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Fr. Thomas Walsh Is New Attleboro Pastor Fr. Daniel Shalloo to Head Fall River Parish REV. DANIE'L F. SHALLOO Catholic College Educators Meet Next Tuesday WASHINGTON (NC) The president of Notre Dame and a Harvard University pvofessor will address Cath. olic college and university edu- cators at the four-day conven- tion of the National Catholic Educational Association in At- lantic City beginning next Tues- day. Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., of Notre Dame, will speak to pqe Seventeea Clearing HouSe, an association of organizations with an interest i<n civil liberties. . Mr. Clancy said the question of Church-State relations was "in no sense settled" during last fall's presidentl-al campaign. In- stead, he said, the status of the discussion is "remarkably fluid." On religious lines, he said, American society is div,ided into four major groups: Catholic, Protestant, Jewish and secular humanist: Despite their surface "amity," he said, each of these groups retains a "deep distrust of the others' intentions." . Turn te Page Seven 'l'nl'n to Page Twelvo REV. THOMAS F. WAlLSH Religious Leaders Predict Era of Conflicts, Efforts WASHINGTON (NC) - A Catholic, a Protestant and a Jewish spokesman predicted the next decade .will see new conflicts and new efforts at understanding among religious groups in America. This will be the situation as churches seek to adjust to the chang- ing conditions of American society, they agreed. Making this prediction were William Clancy, editor of ·Worldwide, magazine of the Church Peace Union; Rabbi Arthur Gilbert, director of interreligious coop- eration for the B'nai B'rith Anti- Defamation League; and Wayne H. Cowan, managing editor of the magazine Christianity and Crisis. 'They in a session on "Church and State Today and in the New Decade," held during tne 13th annual conference of the National Civil Liberties Educator Urges Study of Latin In High School 'COLUMBUS (NC)-Study of Latin in high 'school is "a preparation. second to none for those who hope to study modern languages," according to Father Lawrence R. Strittmatter, who teaches Latin at Elder High School, Cincinnati. The fact that "a vast network of modern languages take their origin from Latin," Father Stritt- Bishop Connolly Also Announces Transfer of Two Assistants. Four Priests Start In New Dutie$ Next Week The Most Reverend Bishop t 0 da yannounced clergy appointments involving the transfer . of a pastor, the appointing of an administrator, and the transfer of two assist- ants. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor of St. Louis Ohurch, Fall River, becomes pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro, succeeding the late Rt. Rev. John J. Shay who died on J'an. 28. Rev. Daniel F. 8ha1100, assist- ant at St. Joseph's Church, Fall River, for 'the last 19 years and General Manager of The Anchor, becomes administrator of St. Louis Church. Rev. James W. Clark, assist- ant at St. Patrick's Church War e ham, succeeds Fathe; Shalloo as assista,nt at St. Joseph's, and Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Fall River, goes to' St. Pa.trick's Church, Wareham, as asSIstant. Appointments of Father Wa19h and Father Shalloo are effective next Wednesday. Appointments of Father Clark and Father Delano are effective next Thurs_ day. FatMr Walsh Father Walsh, son of the late James W. Walsh and Catherine (McDonald) Walsh, was born in Fall River Jan. 25, 1900. After receiving his early education in Fall River sohools, he graduated from Holy Cross College iJn 1923. He studied theology at St. Bernard's Seminary, Rocheste.., and was ordai'ned to the priest- hood 'in St. Mary's Cathedral Fall River, on May 26, 1927, b; the late Bishop Feehan. Father Walsh served as assist- ant at St. Mary's Church New Bedford, Immaculate' tion and St. Mary's parishes in Ta'unton, and Holy Name Chlirch, Fall River. . On Oct. 9, 1951, he became pastor of St. Dominic's Church, Swansea where he served three years. In October of 1954 he was transferred as pastor to St. Joseph's Church, North Dighton, where he remained two years, going to St. Louis Church, Fall River, on Feb. 14, 1956. Father Walsh is Diocesan Director of the Council of qath- oUe Women. Turn to Page Eighieen quently supported the constitu- tionality of loans to private schools, wrote in the New York Herald Tribune, which distrib- utes his articles to other news- papers. He pointed to three "fallacies" 00 detects in opposition to the Bishops' appeal for loans for school construction. He said it is wrong M charge that inclusion of loans in the general Federal aid bHl would jeopardize the entire law in the event of a court suit challenging the loans . "The fact ·is," he wrote, "that Congress for many years has in- serted in various laws a section, usually at the end, which says that if any provision is held un- constitutional by the courts, this does not affect the validity of the other provisions." < School Loan He also said it is a fallacy to say loans are not given schools today because they are unconstitutional. He pointed to a $400,000 construction loan to Sacred Heart College, Cullman, Ala. The third fallacy, he said, that there is a constitutional dif- ference between government aid to schools on the level and aid to the colleges themselves because .pre-college Tum to Page ElghteeD © 1961 The. Anchor PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year Socond Class Mail Privilegol Authorized at Fall River, Mau. Vee. 5, No. ] 3J Local Firm Wins Church Contract In 'New Bedford The Chancery Office of the Diocl:1se announced' today that the Paul G. Cleary and eompany of New Bedford Ims been awarded the contract the construction of a new e'hurch for St. Hedwig's Parish ilia that city. Rev. Emil Tokarz, O.F.M. eonv., pastor of the Ohurch, has announced that plans call for work on the new church to begin immediately. The new structure will be built on Division Street, on the \ Turn to Page Eighteen Columnists Defend Federal School Aid An Anchor of ihe Soul, Sura and li'irm-ST. PAm; - The ANCHOR NEW YORK (NC) - Hearst newspapers and colum- fttsts David Lawrence and George Sokolosky have defended dle appeal by Catholic Bishops for inclusion of private IFhools in Federal aid to education. The New York Journal :American, in an editorial Which appeared in other Hearst newspapers, said it thinks the Bishops are justi- fied in seeking governmental for private and parochial cehools. The paper recommended that iegislation to this effect be pre- Qented to Congress. It supported Ilntroduction of a bill separate Irom the administration's me as- u.e for $2,3 billion in grants to DUblic grade and high schools. Mr. Lawrence, whose nation- syndicated column has fre- ( I , / , \ ' . \ \ ------' 'f;i"-:;>g. '\f·' t' ' SOLEMN IHIOL'J[ WEIE:IT{ SEIRVlICES: Left, Bishop Connolly carries messed Sacrament from main altar of Cathedral on Holy Thursday to dtar of the repository. Center., faithful approach to kiss crucifix"during Good Friday Liturgy. Right, Bishop at Easter Vigil service immerses lighted Paschal Candle, symbol of the Risen Christ, into container (}f baptismal water through which union with the Risen Christ is effected.

03.30.61

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Good Friday Liturgy. Right, Bishop at Easter Vigil service immerses lighted Paschal Candle, symbol of the Risen Christ, into container (}f baptismalwaterthroughwhichunionwiththeRisenChristiseffected. dle appeal by Catholic Bishops for inclusion of private Sacred Heart College, Cullman, Ala. The third fallacy, he said, ~ thatthereisaconstitutionaldif- ferencebetweengovernmentaid to schools on the pre~college' level and aid to the colleges themselves because.pre-college Tum to Page ElghteeD . \

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Page 1: 03.30.61

Fr. Thomas Walsh Is New Attleboro PastorFr. Daniel Shalloo to Head Fall River Parish

REV. DANIE'L F. SHALLOO

Catholic CollegeEducators MeetNext Tuesday

WASHINGTON (NC)The president of Notre Dameand a Harvard Universitypvofessor will address Cath.olic college and university edu­cators at the four-day conven­tion of the National CatholicEducational Association in At­lantic City beginning next Tues­day.

Father Theodore M. Hesburgh,C.S.C., of Notre Dame, will speak

~urll to pqe Seventeea

Clearing HouSe, an associationof organizations with an interesti<n civil liberties. .

Mr. Clancy said the questionof Church-State relations was"in no sense settled" during lastfall's presidentl-al campaign. In­stead, he said, the status of thediscussion is "remarkably fluid."

