddotbellY which is pershyno remotest conceptioll of the fectly proper and may be t~e misery and degradation spelied oilly precise term for what is

out by MrBrownjn lecountirig meant When iewed from t~-e ~his years of childhood and youth two extremes of the coarse slang fhe book is also appilli~g n guts ~d the ~ch babrt~ tum its language Obscemties areas my tIleterm belly seeIiisa fine eommon as commas Sexual old worli precocity is taken for granted T~s-oook altho~ certainly and is eXIlicitly descrJ~ed no slpor~cis ~ excell~nt bedshy How then can one say that a SIde book It is instnlctive and book so raw so acnd is in any enteJ1aining U regUlarly and sense appeamng attentivelycons~ted it will cWe

For one thIng Mr Brown is us of badubits and ~~0Flte being ruthlessly honest He is us to ~tethe laDtW8Be WltJi telling his stegtriWithoutcOnceal middotthe respeCi bldtmiddotmiddot itmiddot ~

VINCENT LOPEZ

Bishops Ball Continued from Page One

andmiddot underpriveleged children of the Diocese

A more elaborate presentashytion of the usherettes to the Bisshyhop is planned for 1966 Charity Ball

Large local committees are working daily with the multiple preparations necessary to conshytinue the tremendous success that has marked the previous ten social events

Dr David Costa Jr diocesan president of the St Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs James A OBrien Jr president of the Diocesan Council of CathoUe Women are co-chairmen and coordinating the work of the various committees from all sections of the Diocese

Acadian Culture Fosters Religion

GRAND CROTEAU (HC)shyThe Catholic religion is a signifi shycant characteristic of the Acashydian culture an associate editor of America magazine said here

Father =tement J McHaspy SJ mane the comment at a symposium here commemorating the 200th anniversary of the arshyrival of the Acadians in South Louisiana after they were exshypelled from Nova Scotia by the British

The overwhelming majorityshyof Southern Catholics are in Southwest Louisiana Father McshyNaspy said in the area settled by the Acadians

With this adherence to the 1aith of our ancestors has come deep family tradition and strong family ties The robustness of Acadian culture has been proved by the way it has withstood conshystant pressures from without for total abSolItion~

He said Acadian culture hal much to offer to our fellow Americans bull bull bull trying to escape this trap ~ooking 1everishli for new ItYles of living

Prelate to Receive Carijpion Award

NEW YORK (NC) Msgr john Tracy ElliS recognlied dean of Americari CatholiClbiSshy

_tlt

torians will be presehteawhuthe 1965 Campion Award of the Catholic Book Club on Friday Nov 26 at the new headquarterS

of Ameri~ ~agazinemiddot here presented annually for )ong

and eniinentser-vice in the~ause of Catholic letters the Campion Award has been made siilce 195~

bullMagr Ellis is the autho~ Of 13 bookS incltidiiig the tw~volume

Life 01 lamesCardinal ~ boils and Catholica in Coloalal Amerlca middot

- FOt Christs Poor~

God Love You By Most Rev Fulton J Sheen~ DD

Eacb day at the Councn I am given letters from blsbops asking for help Every morning the mail carries the same burshyden For one we were able to secure a personal gift of $400 It is necessary to tell you the amount in order to sense middotthe tragel7 of his answer You have become aD instrument of the mercy of God towards me proving that the Lord is near to all whocall upon Him In order to understand the valne of your offershying let me tell yon that your gift was the greatest I have ever received in my lifebullincluding all those received the day of ID7 consecration as bishop The $400 is also more than the total revenue of my diocese from all sources for over six months I have only 12 priests in aD area of over 100000 square mUes Everyday during the CouncU I will offer my breviary prayers and visit to the Blessed Sacrament for you and your apostoUe works May we always be one in the Sacred Hearts of JeSDll and Mary

Imagine running a diocese in the United States greater in xtent than Illinois and Indiana on $BOO-a-year If only some of the money that we funnel into excesshysively rich parishes colleges and orshyganizations could be funneled into the Holy Father for the hundreds and hunshydreds of excessively poor dioceses in misshysion lands One of the many advantages of giving to The Society for the Propashygation of the Faith is that your alms go to the poor church-directly-and that your entire gift is distributed by the Holy Father within the year The Society for the Propagation of the Faith exists for Christs poor church poor bishops poor priests poor religious poor people If you wish to make the rich richer all well and good but for your souls sake take just one minute and think of good bishops like the one above We will not give his name because there are so many like him The Holy Father knoWll who they are-he will give them money~ A good idea is it not

GOD LOVE YOU to a teenager for 1 -After readi= aboat the teenager who -ave $50 a dollar dlclnt seem Uke very much Then I realized that If 49 other teenaampen sent 1 to match t~

teenagers $50 you wonld have $100 for yonr poOl-4nd thats a lot bullbullbull to Anon for 1000 sent to those whose need III lIreater than Dline bullbullbull to 11 for $5 We are sen~inll you th to thank God for the restored health of bull Ve17 much Iovecl 10shyweek-olel pnppJ

Out in time for you to put real v8tue kl someones christshymas stocking is Bishop Sheens new book WALK WITH QOD The handsomely-bound 96 page ~ coyer edition with a tunshyeolor portrait of the Bishop on the eoveris a collection of short commentaries on the moral and religious problems that face all ofns-guilt pride jealousy holiness f~rgiveness and maD) others WALK WITH GOD is a thoughtful and pre~ousgift you can make to enrich the life of many memJgters of the fapilly at well as that of friends both Catholic and Protestant It is avaUshyable for $75 by writing to the Order Department The Society for the P~pagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York N Y 10001

Cut out this column pin y~ur saerlice to It and man It to Most Rev hUon J Sheen National Director of The Society for the PropagaUon of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10001 or to Tour Diocesan Director Rt Rev RaJDlond T Coashy81d1ne 368 North Main Street Fan RIver Musaehusetts

SHELL Premium Heating Oils DADSON Oft BURNERS ~~~

24-Hour 011 $eltv ~I~~ famous Reading HARD COAL _~~laquo -

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WHITES Family Restourontmiddot It 6 CIt The Narrowsmiddot in North WlIJfport

Whelpound The Entire Family Can Dine

Economically

FOR RESERVATIONS

PHONE OS~5-7185

St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

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Impound Copies Of Newspaper

NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 13: 11.18.65

St Joseph Pep School Stages Parent-Daughter Night to Confe Blessed Virgin Medals on Girli

New to the school page this week is St Josephs Prep School in Fall Rivel The school itself has been doing business for a long time preparing girls for entrance tinto the community of the Sisters of St Joseph and is

STUDENT COUNCIL Heading the student councfi at Sacred Hearts Academy Fairhaven are front Elizabeth Bapti-sta president and rear Ann Fortin vice-president

now sharing )lews of its acshytivities with other teens of the Diocese

A recent event was a parshyent-daughter evening at which Prepers opened the program with an adaptation of a song from The Sound of Music Slides of

school events were then viewed Upcoming is reception this Sunshyday by freshmen of the Prep School medal of the Blessed Virshygin Mary Incoming freshmen says Simonne Dufour school president eagerly await this day because they can then conshysider themselves true Prepers having earned this symbol of loyalty to school to virtue and to Mary

Paperback Drive Paperbacks for Ethiopia III

the slogan at Mt st Mary Acashydemy these days Girls at the Fall River school are collcting the books for Brother Michael brother of the academy princishypal who will use them in his educational work in Haile Seshylassies far-off realm

At Feehan High in Attleboro students are eagerly anticipating an intra-squadpractice session of the Providence College basshyketball team to be held at a tomorrow night in Feehans gym Also on the Feehan athletic scene the freshman football team wound up a no-loss noshytie season with its defeat of Attleboro High freshmen