On religious lines, he said,American society is div,ided intofour major groups: Catholic,Protestant, Jewish and secularhumanist: Despite their surface"amity," he said, each of thesegroups retains a "deep distrustof the others' intentions."

. Turn te Page Seven

'l'nl'n to Page Twelvo

REV. THOMAS F. WAlLSH

Religious Leaders PredictEra of Conflicts, Efforts

WASHINGTON (NC) - A Catholic, a Protestant anda Jewish spokesman predicted the next decade .will see newconflicts and new efforts at understanding among religiousgroups in America. This will be the situation as churchesseek to adjust to the chang­ing conditions of Americansociety, they agreed. Makingthis prediction were WilliamClancy, editor of ·Worldwide,magazine of the Church PeaceUnion; Rabbi Arthur Gilbert,director of interreligious coop­eration for the B'nai B'rith Anti­Defamation League; and WayneH. Cowan, managing editor ofthe magazine Christianity andCrisis.

'They participat~ in a sessionon "Church and State Today andin the New Decade," held duringtne 13th annual conference ofthe National Civil Liberties

Educator UrgesStudy of LatinIn High School'COLUMBUS (NC)-Study

of Latin in high 'school is "apreparation. second to nonefor those who hope to studymodern languages," according toFather Lawrence R. Strittmatter,who teaches Latin at Elder HighSchool, Cincinnati.

The fact that "a vast networkof modern languages take theirorigin from Latin," Father Stritt-

Bishop Connolly Also AnnouncesTransfer of Two Assistants.

Four Priests StartIn New Dutie$Next Week

The Most Reverend Bishopt 0 d a yannounced clergyappointments involving thetransfer . of a pastor, theappointing of an administrator,and the transfer of two assist­ants.

Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastorof St. Louis Ohurch, Fall River,becomes pastor of St. John theEvangelist Church, Attleboro,succeeding the late Rt. Rev.John J. Shay who died onJ'an. 28.

Rev. Daniel F. 8ha1100, assist­ant at St. Joseph's Church, FallRiver, for 'the last 19 years andGeneral Manager of The Anchor,becomes administrator of St.Louis Church.

Rev. James W. Clark, assist­ant at St. Patrick's ChurchWar e ham, succeeds Fathe;Shalloo as assista,nt at St.Joseph's, and Rev. Kenneth J.Delano, assistant at St. Patrick'sChurch, Fall River, goes to'St. Pa.trick's Church, Wareham,as asSIstant.

Appointments of Father Wa19hand Father Shalloo are effectivenext Wednesday. Appointmentsof Father Clark and FatherDelano are effective next Thurs_day.

FatMr WalshFather Walsh, son of the late

James W. Walsh and Catherine(McDonald) Walsh, was born inFall River Jan. 25, 1900. Afterreceiving his early education inFall River sohools, he graduatedfrom Holy Cross College iJn 1923.He studied theology at St.Bernard's Seminary, Rocheste..,and was ordai'ned to the priest­hood 'in St. Mary's CathedralFall River, on May 26, 1927, b;the late Bishop Feehan.

Father Walsh served as assist­ant at St. Mary's Church NewBedford, Immaculate' C~ncep­tion and St. Mary's parishes inTa'unton, and Holy NameChlirch, Fall River. .

On Oct. 9, 1951, he becamepastor of St. Dominic's Church,Swansea where he served threeyears. In October of 1954 he wastransferred as pastor to St.Joseph's Church, North Dighton,where he remained two years,going to St. Louis Church, FallRiver, on Feb. 14, 1956.

Father Walsh is DiocesanDirector of the Council of qath­oUe Women.

Turn to Page Eighieen

quently supported the constitu­tionality of loans to privateschools, wrote in the New YorkHerald Tribune, which distrib­utes his articles to other news­papers.

He pointed to three "fallacies"00 detects in opposition to theBishops' appeal for loans forschool construction.

He said it is wrong M chargethat inclusion of loans in thegeneral Federal aid bHl wouldjeopardize the entire law in theevent of a court suit challengingthe loans.

"The fact ·is," he wrote, "thatCongress for many years has in­serted in various laws a section,usually at the end, which saysthat if any provision is held un­constitutional by the courts, thisdoes not affect the validity ofthe other provisions." <

School LoanHe also said it is a fallacy to

say loans are not given chur~h

schools today because they areunconstitutional. He pointed toa $400,000 construction loan toSacred Heart College, Cullman,Ala.

The third fallacy, he said, ~that there is a constitutional dif­ference between government aidto schools on the pre~college'

level and aid to the collegesthemselves because .pre-college

Tum to Page ElghteeD

© 1961 The. Anchor PRICE lOe$4.00 per Year

Socond Class Mail Privilegol Authorized at Fall River, Mau.

Vee. 5, No. ] 3J

Local Firm WinsChurch ContractIn 'New Bedford

The Chancery Office of theDiocl:1se announced' todaythat the Paul G. Cleary andeompany of New BedfordIms been awarded the contract~ the construction of a newe'hurch for St. Hedwig's Parishilia that city.

Rev. Emil Tokarz, O.F.M.eonv., pastor of the Ohurch, hasannounced that plans call forwork on the new church tobegin immediately.

The new structure will bebuilt on Division Street, on the\ Turn to Page Eighteen

Columnists DefendFederal School Aid

An Anchor of ihe Soul, Sura and li'irm-ST. PAm;

-

TheANCHOR

NEW YORK (NC) - Hearst newspapers and colum­fttsts David Lawrence and George Sokolosky have defendeddle appeal by Catholic Bishops for inclusion of privateIFhools in Federal aid to education. The New York Journal:American, in an editorialWhich appeared in otherHearst newspapers, said itthinks the Bishops are justi­fied in seeking governmental~ for private and parochialcehools.

The paper recommended thatiegislation to this effect be pre­Qented to Congress. It supportedIlntroduction of a bill separateIrom the administration's meas­u.e for $2,3 billion in grants toDUblic grade and high schools.

Mr. Lawrence, whose nation­• syndicated column has fre-

(

I,

/

, \ '. \\------'

'f;i"-:;>g. '\f·'

t' '

SOLEMN IHIOL'J[ WEIE:IT{ SEIRVlICES: Left, Bishop Connolly carriesmessed Sacrament from main altar of Cathedral on Holy Thursday todtar of the repository. Center., faithful approach to kiss crucifix"during

Good Friday Liturgy. Right, Bishop at Easter Vigil service immerseslighted Paschal Candle, symbol of the Risen Christ, into container (}fbaptismal water through which union with the Risen Christ is effected.

Page 2: 03.30.61

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TOUHEY'SPH'ARMACY:

WilEN SICKNESSSTRiKE$ITS IMPORTAI'!IT TO SEE., '.

. 'tOUR. OOCTOI\. ANO wHi..tiE'S GIVEN 1'OU APRESCRIPTION. ITS'IMPORTANT 10 ,6£TIf fILLED AT.

202 ROCK STREET

FALL 'RIVER, MASS.

(oronto Prelate:P,redicts. SupportFor Schools " <:>

WINNIPEG (NC) ~::The.day is not far off whentliosewho are against governmentaid to private' schOOls', ::wiHlsupport it, Coadjutor Archbillhop.Philip F. Pocock of ToroMcsaid here.' '1

The prelate, who had serve4as Archbishop of Winnipeg fOl'nearly 10 years, said in a fare­well address that winning stateaid for parochial schools in Man-.itoba "will not be a political vic­tory."

It will come about through thevirtues of tolerance and 10ve,'beItold some 4,000 people at tbefarewell gathering.

"Tolerance," A l' ebb i sh o·pPocock continued, "means iH90lagreeing with others but defend­ing their right to. hold these'· COD­victions ... and' hi- Manitobi;\!have found true tolerance am~Protestants and Jews." .

"I believe that. it is so det!p~rooted that the day is not far, offwhen those who cUffeI' will 'see'fit to support the governmentt.'give aid to our schools."

The Archbishop said, how.evECt,that tolerance is "not enouga.love is needed.'" ..'