Rev Edmund Delaney of st Josephs Church Fall River gavea retreat to underclassmen at Sacred Hearts Academy Fall River iast week while seniors made a closed retreat at Manshyville RI

Brothers are a-Go-Gomiddot lit JrevostHigh in Fall River saY the Maple Leaf Their new moshybility is due to the gift of a ear destined middothopefully for use driver education classes

Left-over Halloween spirit was used up by area students whet journeyed to Boston to see a presentation of Macbeth comshyplete with daggers and witches SChools represented include Jesshyus-Mary and SHA Fall River

Debaters at Cassidy High 1ft Taunton are engagaing in a series of warm-up debates prior to the opening of league activity for the year Last bout featured freshmen vs sophomores with the topic at issue being Should the driving age be raised to 18 Unsurprisingly the negative won

Enter NBS Seven seniors at St Anthony

High in New Bedford have been inducted to the National Honor

ing the Thanksgiving recess HF students will participate in a retreat eon due ted by Rev Thomas Schmidt CSSR

A Booster Drive is in proshygress at Bishop Feehan With contributors receiving a decal for their car windows-so when you see those stickers youll know that a friend of Feehan is going tnataway

Although this school year has hardly begun smart students are getting their ducks in a row for next year Among acceptshyances at Mt St Mary are Theresa Miranda at St Lukes Hospital School of Nursing and Joan Girza and Christine Sweeney at Johnson and Wales Business School while at Holy Family Donna Place a National Merit semi-finalist has been asked by Chatman College to make apshyplication for entrance

On the other siie of the fence colleges are sparing no efforts in acquainting prospective students with their particular claims to fame Boston College sent a representative to Coyle High in Taunton as wen as to Cassidy and Cassidyites also heard of the charms of Cambridge BusineSl School in Boston

Parents Night Annual Parents Night has

been held at St Anthony High with the Glee Club operiing the program with French and Engshylish selections and Rev Gerard Boisvert school director speakshying on student behavior and at- titudes Following the formal

Society Provisional candidates talk by a representative of the for tlte society include nine jUJloo candy -eompanymiddot Besides a deshyiors andmiddot14 sophomres The ~ev~ scription of the product (he WBs

program parents met faculty memberS

Patricia Richard sophomore at SHA Fall River has been named to the Southeastern Mass District Chorus while also in the musical line neophyte typists at Holy Family are typing with a beat since a record player has been added to business deshypartment equipment

In fr6sh football at Coyle Coyle defeatedStang 8-6 while

jayvees were losers 14-12 tID Stang jayvees Also at the Taunshyton school James Murphy Dashyvid Hoye James Fitzpatrick Ronald Rosconi and Gary Kingsshybury were representatives to a leadership day at St Clare High in Woonsocket

A sweet tooth may lead to an electric drill at Prevost High (no not the dentists kind) The drill and a tape recorder are among prizes in the candy sale currently underway at the Fall Riv~r boys school

On Wednesday commentB the Maple Leaf the class ofshyfleers were subjected to a pep

en smart seniors are Lucille Belshy ecstatic over the buttermint dent counCIl anelthe senior clBSl liveau George Boudreau Paul- sticks) hesuggeil~edadailycom~ presidents of the last three elasshy

o -ette Bousquet Joyce J)esautelll petition among the classes to de- ses form the alumnae committee Doris DU)e R(mald ~Qbeil ~ltl termine which has sold the most A special issue of ~ the

Jo-Arin Weaver Five pl8Jl to atshy To $ign~ victory he donated a ~hool paper marks the 25thtendcoUege one will enier moen iI t r 011 s white fluffy dog anniversary of St Anthony High n~sing school 8Jld one Jaltpe8 which will be awarded to the In it tribute le paid to studenia to become _ le~al 8eCre~ry~ winnblg claSs of the day It Ill and teachers over the past quart- Holy Fa~ly Jlighalso New tolle hopedthat tbecompetiti0Jl er century In 1940 middotits noted Ileclford will be represented bullt Is keen tormiddot the rather bedraS- lS8 freshmen entered the thenshya leadership conference at SL

xavi~r College on Tlianksgiving~

weekend Immediate~ preced- Set Book Week TAVARES Bridges of International 17Jlshy UPHOLSTERINC SHOPderStanding will be the theme Oblates to Me~t eastOM Made Upltolstered Fimlltufor the 26th annual Catholic

Oblates of St Benedict win Book Week to be sponsored the Reupholsterinl bull QU~litJ Wonsltlp meet at 4middot Saturday middotafternoon week of Feb 20 through 26 by Large Seleclion Fine Fabrics

Nov 20 at Portsmouth Priory the Catholic Library Association Work Guaranteed bull Free Estimates Rhode Island Dimier and a Further information and book REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTf

social hour will fono~ at 015 week kits are available from 992middot2881 Relatives and friend are iIlvite4 the association at 461 West Lanshy 1102 Acushnet Ave Bedfordto attend castel Avenue Haverford Fa

gled dog appeared in need ef exercise As sooon all the dog was presented our ever alert seniors christened it Brother Bark (any resemblance between this name and that of any other person living dead or 1n beshytween is purely coincidental)-

Cheering Tryouts Cheering tryouts under direcshy

tion of Connie Gagne head cheerleader are being held at Jesus-Mary Academy Fall Rivshyer This year therell be two squads one for JMA and one for its all-boy neighbor Prevost

An open house and tea highshynghted observance of National Catholic Education Week at Casshysidy High Faculties of other Taunton high schools were guests of the Cassidy faculty enjoying tea in the school library and tours of the school and con-- vent

Also at Cassidy thealumnea planning committee will meet Friday Nov 26 to plan for the first social sponsored by the graduates to be held during the Christmas holidays The stushy

HE- ANCHOR-middots Nov 18 1965

College Officials

new school ef whom 19 perseshyvered to graduation This year 89 freshmen entered and 70 seniors are awaiting graduatioD Total student body ismiddot 311

The Crusader Fall River area CYO newspaper has been disshytributed to Catholic schools in the city Its staff includes Gerald Desrosiers editor in chief Richshyard Charland assistant editor and Leo Talbot school represhysentative all from Prevost Anshyother area CYO publication thats been well received is a pamphletmiddotentitled What Is the Fall River Area CYO Its purshypose is to stimulate interest in CYO and help attract new memshybers

Also at Prevost the Mothers Club is collecting trading stamps to acquire new furniture for the

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NEW YORK (NO) - X controversy over seizure by Manhattan College officials of oopies of an edition of the students weekly newspaper has led to resignations of six memshybers of the publications staff

Stemming from an article which student editors later adshymitted was inaccurate and in poor taste the controversy setshytled on seizure of copies of the Manhattan Quadrangle

Brother Cosmos Gregory fa~

culty adviser to the paper imshypounded copies of the paper beshycause of an article in which Francis C~rdinal S p e 11 man

Archbishop of New York was blamed for a ban on folk song Masses and fraternity shyhouses The editors later admitshy

ted the charges were not true About 2000 copies of the pashy

pers press run of 4000 were taken from the newspapers ofshyfice

Admit Errors Brother Gregory president of

the college who has the same name as the papers adviser met for nearly two hours with the papers editors He said they admitted the article was untrue but insisted on a reversal of the advisers decision

Denying their request the president said I believe it III obvious that the campus comshymunity would become chaotie were a president to yield pressures of this kind

In a farewell editorial in tM latest edition of the paper the resigning staff members saY We cannot stand idly by while

half the press run of the Quad- iengelill confiscated over a single trivial article

Brothers residence and the newly formed 21 membertenni team has been admitted into the Bristol County League

Here There At Holy Family High Sister

Maria Stella has been appointecl Guidance Counsetor

At Bishop Cassidy Scie~ee

Club members will hear a talk by Andrea Trzcinski on her reshycent discovery of a centuriesshyold Indian skeleton while social studies classes are planning a mock trial complete with judge jurors plaintiff defendant and

counselors Their case will be the trial of the murderer of Vioshyla LiuzZo

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14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

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President Johnson has proshyclaimed Nov 28 a day of dedishycation and prayer to honor those risking their lives to bring about a just peace in South Vietnam

Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 14: 11.18.65

14 mE ANCHOfl- Poll Says Protestants Reject Unity Sunday Nov2SThurs Nov 18 1965

85 Per Cent Think One Church UndesirableRoxbury Prelate

NEW YORK (NC)-Protesshy more friendly to Protestant been a noticeable gain in friendshy

Says Anti-Busing tanta overwhelmingly reject the churches Forty-four per cent liness between Roman Catholics idea of one church uniting anwered yes 53 per cent said no - and Protestants Thirty-seven Protestants and Catholic al In your community has there per cent said yes 54 per centVote Anti-Negro though some 44 per cent feel the said no

BOSTON (NC)-The vote Catholic Church is becoming St Louis President Do you think one church that swept ail anti-busing friendlier to the Protestant uniting Protestants and Roman

churches Signs Viet Petition Catholics would be desirableschool board into office in This was the result of a pon ST LOUIS (NC) - Father (or) undesirable Only 12 perthis city can only be intershy taken of readers of Christian Paul Reinert SJ president of cent felt this unity would be deshypreted as an anti-Negro vote Herald Magazine largest Protesshy sirable while 85 per cent feltSt Louis University has signeda Boston pastor says tant interdenominationalmonthshy a student petition supporting it would be undesirable

Mrs Louise Day Hicks a leadshy ly Us policy In Vietnam Would increased Protestantshying opponent of busing children The December issue of the Copies of the petition which Roman Catholic cooperation be as a solution for racial imbalance magazine published here said contains the names of more than to the advantage of Roman Cathshyin schools won re-election by it received the fonowing results 2000- students and faculty memshy olics primarilly Protestants pri shya large margin as chairman of to four questions it put to its bers are expected to be sent marily both equally Only onethe school board Two other readership shortly before Pope to President Johnson Secretary per cent felt Protestants wouldbusing opponents were also elecshy Paul vrs trip to the United of Defense Robert McNamara gain primary benefits while 64 ted to the board Nations and Gen William Westmoreland per cent thought Catholics would

Msgr Russell J Collins passhy Do you think the Roman Cathshy commander of US forces in and 30 per cent felt there would tor of St Josephs church in oUe Church is really becoming Vietnam be equal gainBostons Roxbury section said it is impossible not to regard the results of the elections bullbull as an anti-Negro vote It is inshycreasingly evident that for many the concept of the neighborhood school implies that the Negro is to be kept in his place in his neighborhood

In -addition to the physical ghetto into which theNegro has been forced an additional psyshychological ghetto is being creshyated by the refusal even to disshycuss ways in which racial imshybalance in our schools may be overcome

Poison Will Deepen The Pilot official newspaper

ef the archdiocese of Boston commented in ari editorial

Many voters may have beenmiddot telling themselves that they were voting against busing or in favor of the neighborhood

school-but in simple truth they were voting against the rightful claims of the Boston Negro for the education of his children

Although the newspaper said the voters cannot be called rashycists it added they plainly are not taking their racial problems seriously and this means that like other cities of the same mood the problems win fester and the poison deepen until the community is forced to face reshyality

False Accusations The paper also criticized Neshy

gro leaders for intemperate and false accU$ations against those who have been their best friends

More of middotthe local failure than (Negro leaden) eare to acknowlshyedge has come from inadequashycies of leadership among themshyselves and the attempt to shiftmiddot responsibility to others does them little credit To include the Archbishop of Boston (1Uchshyard Cardinal Cushing) in the accusation Is a travesty of fact that will deceive no one and may alienate many the Pilot said

CardinalCUshing had opposed the busing of children in favor of other methods of correcting racial imbalance

Catholic Chaplains Form Association

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Catholic Chaplains recently approved by the a~strative board of the National Catholic Welfare Con- L

ference is being formed CRANBERRY SAUCE - Whole or StrainedThe asSociation is composed of priests seIVing in all hospitals and health-related fa c f lit i e s Within one week more than 500 priestchaplains became charter OCEAN SPRAYmembers

c LB

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Congress had suggested In a resolution that the President designate Nov 27 as a day of prayer but Mr Johnson chose the 28th a Sunday instead A series of anti-war demonstrashytions including a march on Washington have been schedshyuled for Nov 27

The presidents proclamation honored the men and women of South Vietnam of the United States and of all other counshytries who are risking their lives in the war

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THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

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SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 15: 11.18.65

THE ANCHORshy 1S Thurs Nev 18 1965Latin Lands Lag in Housing

Health Education Needs Pastor Asserts Edited by John J Considine MM Civil Rights

From The Church in the New Latin America Basic to every family is the family home In 1960 the From God

55 million families in the United States lived in a total of VICTORIA (NC) - Civil 52 million homes these homes averaging six rooms each rights are not civil at all a large and small A surplus of five million homes in the middotVictoria priest told the United States were reported middot NAACP convention meeting middotteach millions of children to eatas unoccupied In Latin middot here in Texas They are Godshyunaccustomed food is a formidshyAmerica instead the 40 given rights and the role of theable task Three to six of everymillion families possessed 33 hundred children suffer from Church with regard to these million homes with a total of 83 hideous forms of malnutrition rights is the same today as it

has been from the beginningmillion rooms or an average of In many areas as many as fifty two and a half Speaking at a symposIUm enshyrooms per home

out of every hundred children titled The Role of Religious

Thus Latin suffer from moderate degrees of

Institutions in the Civil Rights America regisshy

deficiency Malnutrition is a Struggle Father EA Hermes

ters a shortage continental family problem

But limiting family concern to pastor of Our Lady of Victory of 7 million malnutrition alone is too narrow church said homes for its The Christian Family Movement If these were civil rights it population and encourages parents to work with would mean that they were beshya gross average the community in the public stowed by the government And of 24 persons health needs of every Latin if this were true then they couldfor every 10 American nation and of the conshy be taken away by the same gov- shy dwelling house tinent as a whole These needs ernment rooms in the involve the followingmiddot

The pastor declared that GodLatin American 1 Provision of drinking water established the brotherho~d ofworld Thus the statisticians and sewage disposal for the 70 man which he said is the basisbring home to us the quantitashy per cent of the urban population for what we are now referringtive shortage of residences in and the 50 per cent for the rural to as civil rightsLatin America population not now properly TEA FOR NEW MEMBERS The Friends of St Annes

We can easily understand that served in these respects Father Hermes said that theHospital Fan River conducted their annual rea for newLatin American ieadets are not 2 Reduction of the current crux of the so-called civil rights

exaggerating when they demand excessive mortality among chil shy members Tuesday afternoon in the hopitalfl conference issue lies not in defining the the construction of new homes dren upderfive years of age room Seated MrsRoland Chabot pourer Standing Mrsshy origin of the rights but inimshyin terms of millions 3 Eradication of malaria and plementing themJames J Murphy Jr Mrs William Gaudreau MrsMau

Quantitatively then homes for smallpox and the control of inshy Church pOsitionrice J Poirier and Mrs R~ger LemaireLatin American families are in fectious diseases The Catholic Church throughshyshort middotsupply But qualitatively 4 Better hospitals and family out history has taken the official they are in shorter supply healthcare centers in the back position favoring est~blishment