"This is the virtue that makellus wish everybody well and beprepared to make sacrifices I~others," he added. "This •friendship - and .Manitoba. :m..this spirit of friendliness." :

A royal- commission recoJlPomended in Nove~be~,.1959;,thatthere .be aid to private schools,but the provincial ·legislaturehas taken no .action on thematter. ,: I,

iv

I I.:

,~, '" ...• '.'"..- :"t":

NORTH FRONT· STREETNEW·, BEDFORDwYm'~ 2-5534

'. :New' Bedford & Acu§hn~tJ \ , "'.

',,-,: ·..·~'··:·;:C~pelt"$~ive Banks'. ". i _~ .; , " "

~ ~ 5 ,WOU.BAM $T.··

) DEBROSSE;oii) ...co.

Heatinq Oilsand Bumers

365

N~m~ M<.eIr~Y S;$iersT@ Att®Ui](dPG[j'~ey' ':

Sisters of Mercy from the FaD..River Diocese who will attendthe Mercy Educational Confer­ence to be held' next week i:raAtlantic City' in conjunctiODwith the National CatholicEdu­cationa1 Association Conventi01linclude Sister Miriam and Si~Mary Felicita, Diocesan SupeJP­visors; Sister Maureen, ,principai

C f - G- I of Nazareth HaU; Sister Ma~amp Ire" Ir $' Carolyn, principal of St.·MaJ:Y'w

Plan for W .. k"", .' €athedral School; ·Sister···'-MalTee ... , .Cecile, principal of St. Patrick"The. Bluebirds· ,and .. "Campfire '. Scboo1, Fall.. River;' and Sister"M.

Girls of both Sacred Heart and Merici, principal of ,St~ !.: Jo_St. lVIary's., Cathedral.:parishes Baptist S~~o~l, N~ :J3~d~OI"d.of Fall Riye,r,will,h,old Ii ~Qsier - . ,.: ..exhibit at the Catholic"Co'ri\m~il-.... Swan's~a' K:'of .C: ..ity Center .on, Franklin, );~r~et, .:. .Sw~sea .Kniiiitii:Q(~~I~_next Wednesday ev.~n.in,~..,f,f.om .", Will hold tli~ir ,l;u~nu~l m~~~cd6:30 to 9 P.~, E;very poster, sub- '.~ revue TUE1sday,.'Api'iI.~8'1~.tQ.mitted by 'the girlS will b'e indi- ,Leite will direct.~; . , : - -, .vidually judged and wi~hersw'ilI.. ', ..... t, :" " ,:c;be' chosen f~qm both group.s....rheexhibit' IS open to the pul:>1ic ~ndrefreshments will he served.· ..

The Bluebirds of the' 'Cathe­dral Parish. 'willha¥e 'their '~irstcook-out on Thursday' from 10AM. to '5 P.M. Cars will trans­port them to Sawdy' Pond' where'the girls 'will' go on a hike andscout around for the differentsigns of Spring. ., "...".

Leaders 'and parents' 'oi.' the'Bluebirds' will serve as""'chap-,'

. erons and will assist thegiris in .the Cooking. . ' .' ."",.1

WY 7-9336Watch for Signs

While out for 3 Drive (Stop at this Delightful Spot<><><><X><X><>O<><>O<:>

FIR~T' MASS: Rev. Leo T. Sullivan. pastor,'greetsattendants at first Mass at new St. Ann's parish, Ray,nham.Left to right Mrs. Doris Connors, Father Sullivan, Mr. andMrs. Joseph Scanlon and son Michael.

.;

. Mass Ordo

. ,

OFFICIAL.

Diocese of Fall River

~~ /62_:;:5--':'BishoP of Fall River '. . . , .

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION '.,

Clergy Transfers

Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, pastor of st. Louis Church,Fall River, to become pastor Of St. John the' EvangelistChurch, .Attleboro.

Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, assista~t at. St. Joseph's Church,Fall River, to become. administrator of St. Louis' Church,Fall River.

Appobitments effective, Wednesday, Ap.!il 5.

ltev. JamesW. C1a~k, ·.assistant at St. Patrick's Church,Wa:eham, toas~istant at.St. Joseph's Church, Fall River.

, ,

.' Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, assistant at St. Patrick's ChurchFall'River, to assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Wareham. '.-

Appointm'ents eff,ective T:?ursday, April 6~

Apr. 2-8t;·. Boniface,.:' NewBedford. ' .

St. Peter, Dighton:.

APR. 1Rev. George A. Lewin, 1958,

Pastor, St. Mary, Hebronville.

THE ANCHORSecond-class mail privileges authorized

ct Fall: River. Mass.-. PUblished'· e,veryThursday at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall'River. Mas•.• by the Catholic Pre•• of. theDiocese of Fall River. Sub.criptlOIl pri:QS'ma~postpaid U.OO per ,yeu.&.·· ,.

Legion of Decenc;y"'l·n.e ~"'HOWU!g .(HIHS· .... .a..•" oe)

added to the lists iIi their re­spective classifications:

Unobjectionable for general.patronage: All Hands on .lJeck. .

Unobjectionable for adultsand adolescents: Posse from Hell.

Unobjectionable for adults:Fate of a Man (this film is partof cultural exchange programbetween the U.S.S.R. and theu . .,.J.

Objectionable, in, part for all:Love and the Frenchwoman.(some epI5'ldes make light of thesacredness of se.. and create con­fusion with regard to moral'values); Portrait of a Mobster(low moral tone).

Pope Says Beatification ProcessOf'Mother Seton to Move Q,uickly' \ St_ Michael's ~rofessor 'Finds

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope elude in his papal audience de-John said that the beatification scendants of the Filicchi family, Two Kirrnds@fSaponCa,m.pus."",.process for Mother Elizabeth which 'had befriended MotherSeton is now ~'going to move. Seton when her husband died in WINOOSKI PAR~ (NC) -No atory to drilling maple ·trees Oftalon'g quickly.':' . , northern Italy in 1803. Both Mr. one knows better than Father St. Michael's College campus and

'The Pope made the remark and Mrs, ~eton were Episcopal-' John A. Lanoue, S,S.E" when the boiling the sap down' to··syhip;.. during a private audience he ians at the time. . .' sap is runn~ng in" Vermont-un- Father Lanoue was about to

granted Father Francis Lyle less now it's another kind of start drilling when a' freshmanKennedy, who was ordained a During the audience, Pope "sap.~' student· offered to help, 'envi-

.John expressed great interest in sI'onI'ng a sugary reward Fatherpriest on March 18 following a the pr.ogress t,oward declaring The' Edmundite priest, like Lanoue showed the fro' h' howcareer which included law prac- Mother Seton "blessed." The hundreds of other Vermonters, th d 'lls k' d' •. tS'b ttice in New York and service as decided it was that time of year. e 1'1 wor e , wen a ou

Pontiff, who declared the U. S. an th ha'government attorney in Wash- So he got out his drills prepar- 0 er core. ,ington. foundress of the Sisters of .When. the priest returned, he

Charity "venerable" on Decem- fou d the fresh 'th h dFather Kennedy, 55, has long CC' ((;' 0 "" A n man WI .a an -been a devotee of Mother Seton, bel' 18, 1959, said that "proof' of ~@U'I t:1}D ITIlgs [M'U@$5 ful of blisters but no sap. Father

sanctity is a long process, 'but Lan e l' ed th"tu t'and obtained permission to in- f ~ R- ou s Z up, e. s~ a lon,now the case is going to move '@r Il"'@'thr~er took over the, drilling himselfalong quickly." and grumbled, "the sap," 'Yhen

. .. . Rev. Maurice C. Duchalne, aIf beatified and canonized, priest of the .Fall River Diocese the fresmman was out of earshot.

Mother Seton would be' the first It seems the freshman hadnative citizen of, the United studying for the. Sulpician tackled the biggest tree on the

. Eathers in Louvain, Belgium, ."States so honored. campus--a.n elm.,celebrated· a Solenm FuneralMass .; Tuesday. morning in St.

. ,Theresa's pliurcp" New Bedford,·FRIDAi;-~~Friday.i' Cbss. for his father,'the,late Joseph P •.

Black, BAd ' Violet. ,Solemn Ducha~ne,prominent New. Bed-.LiturgicaiService:,tessons~and ford business man;,whcidied last,PasSi~m, 1:!0Ie~n,Petitipn~,'and, Frtday evem'ing; .'. , ,.' ..Collects, Adoration of the A~si~ti~ Father Duch~ine inCross; CommunIon. - the 'Mass' were Rev. Wiliam E.

SATURDAY-Holy Saturday. I Collard as deacon, Rev. ClementClass. Violet and White. Mass Killgoar",f:iS.CC., as subdeacon,Proper; The Blessing of the . and -R~v:-"Clement F. Dufour asNew Fire and the Paschal master'~Of ~ereffit5iiies. Most Rev.Candle; Lessons; Litany with J~~f~s.·J .., ,Gerratd}'. D.D., V.G.,B~essin~. ~f th~ ,Fo~t,;arid' Re- L-\uxiliaiy~ishopb.Ohe Diocese,'newlV of Baptismal Promises. assi~te~:~ft~i: Mils~,~along withMass: Gloria; no Creed; Pref- 'a 'large gro~~' of p~i~s.

~i~~o~~:~~:.ntesand Hanc:New . Brotherhood

SUNDAY-Easter Sunday, the .Receive'sTwoResurrection of Our Lord Jesus . :. ,Christ, the Solemnity of Sol-- .' .The ceremony of .f~st proles­emnities. I ·Class. White. Mass .:1Iioo 'in. the' Socie.ty. of theProper; Gloria; Sequence; Brothers of Our Lady of Provi­Creed;' Preface, Communi_d.~nce.was held for' the ,first timecantes and Hanc igitur of .'.last·week when'.two ~Providence

· Easter., (!iI.S9 ,e~c~ day during .c,~9vices took: tim:l.po~~ry vows ofthe Octave). 'p.overty, chlistity:8Q.a;6bedience.

.. .;;~~ey are Bi-oth~i,M< Anthon,.MONDAY"':":':Eastei' M6rtday. land Brother M. Williain.· qass, .whi~.. ~~S!l", :proper; c.:.:;i' (: ,.

Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref':' :},-·.'Fhecommunit)".;was foundedace, etc. of Easter. . by I Most.Reverend;.~Russell J

TUESDAY-Easter Tuesday. I M~Vinney, Bishop;.ol\providence·Class. White. Mass Proper; in .i959. The ~e.~fy professedGloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref- ~rothers will be trained in theace, etc. of Easter. .apoiitolate of cateche'tical work

and will also do manual labor.WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednes- according to theif'aimi~ies.

day. I €lass. White. Mass Prop-· er; Gloria;'. Sequence; Creed; They will 'be housed in the·Preface, etC.-:of'Easter. present novitiate"o{ the com-THU~SDAY":':'E~ster'·Thursday. munity, and· the novitiate will be

I Class. White. Mass Proper' relocated in another house onApr. ~t. Francis Xavier, Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref~ ~e tP:-?~nds of the institution on

Acushnet.-- '. ,ace,.etc..of Easter. .arwlc Neck Avenue, War-. . .... ~ "" -~r ....";. ~ .. '~.: ~ ~. ;': ... 1-"jI' • ~... WIck.

St. Joseph; New. Bedf~J'd:,: 'y ., ' '11'I' m . A .Ji ' . - '.St. James;.'Tlijillton. '. -' •.~. ,'::' ,'@U~9 .,\(',e@tQ),.~, ~QOli"f( ;~.~~.<!l._-<>-:e;.~o<.~><e>-e><:X;;~0><::>-:

....:-. " "'. ·:,~.kl 'I ..,~ I!>I.<".JJ.' .',":-.' ' ..:~:, ,'.' ;' "A"FAMllY TLtIEATApr. 16--St. Paul;'- TaUJ;ltoh•.' '. I.' ,n..-.:~IW,~!f1l~(gl,li'«lJ,_ ".'J'.,,;<>;< "¢, ' .... , .....:.\:,

St. John the Baptist, Fall' Me~be~sof the Cath:<>licYouth IaA~;'laaQ CIHI~(~IENS'River. OrgamzatIon, Catholic YoungApr.23-0ur Lady of' the: ,A?ults a~d.CYOAdult A~xiliary RO$~ILAWN

Holy Rosa New Bed~ :. WIll. partICIpate in all-mght ad- ,ford. ry, oratIon at the Altar of Repose IF~RMS

Holy Ghost, Attleboro. at. St. Ma~y's. Cathedr~, ~all .145 Washington St., FairhavenRIver, begmnmg at mldmght Just off Route 6tonight and continuing until sixtomorrow morning.

st. Mary's parishi<>nel'S 'andmembers of any other parisheswishing to join in the annualvigil are invited to do. so.

NecrologyThe ANCHOR lists'the an­

niversary, dates of the deathsof priests who have served theFall : River Diocese since itsformation, in 1904 with. &heiD~i1tioDthat the' tuUhtul willgive'Uiem a'prayedul"remem-brance. '.'.' ".. ,'''~,','<'~' 3~")'

.' ~t...R.eY...v~ci!,ge <;-:. Mli\xwell,. 1953, Pastor, S8. Peter &-PaUl..

. Fall River.

(i

Page 3: 03.30.61

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...:1 ."_:....~'_~',START CCD IN TAUNTON DISTRICT: St. Joseph's parish, Taunton,

win provide guidance for Taunton district parishes in setting up the fullprogram of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. Also active inorganization will be members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women,fur whom CCD work is a major project. Left, Rev. Joseph L. Powers,Diocesan Director of CCD, with Mrs. Margaret Mulcahy, CCD chairman

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30, 1961

for St. Joseph's parish and Mrs. Timothy Neville, CCD Chairman for theDiocesan Council. Center, Miss Winifred Laughlin, DCCW Historian; Mrs.Rose Mullaney, DCCW President; Mrs. Aristides A~ Andrade, DiocesanSecond Vice President. Right, officers of St. Joseph's CCD unit: EdwardM. Trucchi, chairman of Fishers; James H. McCaffrey Jr., President;James M. Kelleher, Vice President. .

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and every day of the year.

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~'He Has RisenHe Is Not· Here'"

New Protestant Version of BiblePossible Basis for Acceptable Text

LONDON (NC) - The new of 14 years of rewriting fromtranslation of the Bible by Brit- the original Greek and Hebrew

. ish Protest~nt scholars could by a committee of top expertsform the, baSIS for a common text . ., .acceptable to Catholics, a prom- from all Bntam s major churchesinent Jesuit scholar suggested except the Roman Catholic..here. Father Corbishley, a Scripture

Father Thomas Corbishley, S.J.. scholar and an Oxford man whocalled for a Bible translation is flow superior of London's prin­for use by all Christians. He said cipal Jesuit community, Farmsuch a version as the newly pub- Street, commented on the newlished English translation of the translation in a Catholic .paper.New Testament, which is basedon the lastest research, wouldwith some modifications be mostuseful in promoting unity be­tween all Christians. ,

The New Testament sectionof "The New English Bible" wasput on sale in Great Britain andthe Uni~ed States on March 14.Published jointly by Oxford Uni­versity 'Press and CambridgeUniversityPres.s, it is the result,

B.M.C.Durfee Trust

Co.FALL 'RIVER

GRSBIIHGS

Judge StressesFathers' Duty

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Chil­dren from families where fatheris boss get into less trouble thanyo'ungsters whose fathers haveabdicated their duties, a juvenilecourt judge said here.

Judge Leo Blessing told a par­ents' institute that "in a Chris­tian home the father should bethe head."

"Too often the father has ab­dicated.authority to the mother,"Judge Blessing said.

Respect for GodThe judge said parents should

not infringe on the privacy ofchildren. The· child, has a rightto his own thoughts and parentswho expect their children to tellthem everything only encouragelies, he stated. .

i'Primarily there must be re­. sped for God from each child,';. Judge B!essing ""'l1mented.

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tacks against the Church. EarlierChurch-State relations had beenrelatively peaceful in Polandsince 1956.