Doctor Alvarez Icaza and his country as well as in the cities Deplores Apathy of equality he said But heconfreres offer us Guatemala as Latin America needs more readily admitted that practice an example This nation of four than 500000 additional hospital Inc~easing Juvenile Delinquency Problem has fallen short of official proshymillion inhabitants possesses beds and 100000 more doctors nouncementsrunning water in only 34 per With an average of over 400 famshy Alarming Nebraskan TeUs CYO Members Father Hermes appeared atcent of its homes electricity in iliesdepEmdent on each doctor in

the symposium with the Rev39 per cent a bath in only 19 the Latin American world the CHICAGO (NC)-The headof them a realization that they Mac N Turnage pastor of Graceper cent and water closets in 29 luxury of a medical man within the Churchs organization forshy must briDg the love and peace Presbyterian church Dr Jackper cent A few nations they call is reserved to the favored few teenagers has urged CYO m~m- of Christ to the world Kahn a Jewish rabbi and theexplain are still worse off family belS to involve their fellow Rev NH Kern of Our SaviorsThe Dominican Republic Ecshy Educating the Family youths in bringing the love and M k A Lutheran churchuador Haiti Slightly better off The saga of the struggle of peace of Christ to the world or s nnlversary

are EI Salvador and Panama Latin Americas millions of Charles Rucker of Omaha Of FI degd Ch h Rev Turnage said the civil The most advanced so far as its families for the education of president of the teenage section orr a u rc rights movement has reawakenshytotal society is concerned is their children makes a heart- of the National Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - The ed the Church to its sense of Costa Rica small in its popula~ warming story The achievement Organization Federation told Cat hoI i c Historical Review mission It may restore demoshytion of less than a million and is still in the process of develop- the eighth national convention quarterly publication of the cracy to America and Christi shya half but consistently energetic ment since huge numbers of the of the federation American Catholic Historical anity to the Church in its provision in many ways population are still illiterate A Christian with an apathetic Association here has devoted its for strong family life But during the decade of the attitude is a contradiction Fall number to the 400th anni- Asks Half-Fare

Feeding Family 1950s a major phenomenon was The University of Nebraska versary of the Catholic Church achieved namely the average student said in Florida WASHINGTON (NC)-PermisNext to housing the family the middle andmiddot lower class family The nation is beset with Three articles and numerous-sion to allow clergymen to fly atmost elementary material need becam~ convinced that its chil- problems and unfortunately the maps and photographs tell the half-fare has been asked of theis feeding the family On this dren shoud be educated During youth of our nation play too story of themiddotfoundingofmiddotSt Au- Civil Aeronalitics Board herebyscore conditions in Latin Amer- the decade of the 1960s millions large a part in these social gustine Fla in 1565 and of the Allegheny Airlines~ The currentica are grave indeed The Food of familiesare seeking to make problems ~ubsequent Spanish missions in rate charged for clergymen byand Agriculturltli Organization this a reality You aswellas Y kilow of the Floridamiddot AllegHeny anda half-dozenadvocates a worllaquol minimum of

But to b~ck up tbis~mphasis increasing threat that juvenile 1 fourth article reviews middotthe other airlines allows a 25 ~r2700 calories in daily intake By on ~pre ~ducation tl1ere must delinquency poses to the law holdings ofmiddotthe mission ()fN~in- cent fare cutthis measure at least 16 Latin

middot be money The fact that 31 mil- and order of our country The bre deDiris Library in St AliAmericari countries fall below lion out of 58 million grade and teenage drinking problem is con- gustine All the articles are by the minimum ltmiddle school age children dont shlfitly becoming more severe priests ofmiddot the Diocese of St

Those above the minimum are middot go to school is not due to lack and widespread Youth pur- Augustinein the following order Argeri of the will of parents or young- chases billlions of dollars of porshytina Uruguay Cuba Brazil and sters to use the schools Most nographic literatureMexico Haiti and Bolivia are often it is because there is no More alarming than the reklshythe lowest at less than 1900 calshy money to build schools tive small number of teenagersories per day Members of the Very Often it is true parents involVEid middotin these actions is the average family in seven other must make their youngsters stay larger number of youth who arecountries fall more than 500 calshy home to help support the house- apathetic to these actions and toories a day below the minimal hold The economic factor is the the other problems of youth and2700 greatest single obstacle to more society

The problem of feeding the education in the Latin American Catholic youth he added must family in Latin America is often famoily rise to the challenge by involvshynot one of the too little to eat Disparity in Clergy ing our fellow youth to bring but of the wrong things to eat To terminate this rapid com-Malnutrition means unbalanced parison of the Latin American diet lacking animal proteins family and its opposite number Nuns at Workshop vitamins minerals It is a probshy in the United States let us note DAVENPORT (NC) - Some lem not merely of money but that as of 1962 the Latin Amershy 600 nuns from Iowa and western of age-old habits ican world was served by 19064 Illinois are expected at a workshy

Getting millions of parents to diocesan clergy and 18768 clergy shop on race and poverty to be of religious congregations a held here Friday Nov 26 at total of 37842 In the United Marycrest CollegebullDrive for Schools States to serve 44 million Cathshy

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshy olics less than a fourth of those bishop Philip M Hannon of New in Latin America 31961 dioc- LEMIEUX Orleans has announced a$26 milshy esan clergy and 20728 priests of PLUMBING amp HEATING INClion fund drive to help support a $30 million high school expanshysion program The program

religious congregationS a total of 52689 were available

Thus once again the United

-

for uomestic ~ and Industrial

which will expand existing high States possesses a decided ad ~~ Sales and Service schools and build 11 new ones vantage shy an average of one Oil Burners was launched last year with a priest for each 835 Catholics as WY 5-1631shy$25 million drive by Archbisshy against Latin Americas average 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE hop John P Cody now archshy of one priest for each 4700 Cathshy NEW BEDFORD

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16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

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The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 16: 11.18.65

16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Nov 18 1965

Advises Professional Care For Psychological Illness

By John J Kane PhD Judging by your earlier column everyone addicted to

pornography is sick If that were true then every sin we commit isnt a sin Its because we are ill Couldnt persons addicted to smut merely be evil persons You told this mans wife not to seek a separation What about her quite probably not responsible peace of mind her feelings for his behavior

and health Dont they mat- Mental Illness ter I would certainly not agree

You have raised a highly in- with you in calling a person who teresting and provocative ques- collects pornography compul- tion Dorothy Is sively as a result of an emotional it possible to illness an evil person I would e I aim t hat much prefer to call him a sick everyone who person and I believe I stand on commits a sin sound scientific grounds is ill I certain- Today there are many condishyly would not tions which we once considered m a k e sue h due to a weak will that we now a claim So m e believe to be mental illness or h i g h I y subtle neuroticism One of the very best distinctions are examples of course is true essential Lets alcoholism take the case 0 I should like tC refer you to a woman who a very excellent book Counselshyenters a supermaket and engages ing The Catholic by Fathers in shop-lifting She does this Hagemaier and Gleason The first purposively and perhaps because part deals with psychological asshyshe needs the item she steals and peets the second with the moral cannot pay for it Or to put it aspects of aberrations I think if better she thinks she needs you read this book you will unshythe item she steals I am not re- derstand more clearly than I can ferring tc someone who is des- help you to understand in a brief perately poor and starving I column the full implications of would consider this an immoral psychological illnesses for cershyact and I would not claim that tain kinds of behavior the woman is necessarily ill I advised this woman not to

Desperately Sick Ieave her husband simply be-On the other hand lets take cause when one enters into the

the case of a woman who peri- sacrament of matrimony he or odically goes to a -supermarket she takes the other in sickness and inevitably shoplifts She and in health There is no justi shytakes items which she doesnt fication for deserting a husband_ need and for which she could or wife or divorcing or separshywell pay It turns out that the ating from either because the inshysecond woman is a kleptomaniac dividual is ill She is sick desperately sick Only if the life of one spouse psychologically She is probably is truly in danger and absolutely not morally responsible for her nothing can be done about it acts because of a severe emo- would I think of recommending tional disturbance a separation and then only on