In that year the anti-Stalinistcommunist leader, WladyslawGomulka, came to power, suc­ceeding a regime that had keptCardinal Wyszynski under arrestfor three years. An agreementwas reached between Church andState authorities which allowedreligious: instruction in publicl'chools and restol'ed someChurch rights.

Step up Propaganda~s part of the government's

new 'anti-Church campaign, reli­gious instruction has 'again beenbanned and atheist propaganda

'against the Church' has beenstepped up:

The renewed struggle reached·a peak on March 19 when Car­'dinal Wyszynski' denied claimsby Mr. Gomulka that the Churchwas. not being persecuted inPoland arid wariled the commun­ists . that they will lose their.fight to separate ~oles from theChurch. "I tell you Caesars," theCardinal warned Red leaders,"that you will bow to your Godand you will serve Him and noone else." ;'

The day before, Poland'scommunist chieftain had deniedthe Church is persecuted andclaimed that Church-State diffi­

.culties exist in Poland only be­cause Church leaders there arebeing fOl'ced by the Holy Seeto adopt' an antigovernmentstand.

'BOW TO GOD': Poland'sPrimate, Stefan CardinalWyszynski, has hurled de­fiance in the face of hisnation's communist "Ceas­&1'8" in a heighteningChurch-state struggle. liewarned Poland's Red leadersthat "you Caesars will bowtID your God and you willserve Him and llQ one else."·brc Photo. .

Poland's Bishops, PriestsRally to Sup~ortPrelate

BERLIN (NC) - Polish bishops and priests, evensome who until noW have served that nation's communistrulers, are rallying to the support of Poland's Primate asChurch-State tension increases. according to reports reach­ing here. The 300 to 400priests belonging to the pro­government Circle of PriestsWith Caritas have with­drawn fl'om the organization on

. orders of Stefan Cardinal Wys­Z)'nski, reports said.

A majority of the circl~s ex­eeutive board voted (March 22)to disband the group after theCardinal warned priests they hadto resign by April 1 or face sus­pension. The vote to disbandcame despi.te reports that thegovel'l1ment replied to the Car­dinal's warning with offers ofstepped-up aid to Caritas priests. ,

Rededication to MaryMeanwhile, reports stated, the

Polish bishops were called to .Warsaw' by the Cardinal. At ameeting there they decided to·eededicate Poland to Our LadyOIl the feast of Corpus Christi,tune 1, and drell: up a' pastoralletter on the intensified Church­S&ate struggle.

The struggle has been' ap­proachillg a, climaX sinoe lastSummer, when the governmentlaunched increasingly severe at-

Page 4: 03.30.61

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GIl'Qlde School Pl1Bpn~s Like Overtime Study, DETROl1 (NC)-The Harper studying for their more difficult,Community Center. a Polish Aid courses at school. Seven studentsS~ciety project ~at is affiliated took advantage of the oppov­WIth the Catholic Youth Organ- tunihation of the Detroit archdiocese. t:. , ,is convinced grade school pupils This year the cen~r s staftdon't mind overtime study anticipated a jump to 15 pupibl

, . for the classes, held twice a weekLast year the center started a ,after school hours. Fifty 00"

program giving' grade school and girls applied for the oYe»­pupils a chance to do some !!xtra time classes.

JeSMot New Chaplain,At Otos Air lSase

Chaplain (Colonel) John D.St. John, S.J. is new base chap­lain at Otis Air Force Base, ,Fal.:.mouth. He replaces the formerProtestant base chaplain andwill work with other Catholicchaplains already on duty at Otis.

Father St. John joined theAir Force in 1942' and serveduntil 1946 when he returned tocivilian life and was assigned tothe Jesuit Mission Band of NewEngland.. He has been back 'onactive duty since 1949, spendingmuch of his time at overseasbases.

His last assignment was atTruax Field, Wisc. He is a native'of Massachusetts. /

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State CCU[f1' GivesCatholic' ChildTo Minister

'PI'FfSBURGH (NC)'Courts must at times brushaside the general rule whichcalls for placing' "the eust­OV dof a child with persons ofihe same religious faith,'" thePennsylvania' Supreme Courtruled here.

Weighing the "paramount im­portance of the general welfareof the child" against a findingthat the youngster's parent "ha.!l

'failed both as a husband and afather," the state's high ,tribunalpermitted an infant, baptized aCatholic, to remain in the cus­tody of a Protestant minister.

Ilnnocent PawnThe innocent"pawn in the case

, is Michael Charles Bendrick, theinfant. The father, Charles Ben­drick, of Andreas, Pa., sued forcustody of the child after hisdivorced wife, Mrs. Lillian KiskBendrick of Hummelstown, Pa.,had, given the Catholic-baptizedinfant into the custody of theRev. Belvy C. White, an Assem­bly of God church, minister, andMrs. 'White of Dublin, Pa..

The father lost his' case inHuntington County OrphansCourt and appealed to the, statehigh court. Supreme Court Jus­tice Benjamin R. Jones noted inthe court's decision that theWhites, offer, the child stabilityand secl.lrity while Mr. Bendrick"has failed both as a husband andali ~'fath.er."

"Proper religious training ofa child is most important and afactor which must be given themost serious consideration. How­ev~r, such a factor, while of greatweight, is not controlling," th.ehigh court ruled.

"As a general rule courtsshould endeavor to place thecustody of a child with pereonsof the same religious faith, butbearing in mind the paramountimportance of the general wel­fare of the child, courts may, inthe. exercise of a sound discre­tion, place the child in the cus­tody of persons of a differentreligious faith. if the child's wel­fare so demands. A proper reli­gious atmosphere is an attributeof a good home and it contributessignificantly to the ultimatewelfare of a child."

water. "I've heard hardly any­thing about Lourdes, but I knowit's said that its water can makeinvalids well again." She appliedsome drops of it, asking, ''DearGod, help me." Her conditiondid not improve.

Devotion to MaryFive years later she happened BIRDIE TOLD ME: Co-

to look into a book about Our lumbian Father Edward A.Lady of Good Counsel. Until DePersio, a former editor 'ofthen she had never given much The Far East magazine a~dthought to Mary. But "from the d tmoment I picked the book up I, NCWC ~ews' Correspon en ,have 'felt a sense of devotion to " now aSSIgned to parIsh workthe 'Mother of Good Counsel.''' 'in Bonifacio on the island ofPrayer to the ~other .of G?d Mindanao, still, has an earnow became habItual WIth MISS f NC Ph toFulda. or news. o.

But despite all the discourage­ment heaped upon her, and theseemingly insuperable obstaclesin the way of such a trip, MissFulda and her mother se,t out forLourdes in early August 1950.

She brought her medical his­tory to the medical bureau, andthere she was examined. Her,hopeless condition was verified.The examining doctor gave herthis prescription,' "Daily" bathand Daily Sacramental Proces-,sion." '

Symptoms VanishShe was examined by 12 doc­

tors, who asked her to return in,a year, in order that they mightdetermine whether the recoverywas lasting: On her return toAustria she was examined ,at aclinic where her case was wellknown. The doctor certified thatall symptoms of the disease haqvanished. ' , ,.'For her return to Lourdes .in

1951, she organized the firstAustrian pilgrimage of the sickever to go there. This was a com­plex and difficult undertaking,but she carried it through withverve and remarkable success.

Again she was examined atLourdes (this time by 32 doc­tors), and again it was deter­mined that all traces of the dead­ly disease had disappeared. Butit was not until some years laterthat any official claim of a mir­aculous cure was made.

Miss Fulda learned to operatea knitting machine and has beenearning her living by makingsweaters and the like. She halnever had a recurrence of herillness.

The part of her book dealingwith that illness is heavy withclinical detail, and makes de­pressing reading. But from themoment of her turning to OurLady, it is vibran't with faith.Lourdes has seldom been madeso vivid as here.

Completely Cored, She went to the baths .and en~teted one without any emotion'save fear of the cold, slipperyplace: She felt better after that.But it was during the blessingwith the Holy Eucharist onAugust 12 that a radical changetook plac~. ' .

The same day, after havingsubsisted on drugs and the tinyamount of food which she couldtolerate but could not eat while

, sitting up, she ~eilt to the hoteldining room raveno\lsly hungryand ate the same meal servedto 'the ,guests in g~od health.

She also decided to stop takingdrugs 'which had' been a daily,almost hourly; necessity. She:considered herself cOmpletelycured.

Sister Doubles l8«llckOn Mercy Errand, LUANDA .(NC)-A missionary

Sister in the remote south of thisPortuguese African territory wa'sdriving back to'her mission sta­tion.at Cuchi after taking a sickwoman 600 miles to' the nearesthospital when she - learned of

, another woman .In need of ·hos­pital attention.

Back again drove Sister Chris_tina to the hospital with her newpatient, who was about to 'givebirth. She arrived there in timeto assist at the arrival of twins.

Closed DoorMADRID (NC)-Bishop Leo­

poldo Eijo y Garay of Madridrevealed in announcing a sem­inary fund appeal.' that 150would-be seminarians w ereturned away this year for lackof space and funds to supportthem. ' ,

,THE ANCHOR-Dioce~e of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30. 1961

l@M~@1®~ VOWD~~2f ~@f?ffr@y®©lIn DA~d ~ ~[}l)@~~ ~@ ~@@~@ccl1L7

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S.KennedyEdeltraud Fulda, author of 'And I Shall Be Healed'

(Simon and Schuster. $4.(50), is said to have been miracu­lously cured at Lourdes. The cure occurred in 1950. Four,years later, the Medical Substantiation Bureau at Lourdesdeclared that no medical ex­planation of the cure couldbe given, and the NationalCommittee in Paris whichreviews the findings of theLourdes bureau, affirmed thatthere was ne­natural, scien:..tific reason forthe cur e. In1955, CardinalInnitzer of Vi­enna, Miss Ful­da's place ofresidence issu~da . decree pro­nouncing MissF\lIda's sudden'healing "a mir­aculous Cll r e ,incapable of naturalexplana­tion." ,

These facts are presented inthe last few pages of Miss Fulda'srather lengthy book. Precedingthem is a quite full account of

--her life and especially of the 13years 6937-1950) during whichshe was desperately ill. What shewrites is based on diaries whichshe kept, as well as other records.Her intention, she says, is "toshow how God ,uses everyone ofus-just as we are-as tools tohelp carry out His will."

Professional DancerIn 1937, when she became ill,

she was' 21 years old. She, herwidowed mother, and two sisterslived 'in Austria,' although fre­quently visiting close relatives inYugoslavia

She and ber sister Ursula wereprofessionai dancers, appearingin vaudeville, revues, operettas.Her heart was in her career. ACatholic by birth, she apparentlygave her religion p.ttle thought,and she indicated that hermother was a sporadically prac­tising Catholic.

While on tour in Italy, she hadviolent attacks of stomach pain,and in Turin she was operatedon, having' a' stomach resectionbecause of an ulcer perforation.This, of cours~, was a majorop­e,ration. When she was ,strongenough', she returned to Vienna.

, .' Incurable DiseaseIt appeared that she would

make a quick and, complete de­covery. But then complicationsbegan. She suffered a kidney in­fection, 'arid another operationfollowed. ',In the subsequent years she

was in and out of hospitals and,clinics constantly, always grow­ing worse. In 1938, it was dis­covere~ that she had Addison'sdisease. She learned that therewas as yet no known cure forthe ailment.

As she reviews her illness, shesays nothing for a while aboutprayer. The first prayer shementions is a, taunting oneevoked by the sight of a crucifix:"Help me if you can. Make me'well, if you are really almightyand know that I must die, sinceall the skill of the doctors is use­less! You can't do it, because youdon't exist!"

Lourdes WaterHer diary shows that, even

though critically ill, she refusedopportunities to receive the HolyEucharist. When her sister an­nounced her intention of marry·ing a man who expected his wifeto divorce him, the author notedthe news without adverse com­ment.

She encountered a woman whosaid she was glad to suffer ,for,the sake: of others; Miss Fuldawas incensed by such a senti­ment. _

The first allusion to Lourdes isin a 1938 entry. Her. grandmothergave her a bottle of Lourdes

/

Page 5: 03.30.61

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, . I

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Parenthood is "the mostchallenging career, and themost demanding," a theolo..gian told several hundredmothers here.

It can be lived successfully"only if you understand that itis a vocation, a call by God,"Father John J. Wenzel, S,J., di­rector of Xavier University'sfamily life institute, asserted.

It is the responsibility of par­ents .to prepare their children"to be citizens of two worlds­the secular world and the heav­enly," the priest, who is head ofthe university's theology depart­ment, told the Federation ofCatholic Parent-Teacher Asso­ciations.

Some of the essential ingredi­ents in shaping a child's person­ality for the dual citizenship are"a sense of discipline, a sense.of obedience and a sense of con­trol," Father Wenzel said.

All these can be taught "mosteffectively" by the parents and"if these lessons are not learnedat home, it is an idle dream tosuppose they will be acquiredanywhere el"e," he said.

,A child must be taught re­sponsibility from his earliestdays, the theologian. said. Headded: "A person doesn't sud.'denly,:acquire a sense of respon..sibility at ages 18 or 20 01 24."

Some parents are unrealisticin teaching responsibility, .hecontinued. It must "be taughtgradually, over and over, takinginto a,ccount, t.he child's age .andcapacity, and the responsibilitymust be increased gradually asawareness and capacity in­crease," he detailed.

The final essential ingredient,Father Wenzel said, in shapinga child's personality is "a senseof God." He explained: "Thismeans more than just a knowl­edge about God. The child mustunderstand that God is a vitalreality in his life, the beginningand the end of all his actions."

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ST. DOMINIC,SWANSEA

The Women's Guild will holdjts annual dessert card party at8 Wednesday night, April 5 atKnights of Columbus Hall, OldWarren Road. Mrs. FlorenceHastings is chairman, aided byMrs. Florence Barboza, co-chair­man.

ST. PATRICK,WAREHAM'A 'Teen-age' conference for

high 'school studen ts was con­ducted by Rev. John P. DrisCollin the' parish h'all Sunday 'night.Re'i'~' John A. Chippendale, pas­tbr; introduced the guest speaker.A question and answer periodfollowed., A' negative and positive tea'm

. from Holy Family High School,New Bedford, conducted a de­bate on the UN for membersof the parish CYO. Miss AnitaBaptiste, president, was incharge of arrangements.

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NEW MEMBERS: Rev.. Wiiliarn J. McMahon assistant,left, and R~v. Walter J. Buckley, pastor, right, receIve 50new members into the Holy ~ame Society of St. Kilian'sChurch, New Bedford..

OUR LADY OF GRACE.NO. WESTPORT

The regular monthly meetingof the Women's Guild will beheld on Tuesday evening at 8o'clock in the parish hall. Fol­lowing the business meeting,. ,,'Parcel Post auction will be con-,du'cted to which the public is'invited. '

Members ,may bring articlesfor the Auction to the meeting'or rDay leave them in the Churchbasement before Tuesday night.;Mrs. Clinton Lawton and Mrs.Edna Cleme~t'are co:"chairmen,a~d they have announced thatme~bers of the executive boardw,ill Serve refreshments.

Mrs. Edna Clement, chairman,has announced that the Guildwill sponsor a public maybasketwhist party on the evening ofMay 3 at 8 o'clock in the parishhall.'

\

ST. THOMAS MORE,SOMERSET

"The Holy Name Society willmeet in the Old Town Hall at8:15 Tuesday night, April 4. Sonsof members and other youngmen of the paris:: are invited ·to,attend the gathering, to featureofficial sound and color films of'the 1960 World Series,

Conference RecordOAKLAND (NC) - Bishop

James A. McNulty of Paterson,N. J., and Father Francis J. Con­nell, C.SS.R., moral theologianand dean of religious commun­ities at the Catholic Universityof America, Washington, areteamed on a Conference-a-MonthClub recording which will bedistributed to more than 2,000conyents in all parts of the world.,

ST. MICHAEL'S.FALL RIVER

The newly-organized parishCYO athletic program is underway and is directed by Miss Mar­garet Moniz for junior girls;Jack Machado, junior boys; MissJuliette Silva, senior girls; andJoseph DeCosta, senior boys.