I hope these two illustrations the grounds of personal safety will help to clear up in your Disturbed Personalities mind my distinction between persons who engage in immoral I think this wifes health and behavior purposively and those peace of mind will be greatly under strain of grave emotional improved if her husband reshydisturbances ceives professional care There

As the fields of medicine psy- is no doubt that his particular ehiatry psychology and sociol- compulsive behavior can be corshyogy are more and more devel- rected with psychiatric assist shyeped we are learning a great ance deal about the motives and be- If she were to leave him she haior ofhuman beings A per- would constantly worry about son accused of witchcraft in what happens to him And if early colonial times might well something dire did happen a have been put to death far from unlikely possibility she

Yet we know today that many might suffer anguish the rest of of these women were probably her life for not having stood by

gt mentally ill Not too many years the man shemarried during his ago persons who were psychotic period of crisis crazy in the popular language Finally I did not intend in were chained in dungeons In any way to convey the impres- England of the past ladies and sion that everyone who commits gentlemen used to visit these a sin is sick But I do want to asylums on Sunday in order to emphasize that certain types of laugh over the antics of the behavior w h i c h objectively mEntally ill speaking are imlIoral may be

Indicates Disturbance due to disturbed personalities Today we realize that mental- Morally speaking such indishy

ly ill persons are not responsible viduals are not capable of makshyfor their condition any more ing a distinction between right than a person who suffers from a and wrong and therefore are not cold or a stroke is directly re- responsible for what they do sponsible for his physical con- Furthermore if there is to be dition We no longer laugh at in- any hope for such people it can sanity we attempt to do some- only come through an intelligent thing about it for these unfortu- and sympathetic understanding nate persons of the dynamics of their person-

Psychologists believe that the alities mere collecting of pornographic literature for instance sexual humor in the form of cartoons and drawings may not be absoshy CORREIA amp SONS lutely indicative of any sexual ONE STOP abnormality

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Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

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18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 17: 11.18.65

- - - --- -------------------------------~- -~---- ----------------------------l

Milwaukee Catholic Council To Investigate Segregation

MILWAUKEE (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council of Milwaukee will investigate alleged de facto segregation In Oatholic elementary schools here with the cooperation of the archdiocesan school office The CICs executive comshymittee approved the study 14-3 along with a recomshymendation that Archbishop William E Cousins ask the recently established archdiocshyesan school board to prepare a plan for rapid and complete deshysegregation of Catholic scho~s

if segregation is found The interracial councils education eommittee will make the study

Msgr Edmund J Gobel archshydiocesan school superintendent Ilaid his office will be most hapshypy to cooperate with the study

In Controversy He said that in places where

DO Negro families live there is bound to be de facto segregashytion of schools-not by design but only because citizens of color have not been allowed to or have not chosen to live in these and other areas

Msgr Gobel was involved in the recent controversy here over Catholic participation in a pubshylic sch~ol boycott called by civil rights groups to protest segreshygation

Shortly before the boycott in mid-October he issued a directive barring use of Catholic parish facilities for Freedom Schools for children taking part in the boycott A similar order was issued by Auxiliary Bishop Roman R Atkielski vicar genshyeral

Five Catholic parishes here had announced plans to make their facilities available for Freedom Schools However they obeyed the order not to do 110

In Five Schools During the boycott the Milshy

waukee Journal published a surshyvey of Catholic elementary schools in the city showing that 1000 of the 1200 Negro pupils in these schools were concenshytrated in five parochial schools while of the remaining 200 more

Pontiff Speaks On Tourism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-At an audience granted to the directors of the Italian Touring Club Pope Paul VI asked them to work toward encouraging the higher eultural and social aspects of tourism as well as its religious alues

The Church has an interest in tourism he said in its attempts to encourage as much as possible the observance of religious duties by excursionists travelers and holiday makers But it is also interested in tourist attracshytions themselves and organized study trips he stated

How could one travel in Jtaly without observing the conshytinual epiphany of art and reli shygious custom How could we avoid contemplating such treasshyures not only in their historical and esthetic aspects but also and essentially in their spiritual and edifying aspects

This you certainly do already Therefore you will be pleased to know our satisfaction with this and our encouragement that you may expand tJ1at phase of your work

The occasion of the audience was the 71st anniversary of the establishment of the club

Hit Abortion BERLIN (NC) - The Catholic

bishops of communist-ruled East Germany have issued a joint declaration condemning a proshyposal to liberalize the countrys law on abortion

than 150 were divided among three more schools

The Catholic Interracial Counshycils action was taken on a resoshylution offered by Robert J OConnell a professor of law at ~Marquette University He is one of the attorneys representing parents involved in a federal court suit to force the public school board to end de facto segregation in public schools

Msgr Gobel said he hopes an open occupancy housing measshyure newly enacted by the state assembly will make it possible for all citizens to exercise their natural right to live where they choose thus helping to elimishynate de facto school segregation

Honor Children For Mission Aid

LOS ANGELES (NC) -Ten thousand children were feted at a celebration in the Sports Arena here in recognition of their aid to the missions for the children of the world

Father Augustus O Reitan national director of the Holy Childhood Association said chil shydren of the Los Angeles archdioshycese for years have led youngshysters of other areas in sending aid to the missions

Five choirs representing the children of the world sang verses of the Lourdes hymn in Swahili Navajo Eskimo Spanshyish Japanese and Polynesian James Francis Cardinal McInshytyre and Auxiliary Bishops Timothy Manning and John War~ of Los Angeles were presshyent The cardinal distributed awards to schools leading in misshysion efforts

Msgr Hraold Laubacher archshydiocesan director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith said the children provided food clothing shelter and education to thousands of children overshyseas

All this you do to a degree and in a manner unmatched anyshywhere in the world Thanks to you little people of God who show concern for the family of God and make Gods parish your own he said

Pope to Dedicate Church in Rome

VATICAN (NC)-Pope Paul VI will dedicate a new parish church which bears his baptisshymal name-John the Baptist-in the working-class Tiburtina secshytion of Rome

After celebrating evening Mass Sunday he will receive teachers directors and pupils of the International Center for Young Workers for which a dormitory is being built beside ths new St John Baptist church

Both buildings are the result of the efforts of Opus Dei secushylar institute which solicited funds from all over the world

The Famou~h National Banlc Falmouth Mass

By tile Village Green Since 1821

SHARE THEIR LIVES WITH POOR A member of the Sisters of Jesus a religious community founded in 1939 cares for a sickly child in the Congo The nuns with their headquarters in the nations capital Washington work in Africa

THE ANCHOR- 1 - Thurs Nov 18 1965

ChaplainChar~

-Ch~pel Delaye~l

At University EVANSTON (NC) - Tl

Catholic chaplain at Nort~middot

western University has m~

a charge that the school shytrying to delay to death conshystruction of a new chapel

University officials denied the charge

The controversy came to light at an Evanston zoning meetirgtf whim Msgr Cornelius McGj11shycuddy asked for variations for the construction of the proposed chapel behind the present one The proposal also called for renshyovation of the old chapel for a student center

Alban Weber the schools lawyer asked the board to deshyfer action on the petition so the university could negotiate on a different site for the new chapel and center

The school needs the chapel site for a planned student housshying development Weber said

Notice Given Msgr McGillicuddy replied

that the universitys plans seem to be far in the future and that sufficient notice had been given to avoid delay at this stage

He said that the recent action seems to be a tactic of delay aimed at slowing the momentum of our fund drive and that sugshygested alternative sites are each one farther from the center of the campus

William S Kerr Northwestern vice president denied that the school istrying to delay the conshystruction and declared that firm proposals for relocation will soon be presented A mountian is being made out of a molehill the official said

Baltimore See Supports Protest March BALTIMORE (NC) - The

archdiocese of Baltimore put its official backing behind a march protesting alleged segreshygation in housing here

Auxiliary Bishop T Austin Murphy acting in the absence of Lawrence Cardinal Shehan donated $100 to the march in the name of the archliocese