A discussion club is in processof formation and will be opento anyone interested in learningmore of the Faith and In discuss­ing problems of the day in thelight of Catholicism.ST. JOHN BAPTIST,NEW BEDFORD .

The Ladies' Guild will hold arummage sale Friday and Satur.day, April 7 and 8 and a ham andbean supper is planned for Sat­urday, April 22, to be followedby a games party. Chairmen forthe respective events are Mrs.Robert Clark, rummage; Mrs.Manuel DeMello, supper; Mrs.Augustine Mortagua, gamesparty.SANTO CHRISTO,FALL RIVER

Joseph Cabral presided at theregular monthly meeting of theCYO in the Parish Hall. Geral­dine Rezendes, chairman. of th~spiritual committee, appealed toall members to make the Stationsof the Cross during the month ofApril. . ., The 'monthly bulletin was dis­

.tributed to all members by Vic­tor Rezendes, chairman of thecultural committee.

A boys' bowling league and agids' softball te;tOlare in theprocess of formation.

A, social will be held nextmonth for ail members of theCYO.ST, PA~RICK,FALMOUTH

The Women's Guild will holdits annual Communion breakfastfollowing 8:45 Mass Sundaymorning,.May 21 at CoonamessettInn. Sister Mary Joel, R.S.M.,superior .at Nazareth Hall, Hyan­ni, will be guest speaker andMrs. Bertram K. Haddon andMrs. Harold E. MacFadden areco-chairmen.

Parishioncrs are invited toatten.d a Cana conference forparents of young and ,teen-agechildren at 7:30 Tuesday night,April 25. in -the church hall: Ateen-age'conference will. be heldat 7 Thursday night, April 27,alsC). 3,t the hall,.~or teen-agel's ofSt. Joseph's Church, Woods Holeand St: Patrick's.HOL:Y~:'NAME"

NEW BEDFORI)'Women's Guild members will

participate in a day of re'collec'­tion' Wednesday, April 26 atBishop Stang High School, undersponsorship of New Bedford dis­trict of the Diocesan Council ofCatholic Women, .

The guild will hold a Springdance Saturday night, April 15at the parish hall.OUR LADY OF LOURDESWELLFLEET

The members of the HolyName Society of Truro, No.Truro pnd Wellfleet will receive.Holy Communion in a body onSunday morning, April 9; at the9 o'clocl:c Mass' in the SacredHeart Church, Truro.

Rev., Ronald J. Nutterville,SS.CC., of -Fairhaven, and aformer Navy chaplain, will bethe principal speaker at thedinner to be served at the Islede Elba restaurant at 5 o'clock inthe evening.

Members of the society mayinvite their wives to the dinner.

·'Moonwatch TeamsTo Set up Network

CINCINNATI (NC) - Fifteen"moonwatch" teams will sendrepresentatives to Xavier Uni­versity here Saturday, April 8to set up the Eastern SatelliteResearch Network.

Host will be the Cincinnatimoonwatch team. Purpose of thenew organization will be to makepossible· a more extensive andefficient system of satellitet.racking.

Last year the Cincinnati teammade 404 sightings of satellites.The Cincinnati team uses a com­puter provided by the GeneralElectric Company to figureorbits.

North Attleboro Whists

SACRED HEART,mORTH ATTLEBORO

April plans for the Ladies of&e. Anne include a Court Whistat 8 Tuesday night, April 11 and• Spring Whist Wednesday night,

, April 19, also at 8. Both will beheld in the church hall. Mrs.loseph Bonneau and Mrs. ArthurGagne are the respective chair­m~.

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUAFALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a mother-daughterCommunion breakfast Mothers'

. Day, Sunday, May 14. Miss AngieVasconcellos and Mrs. BellaNagueira are co-chairmen. Acake sale is slated for Sunday,April 16 and members will par­ticipate in the district dialogue

'llIass at St. Mathieu's ChurchWednesday night, April 26.VISITATION GUILD,

. EASTHAMMembers will hold a social at

II Thursday night, April 6 at theborne of Mrs. Leroy BabbittEastham, 'NOTRE DAME,WALL RIVER, The Council of Catholic Womenwill hold a card party Saturday,April 8 in Notre Dame Schoolball. Miss Blanche Lambert iscbairman, A food sale is sched­1ded for Sunday, April 16 in thechurch basement, with Mrs. LeonBrisson in, charge of arrange-ments. .

Other activities will include allOUer skating party sponsored

. bv the youth committee on Fri­day, April 14 and a breakfast forfirst communicants. Memberswill participate in adoration onGood Friday.

, 8'1'. ANN'S,BAYNHAM

Cyril Tucker 'is temporary. president of the newly-formedMen's Guild which will meet'thursday, April 6 in the churchbasement. Women of the "parish8l'e organizing a Women's Guild,which will meet the first Wed­!leaday of each month. Rev. Leo'r. Sullivan, pastor, will be mod­erator for both groups.ST. PIUS X,8OUTHYARMOUTH

The third annual golf tourna­ment of the Holy Name Societyw.tll be ,held at' Bass River GolfClub Sunday, April 16. This hasbeCome the first major' golf eventof the Spring for amateurs fromall parts of New England. Thefield is limited to 160 playerS_d many prizes will be awarded; .

Starting time reservations maybe made with Frank Sheehy atEXeter 8-9079, South Yarmouth,ell' by writing P. O. Box 465;South Yal'mouth. Bob Harwood

... in charge of arl'angements.ST. ROCH'S.J!ALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenwill be entertained by theGolden Agel'S at 7:30 Mondaynight, April 3 in the school hall.Mrs. Romeo Charest, president,urges members to bring guestsand also l'eminds them to donateitems for an April rummage sale.

A whist is slated for Wednes­day, April 12 to benefit the con­vent fund: Mrs. Pierre Gagnonmchairman. Members are askedto donate gifts to be used asprizes.IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,BALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will meet• 8 Monday night, April 3 inChe church hall. Miss FlorenceLynch and Mi·S. John Roach areill charge of a program whichwill demonstrate cake decora­tion. Mrs. John Terceira is inClbarge of the sodal hour.ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

The PTA and Alumni Asso­ciation will hold its next regularmeeting Wednesday, April 5 inthe school hall. 'ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI,NEW BEDFORD

The League of St. Francia willreceive corporate Communionat 9:30 Mass Sunday morning,April 9. A silent cake sale 18 alsoaeduled for April and the nextI'egUlar meeting is set for Thurs­day, April 20 with Miss PaulineOrsi. supervisor at FraminghamWomen's Reformatory, as guest'l)eaker.

Page 6: 03.30.61

-Missionary. SO"Church in CongoWill Survive ,-

DETROIT (NC) - ,..Church in the Congo.weather the current ram.;page of violence'and mur~according to a veteran missiom.temporarily residing here., .

Father Joseph Van de W.C.LC,M., -a 'missioner in 'tlbeCongo province of Kasai, S8i4that most white missioners h_not been molested in the C.go'S current outbreak of violenee.

The missionary, a member, ellthe Immaculate Heart, of Mall'f'Fathers, said that Cath~

schools and dispensaries in. tbeCongo are still open and that~750 missioners of his society wamremain at their posts.

Father Van de Walle, a~sinonary for 20 years, was' 0lP­dained in the Congo's '. K~.bweSeminary, with i, manY'I\ativepriests as his classmates. Two, 01his sisters are nuns· working inthe Kasai province. He said'·the.letters to him are calm andneither has been bothered byrampaging troops.

DOWN',Wit,."

W TES

Shows ErrorFather Van de Walle said it b

a mistake to consider a democ­racy in the Congo in Westenterms and to think that a ~imt-

. tive mentality can be radlcalllYchanged in only 50 years. '

The year for granting of Co.: independence by the BelgiaDA

'HOLY SATURDAY-This day he, explained, was to be liiM.of silence in the Church erupts 'when there would be many ritOienear midnight into the Easter qualified natives to take over theVigil,which was restored in .. reins of government. The Churda1951 by Pius XII to its rightful, anticipated fh-iancial probleine.hour and. to a form encouraging '-- he 'stated'- because the Belgl.