Some)2000 demonstrators inshycluding priests nuns and Reli shygious participated

Father Joseph M Conrt0lly

moderator of the Baltimore Catholic Interracial C 0 u n c i I since 1953 charcterized the march as a demonstration to the city that we have a legitimate demand for a free and open housing maiJtet so that any man can live where he wants and can afford to

He said the marchers also wished to demand that the slum land-lords actively recognize the human dignity of their tenants and to urge people who live in

the ghetto to organize for power and self-help The marchers met in Prince Hall Masons Grand Lodge where ~ they held a rally at which Father Connolly offered the invocation From there they went to the chief target of the protestshyHorizon House a highrise a- partment building now nearing completion Two Negroes were recently denied admission to Horizon House They also pickshyeted a nearby real estate office

BUY A FLAMELESS ELECTRIC RANGE AT YOUR APPLIANCE DEALER OR

FALL RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT CO gt

IT COOKS RINGS AROUND THE REST

shy

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 18: 11.18.65

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish Parade HOLY ROSARY FALL RIVER

Miss Rose Saulino is chairman of a Christmas party to be held Monday Dec 6 by the Womens Guild

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HYANNIS

An old-fashioned card party will feature a Womens Guild meeting at 8 tonight in the church hall To be awarded are a turkey and a basket of fruit A pantry shower for the Misshysionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity will also be held All women of the parish are inshyvited to attend

ST GEORGE WESTPORT

The Holy Name Society will serve a spaghetti supper at the school hall from 6 to 730 Saturshyday night Nov 20 A turkey penny sale will follow

The Womens Guild will meet Monday Nov 22 and will hear a talk by Dr Albert G Hamel trustee of SMTI Members may bring guests

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE BREWSTER

The Womens Guild announces a public card social for tomorshyrow night in the ch1lrch hall West Brewster Turkeys will be the featured awards

SS PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER

Boy Scout Troop 17 will serve a ham and bean supper from 5 to 7 Saturday evening Nov 20 in the church hall Members will participate in a camping trip to Noquochoke Scout Reservation Westport Friday and Saturday Nov 26 and 27

The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine ir presently being esshytablished in the parish Training sessions fo adults re held each Monday evening at 730 in the school

ST ELIZABETH FALL RIVER

New officers of the Womens Guild are Mrs Alice Correira president Mrs Laura Mello vice-president Mrs Hilda Tetshyuan secretary Mrs Mary Olishyveira treasurer Members will receive corporate Communion at 8i5 Mass Sunday morning Dec 5 and attend a following breakshyfast in the church hall prepared by members of tbe Holy Name Society Rev Joao Medeiros will be featured as guest speaker

The unit plans its annual Christmas party for Saturday Dec 11 at the Hearthstone resshytaurant Seekonk

SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIV~R

A cake sale is slated to follow all Masses Sunday Dec 12 by the Council of Catholic Women Mrs Mary Farias is chairman A Christmas party is planned for Snnday Dec 19 at Blinstrubs restaurant Boston Busses will leave the church at 6 that eveshyning

ST WILLIAM FALL RIVER

The Womens G u i 1d has planned its Christmas party for Thursday Dec 9 Gifts wild be exchanged and friends of memshybers are invited

SACRED HEART FALL RIVER

The Mens Club and Womens Guild will co-sponsor their anshynual harvest buffet and dance at 8 Saturday night at Eagles Hall Locust Street Tickets will be available at the door and are also on hand at the rectory or may be had from committee members

OUR LADY OF GRACE NORTH WESTPORT

A Christmas party is set for 7 Sunday night Dec 5 at Stevenshysons restaurant by the Council of Catholic Women The program will include a pageant music and exchange of gifts A talent night is planned for January and a game night for February

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

Holy Name Society officers are Manuel Faria president William Rego vice-president George Tonelli secretary Carl Frederick treasurer The unit plans a whist party at 730 Satshyurday night Nov 20

HOLY NAME FALL RIVER

Mrs William Renaud William Renaud and Cornelius Lynch are co-chairmen of the fifth annual parish bazaar to be sponsored from 1 to 8 Saturday afternoon and evening Nov 20 in the school hall by the Womens Guild and Holy Name Society

Renaud will be announcer Mrs Frank Kingsley will be treasurer and John McMahon will head the hall committee Raymond A McGough is publi shycity chairman and Francis Deshyvine is in charge of prizes A large committee is responsible for various booths

ST MARYS CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER

Officers of the newly-organshyized school Mothers Club are Mrs John OConnor pr~sident Mrs Paulihe Hennessy viceshypresident Mrs Mildred Perry treasurer Mrs Claire Urban secretary Next meeting will be held in January

ST JOSEPH FALL RIVER

A public Christmas sale is scheduled for Thursday Friday and Saturday Dec 2 through 4 by the Womens Guild The unit also announces a turkey whist to be held at 8 tonight in the school hall

HOLY CROSS FALL RIVER

The parish PTA will hold its annual turkey social at 4 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 in the parish hall Heading a large committee is Mrs Evelyn Szulewski

OUR LADY OF ANGELS FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will sponsor a Turkey Whist Saturshyday night at 730 in the parish hall

Mrs Mary Rodrigues will serve as chairman of the Penny Sale scheduled for Friday eveshyning Nov 26 in the parish hall Refreshments will be served

A Memottal Mass will be ofshyfered Sunday morning at 8 oclock for the repose of the soul of the last President John F Kennedy

ST MARY NEW BEDFORD

A parish show Autumn in New York will be presented Saturday and Sunday and a Christmas dance is slated for Saturday Dec 11 at the school hall Next regular meeting of the Womens Guild will be held Monday Dec 13

OUR LADY OF MT CARMEL NEW BEDFORD

Womens Club officers are Miss Natalie L Ferreira presishydent Miss Evelyn Hendricks vice-president Mrs Mary Araushyjo secretary Miss Leonor M Luiz treasurer They will be inshystalled at January ceremonies

A Christma~ party is planned for the unit for Wednesday Dec 1 at the Rendezvous North Dartmouth

PREPARE FOR HOI~IDAY ENCOUNTER Coach Charley Connells Bishop Stang High school football eleven will close out its season at 10 30 next Thursday morning when it meets Coach Chet Hanewichs Bishop Feehan club at Dartmouth The first year mentor watching his squad go through preparatory drill is at the right rear Co-captains are Joe Bartek left Bobby Gastall (rear) and Paul Mathewson front

Prelate to Assist Medicare Program

JONHSON CITY (NC)-Msgr Harrold A Murray director of the Bureau of Health and Hosshypitals National Catholic Welfare Conference is among 18 persons named by President Johnson to help establish government rules for the new medicare program The monsignor is a past presishydent of the American Hospital Association

HATHAWAY OIL CO INC

NEW BEDFORD

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales amp Service

501 COUNTY STREET NEW BEDFORD

WY 3-1751

Lobster Bocits are

coming bringing

LARGE LIVE bullbullbull

Macleans Sea Foods UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN

-

CONVENIENT BAN~ING WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMS

at the

SLADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY SOMERSET MASSbull

The most friendly democratic BANK offering

Complete One-Stop Banking Club Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loans Savings Accounts Reaj Estate Loans

At Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St Bridge

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corpbratio

--

- --

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 19: 11.18.65

--

- --

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thun Nov 18 1965 1poundAttleboro High Gridders Lead County Grid Loop Art Ferrance of Fall River

By Fred Bartek Coach Jim Cassidys classy Attleboro High grid comshy

binetoday looms as the 1965 Bristol County scholastic Be Guard Overcomes Leg Injuryleague championship aggregation as a result of its 6-0

Grit Pays-Off for Senior Econ~mics Majortriumph over its nearest contender and intra-eity rival Bishop Feehan High Attle- W h bb d h Id ofmiddotthmiddotts II are am gra e 0boroWI 1 a -wmnmg fourth spot by downing Somershyleague record is a stand-out set-7-0 in the rain last Saturday favorite over North Attle- Warehams remaining game is boro in the traditional Thanks- against Bourne and the Wareshygiving Day contest A victory ham club could take the third over Coach Art place by winning over the Posts club will Canalmen give the pennant Somerset now 2-5 is in sixth to the Bombar- place in the league standings diers who now Case High School of Swansea are at least as- broke a 15 consecutive game losshysured of a first ing streak last week by downing place tie An Barnstable 15-0 The Cardinal

e a r I y opening wiJi created a three-place tie period Attleboro for the bottom spot Barnstable touchdown pass Case and Dartmouth have 14i accounted for records the only score Longtime Rivalry in the otherwise New Bedford High School evenly played Feehan contest takes this week-end off in prepshythat has just about decided the aration for its Thanksgiving Day title game against Durfee of Fall

A Mike Bristow-to-Frank Ma- River This is one of the oldest roccio aerial sent the Cassidy- rivalries in the State men into the lead which they The Crimson got back on the maintained in the hard fought winning rQadlast week by easily tilt which saw the Bombardiers downing Wintllrop 20-8 Touchshysmashing Feebans butter-and- downs by Gary Rodriques Bill bread passing attack B9bby ~eg~l and Bino Dias told the Poiriermiddot found himself sitting on story the turf a good part of the after- Saturday Fairhaven visits New noon as the hard charging Attle- Bedford Vocational The Blue boro siX-man forward wall Devils won their second game smothered the aerial artist be- of the season by downing Barshyfore he could get into position to rin~on R 1 12-8 last Saturday Uncork his throws ThIS will be Vocationals last

North Attleboro High chalked game up I1s fourth victory by wallop_Durfee concluded league play Infg New Bedford Vocational hI ~and style last week by 32-0 in Its laSt outing The crushmg Coyle of Taunton 28-8middot Whaling City Artisans record The victory gives Durfee a 4-3 now is 2-5 Four North players mark and fourth place In the shared the scoring honors for league This is the first time in thePostmen years that Durfee has finished

North Easton Oliver Ames below second place It was the squeezed out a 7-6 win over eighth consecutive loss for Coyle Foxboro on its own field last which has not won a game since Monday when it played Its last Thanksgiving Day when it Saturday-rained-out contest bested Taunton High The holi-

The Norton High Jayvess day tussle is the only one left who next year join the Clover for the WarrIOrs who have not Leaf Conference varsity play lost a Turkey Day engagement chalked up their sixth win in in 10 years eight starts with 21-0 win over Stang High of Dartrpouth Medway on Monday last evened its league mark at 3-3

Bulldop Top Trl-County by downing Taunton last Satur-Old Rochester can clinch the day Three of the leagues best

Tri-County Championship this backs showed their best stuff in Saturday with a win over Dart- that encounter Tauntons Bruce mouth in its season finale Frank ~ornell rolled over the Stang Almeidas Bulldogs presently line for continuous gains and 7-0 are one full game ahead of huf-back ~ke Del Solio showed second place Falmouth his versatility by playing quar-

A win will give the~gional terback Stangs Joe Bartek combine its first undefeated sea- amassed over 170 yards in rushshyson and first Tri-County cham- ing and two TDs The loss put pionship How much of a road Taunton into seventh place with block Dartmouth will present is a 1-4-1 mark Stang faces Feeshyquestionable The Indians have han in its last effort fallen from their lofty perch of In small school action Nanshy1964 This season they have onl tucket and Marthas _Vineyard one win Dar t m 0 ut h was closed the season by playing to trounced by Falmouth 34-7 last a scoreless stalemate in the rain

weekend last week Lawrence Ronnerup Apponequet which lost it

All oth~r Tri-County teams eighth straight game (27-0 to ~ be idle this week-end Bar- Medfield) last week has only a nng an upset in the Dartmouth- game with Dighton-Rehoboth on Old Rochester encoupter the Thanksgiving Day remaining circuit standings are pretty well determined

Lawrence High is solidly enshy Iowa Students Give trenched in second place with a Blood for Vietnam1-1 mark Coach Paul McGuires Clippers proved last week that DUBUQUE (NC)-Operation they are a league power hanshy Blood Brother begun at Loras dling Dartmouth quite easily College here has signed up 750 Greg Anderson brought smooth blood donors as part of a proshysailing for the Clippers His gram of support for U S efforta speed and running acumen acshy in Vietnam counted for two TDs The lou The donors so far represent toppled Dartmouth to last place Loras Clark College and St

Bourne High is In ~rd place Pauls Seminary Epworth StushyThe Canalmen downed Dightonshy dents at the University of DushyRehoboth 18-6 last yeek and now buque and area seminaries will BPOrt a 5-2 league record Dighshy also be invited to give blood ton in losing closed out ita The blood along with contri shyleague schedule with a 4-4 mark butions of gifts and JIlOIiey colshyThe Falcons finished in fourth lected in Dubuque Operation place last season and their 500 We Care wl1l be forwarded to aftrage PYa tiaeIa fifiJl plaea Vietnam tblOUlA the DeleD_1I6L - ~

By Phil Perreira Twenty-one-year-old Art

Ferrance ef Fall River is seeing action on the gridiron after a bout with a knee injury which began more than a year ago

Art the son of Mr and Mrs Arthur M Ferrance of 22 Hunter Street iil the city of hills mills and pork pies pulled the tenshydons in his left knee the day beshyfore the 1964 Boston College football season got underway It w~ an especially tough break because he was the starting right defensive guard at that time

Built Up Lightweight It wasnt only a tough blow

for Art but for BC as well This passage from the Colleges Football Facts Book of that year bears this out Arts Springshydrill performance was one of the top surprises of the sessions -Art put in extra hours buildshying himself up all Winter and then made the extra weight pay off in the Spring

He had to build up his body because standing at just under six-foot and weighing only 203shypounds he is a light-weight playing football where 230shypound guards are a dime a dozen

Airplane and Miami With a bad knee and outshy

weighed bymiddot nearly everyone competing for his poSition the football scene for the future beshygan to look pretty gloomy inshydeed from Arthur Ferrances vantage point But there middotwas something that Art wanted to be in on He was not yet ready to be counted out of the running for this years traveling squad to make the trip down to the Orange Bowl to play the Hurri shycanes of Miami

Art had never been to Miami nor had he been on an airplane before and both of these firsts he made up his mind were going to come his way So still in bandages in the Fall of 64 he made up his mind that he was

going to make not only the team again but the traveling squad to insure himself a seat on that plane to Miami

A long Winter of visits to the doctor and exercise turned into Spring Spring-drill came and went and all considerinamp

Electricity Failure Brings Big Sale

NEW YORK (NC)-It hapshypened during the now historic Nov 9 electric power failure which blacked out this city and almost all the Northeast

Some employes were working hI an office of a nationwide stock brokerage firm when one enterprising worker got an idea A group visited a nearby Cathoshylic church plumped down bull large donation and walked back to the office with every one of the churchs candlis that wasnt lighted

RICHARDSON LINCOLNmiddot MERCURY-

LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD

-where Service bull bullbull offer of PrideM

ART FERRANCE

didnt go too badly at all for Art But it was with the arrival of Summer that Arts program to regain a spot with the Eagles really went into high gear

Work Work Work Art teamed with a friend he

played football with at Durfee High School and together they began to workout This program began In the evening after Art had worked all day as a laborer

He and his friend would jourshyney down to Horseneck Beach in Wesport and run through the lurf to build up Arts leg musshyclebullIt paieJ off Although Art still isnt running with the first string of ponies he is seeing quite a bit of action in this his senior year The long-awaitshyed pay-off came recently when he made the travlillng squad and that trip down to Miami

Never one to take the easy way out he showed this while Itill a student at Durfee Despite a pinched nerve in his neck he managed to co-captain the football team in his senior year play on the baseball team and graduate as one of the highest ranking members of his class

Good Student He won the Clover Club of

Fall Rivers award in 1961 for being Durfees outstanding stushy

dent-athlete He was a fullbae)shyduring his high school days am was good enough to earn All shyCounty and All-Diocesan honshyors at that position but th( coaches at BC made him into ~

laquoliard because they didnt thin)- he was quite fast enough ou~

of the box to play fullback there A member of St Marys Cashy

thedral parish Art is majorinr in Economics and hopes to at shytend graduate school in tha~

field if he can get a schplarship It shouldnt be too difficult for he is now a member of the Deans list

Art rerrance is certainly not the pest guard to ever play footshy

ball for Boston College but bt ranks with the best of them when is comes to overcoming 811 bull

injury and lack of size inmiddot order to make the team

SERVINGshy -I FINE ITALIAN FOOD j GONDOLA ~ESTAURANT and LOUNGE

on Lake Sabbatia j 1094 Bay Street

l TAUNTON VA 4-8754

MANUFACTURERS I~ATIONAL BANK BRISTOL COUNTY

THE AREAS MOST ACCOMMODATING BANI(

NORTH ATTLEBORO bull MANSFIELD ATTLEBORO ~ALLS

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans

Page 20: 11.18.65

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs Nov 18 1965

The Parish PCllrade

SACRED HEART OAK BLUFFS

New officers of the Womens Guild will be elected Monday Dec 13 A childrens Christmas party is planned for Tuesday Dec 21 and members of the cheer committee will send Christmas baskets to shut-ins

CORPUS CHRISTI SANDWICH

A requiem high Mass for deshyceased members of Corpus Christi-St Theresas Guild will be celebrated at 730 Saturday morning Nov 20 The following day will ~e Communion Sunday for guild members

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION NORTH EASTON

Parish members of the Chrisshytian Family Movement are aidshying in arrangements for saying Mass in the homes of invalids Couples gather Mass equipment and set it up in the homes reshyturning it to the church after Mass This assistance enables priests of the parish to say two Masses a week for shut-ins

ST KILIAN NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies Guild will sponsor a penny sale Saturday

NOTRE DAME F~LI RIVER

The Holy Name Society will hold a turkey whist Saturday Nov 20 Turkeys and other prizes will be awarded and proceeds will benefit the societys scholarshyship fund

SACRED HEART NORTH ATTLEBORO

A turkey whist will be sponshysored at 8 tonight in the parish hall under auspices of the Home and School association

The CYAO will leave the church grounds at 1 Sunday afternoon Nov 21 for a visit to St Josephs Academy Fall River

OUR LADY OF VICTORY CENTERVILLE

The annual Christmas bazaar of the Womens Guild will be held from 10 to 3 Saturday Dec 4 in the church hall Gifts handshymade toys chiidrens items fooqs Christmas decorations and white elephant articles will be featured and a snack bar will be in opeoation

ST JOAli OF ARC- ORLEANS New Womens Guild offiCers

are Mrs RObert Peno president Mrs Leo Miller vice-president Mrs Henri Ozon secretary Mrs Jane Keenan treasurer The unit will meet Wednesday Dec 1 at the home of Mrs Peno Members will bring toys to be donated to an orphanage

Approve Expansion Of Medical Center

ST LOUIS (NC)-The City Plan Commissions zoning comshymittee here has approved erecshytion of a $28 million medical reshysearch building and 225-car parking lot adjacent to the St Louis University medical school

The project is part of the 10shyyear $34625000 program for new buildings and other facili shyties to be constructed on a 25shyacre tract

The action by the zoning group was considered approval in principle by the city commisshysion of the over-all expansion program in which the Cardinal Glennon Memorial for Children the Catholic Hospital Associashytion and the Bethesda General Hospital are cooperatingbull

ern hemisphere It was the cershyemony of tonsure for the first class of older men who forsook various professions in civil life to study for the priesthood in the Catholic Church

Tonsureit was explained is a rite in which the layman is made a cleric and is prepared for the GASreception of minor and major orders

As Cardinal Cushing cut the locks of hair from each candidate he explained that it is a symbol of the Saviour to whom he must HEATcon~ecrate his life

The candidates whose ages average 41 years and the oldest of whom is 59 will receive minor orders next SprIng the lower ranks of the clergy through which all candidates for the UmiddotNCONDITlONALLY priesthood must pass

MsgrGeorge J Schlichte seminary rector said the first experiment of its kind in Amer~ ica has been highly successful GUARANTEED adding that men of mature years are an asset IN THE FALL RIVER AREA

Already Trained

You cant train older men They are already trained All you have to do is teach them PLUS theology They have already surshyvived many a battle in the real world They could have resisted 10 YEAR FREEGAS BOILERS their vocations but they didnt bull They are well-tested and still MAINTENANCE AND SERVICEGAS fURNACES bull

The Gas Company will continue its usual freeMail Call Founders GAS CONVERSION service policy and in addition will replace anyNEW YORK (NC)-Dr and defective parts on the equipment for a periodBURNERSMrs Richard Ornsteen of Gladshy

wynne Pa who originated of 10 years from the date of purchase bullbullbull Mail Call Vietnam were aU at no cost guests of honor at the annual I Communion breakfast of the Catholic War Veterans of New York The Ornsteens planned and publicized Mail Call Vietshynam to help provide thousands IFALL RIVER GAS Companr1 Iof servicemen in Vietnam with cards and letters at Christmas

HOLY FATHER GREETS NCCW OFFICIALS Pope Paul VI extended his blessing to Mrs Marcus Kilch right president and Miss Margaret Mealey executive director when the two officers of the National Council of Catholic Women visited the Vatican NC Photo

Cardinal Cushing Conducts Tonsure Rite Delayed Vocations Students Become Clerics

WESTON (NC) - Thirty-one want to be priests the monsi followed before entering study men slowly walked up to Richshy gnor said for the priesthood were varied ard Cardinal Cushing of Boston The rector said the progress in ~hey included a former public and each had five locks of the seminary which the middotlate school superintendent linotype hair cut from his head in the Pope John asked Cardinal Cush- operator a former airlines exshyform of a cross ing to establish patterned after ecutive several salesmen a

The men are members of the one in Rome is being closely newspaper editor college professhyfirst class f the Pope John Semshy watched by the Sacred Congre- sors store manager accountants inary for Delayed Vocations gation of Seminaries in Rome electronics experts and others of founded by the cardinal as the Occupations which the men assorted professions only one of its kind in the west-

Pontiff -Insists

All Translations Be Observed

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul has declared that when liturgical texts are translated into vernacular languages with the approval of local and Roman Church authorshyities they have the force of Church law

Speaking to 400 participants of a congress of translators of liturgical books the Pope said liturgical texts approved by competent authority and conshyfirmed by the Holy See must be religiously preserved

No one therefore may alter shorten lengthen or omit them according to his own judgeshyment he said

Although the Church shows herself to be a benign and libshyeral mother in liturgical matters nevertheless whatever is legitimately established already has the force of ecclesiastical law

Pope Paul spoke of the need for s moo t h understandable translation which retain a noshybility and which follow the ori shyginal texts He said that in countries where there is only one language there should be only one official translation and he added that all work in this field should be done in collaboration with the hierarchy

Among the Popes listeners were 10 cardinals including ioshyseph Cardinal Ritter of St Loui and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro of Bologna who is the head of the post-conciliar liturgical commission

Consecration Date BAY SAINT LOUIS (NC)shy

A u x iIi a r y Bishop-designate Harold R Perry SVD of New Orleans will be consecrated Jan Gin New Orleans