,the. active. participation of all government haa subsidized -thOChristians. ' , schools heavily and 'the lost r.

This is the great night of the . enue would be a blow.year, the central act of worship . -, ""f th P 1 f G be . "We had envisioned a PYl'amIm

o e eop e 0 od. It gins with the 65 per" cent of the'c~witA . the., service of light, i~ dren in the g'rade schools as'tiewhich Christ appears before 'the '

· community as the Easter Candle, base, up to the 60,000 high' scbOall, source of illumination, warmth, children, and at the top the~.·.strength"and che~r .. '; a light 'v'ersity s'tudents," Father ."-

that spreads to all who become ,de:Wa,I,I~ 'said. i'AI~ would.h~.His disciples. _ !I'he Scripture:, bee!' r~adY, fQr ,a self-rul~"

,readi~gsjfollowed by: songs and· CO~gO ,:f '!Ve\ could only ~. prayers recount the stOry of walted.

God's 'care for man, so'perfectly . ~.Iewman' "R~II·c··S.,'fulfilled. this night. .. I~ 'lSi

In the, baptismal ser,iicefol- C U'lowing, the Font, .the wom'bof ome to .S. . '".Mother Church,. is consecrated.to ,'.. LONDON (NC) - The':iidtinitiate men -who seek ,the' truth' . major relics of John Hen'ry'C.

, into the. Death and Resurrection· dinal Newman to leave Brit.of the Lord. And, finl1ily the are on their way to the UnitedMass of the Resurrection,- ·the States. , ..proclamation of the Allehj~a; the The relics of the English coG-.grouri'd, of Christian. ··faith 'and . vert . who established the' C.'hope. . '. . gregation of the Oratory ,in En;... EASTER SUNDAY: 4 ·The land were :taken from Englanct

,Church continues the ceiebra- byF:ather -John Greene, C.(),;:~.tion, b~gun at the Vigil, of_the the Oratory in Rock Hili;, So'"day .. when ~emptiness"is 1illed,·Carolina. . ' , , ~

· when the ,old man is succeeded ' They 'in'cluded .Cardinal N_by the flew, when death becomes man's·~assock, a lock of his "'*thegat~ of life, when suffering and a piece of his pontifiC<lll'~finds its place, when sin loses its Also included were more ttt_power t,!l ,discourage,. when Bap-' 100. photogr~phic copies of ,p~tism rouilds. a new Body, the traits of Newman and of see~Mystical Body of redemption and connected with his life. .salvation-the Church, of -Which' The coilection is dcstined _Christ'i~ the Head. .' a Newman exhibition at .~

It is the, day when'the mem- Hill Oratory. .. ;.bers of His. Body, purified and. ' Cardinal Newman, who dieIstrengthened,renew. their vows in 1890 at the age of 89, wc!s...to Him, reaffirm their piedge'Ot . Anglican clergymim'whcn he ..conversion--':the'day of triumph, came a Catholic 'in 1~45; " , .joy and peace.

- ·EASTER'MONDAy~A' speCial of, men. He came in hurnaMass 'each day this week' echoes', 'flesh, really died, rose''again' ...the Alleluia' first sung .in . the . was seen by- witnesses,

,Vigil.: The lessons froin' 'GOd's in a visible Church GOd eClDo

·Word read. in Christian assem- tinties to: manifest Himself' ..blies for worship on these days . audible' words and tangibJe'sa,o..are all concerned with the. vic- . ramenis. In the best sense,'_tory· of Jesus over death and Christian's 'is Ii worldly religioO­with the ~ci-aments of 'initia- He loves the world of men' ...tion . (Baptism, Confirp1ation,. things. He will not bef-orCtMIEucharist) normally celebrated in'to a choice beiween matter ...-at Easter. spirit-for he accepts both.

Today the ~iscipl~s i.n the , EASTER WEDNESDAY....:.~Gospel recogmze Him m the ,.'breaking of bread. Their ex,pei'i- pendt~~ce an1 con~er~lOn ~re ::ence on the road and i'n the ,con 1 lons" or s armg m ..restaurant parallel th . glory' (Epistle). And the Go~s e experI- h J'd' H' d' .....Jooi.ence of every Christian at Mass. ~ oW

hs e~ufs ~l mg ISf lSCJ_

At first, the listening to '(;()d's . 1~ t e pa1~ u process 0 co~~word, to the proclamation of His Slon to ~a1th: Every M~ss I~deeds a'nd HI' 1 A d th trates thiS primacy of faith in ..s ove. n en, t 1 l'fwith faith thus. nourished, the sacramen ale., :sacrificial meal shared brings fAHl~ayS, ~fe~ore thde Cetlhebra:recognition of Him in one's 0 IS saCrI Ice ';In er e s _neighbor and in the Chur h of bread and wme and b~

, c. , the holy meal, the comm~EASTER TUESDAY -Again assembles to hear the biblleSl

the Gospel is of the worldliness Word of God proclaimed anel.of Christianity, of eating to. assenting to that Word agaimgether, of flesh and blood. God experiences the Lord's aid _a.asks' no impossible "spirituality" renewal of its faith.

"~n\~~,~

::r· ,I>

'Th11.0LtCjh thE WEEk <With thE ChU11.Ch.By REV~ ROBERT W. HOADA, Catholic University

ANCHOR

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

- -:- >~ese _of Fall River~Thurs:.Mar. 30. 1.961.T,:.

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

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll

@rhe

6

God

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weei<ly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River41 (j Highland Avenue

Fall .River, Mass~ OSborne 5-7151

Is Li'ght"And the message' which we have heard from him

and announce to you, is this: that God is light, and· in himis no darkness.'~

These wor<is of .St. John are strikingly borne out· inthe Liturgy of Holy Week with its progress from the somberservice of Good Friday, the emptiness of Saturday and theimpressive -Easter Vigil Service with the darkness ,of theChurch giving way. to the Paschal Candle the symbol ofthe Risen Christ

Light does stra~ge things to thoseit comes near. Somepeople's features it throws. into strong relief, and dark. l,inesare drawn darker. ·Those :who seemed pallid and obscureare rev~aled in candle-light with a certain' hidden' beautythat the flame emphasizes and etches out. Others whoseemed attractive become in the light caricatures of beauty.

Christ, the Light of the world, had that same effecton the souls- of men. He divided the world wherever Hewent, and in His Light were seen either those who lovedHim..:... those who· shouted "Hosanna" - or those. whoturned from Him - tl}.ose who shouted "Crucify him."

He threw His light into the recesses of their. consciencesand showed them for what they were - for good or bad. .

Christ, the Light, still has that effect on.men. His light/this Easter will show men either better -or worse than theywere on Ash Wednesday. His light. will reveal how manyhave died to that part of themselves that was unworthy,or it will show their faults in all their hideous and ever·growing strength.

As the light of the sun, shedding its same rays, willcause ice to melt and mud to harden, so does the light of.Christ, shining 'on the souls of men, warm with love thesouls of the good and cause the bad to shrink from the Lightthat is also the Way and the Truth and the Life.

This, then is wh~t the Risen Christ does. . TODAY - Thurs~ay of., the. Lord's Supper-The. great litur-Politics and Religion. -gical event of this evening isthe

celebration in' every parishIt is axiomatic' that a person who wishes to preserve church of the Mass cpmmemorat.

ealm and peace around him should never discuss. either ing ·the institution of the Lord'spolities or religion~ . " ,~ ~ Supper. On the night before He'

died, Jesus gave two elements ofAnd like many sayings, this one n~eds a,certain amount the Jewish Passover Meal new

of further investigation.', .' , ,..' - meaning and new power, makingFor if' one' were to follow such'a maxim, his life might them His Body and His Blood as

be calm, or~ and· this'would be a"J?etter'word ...:...·stagnant. given and as shed for man~ind.'For peace and calm may simply be 'di~guises'.for inactivity So the great Sacrament of the

.. , - -',' .. , : . '. 'Church springs into existel1ceby.andstaleness:·'· '-" ' .' ....; , .. ', . the will of'the Saviour,and the

Politics thrives .on discussion, on challenges, on investi- 'hierarchical ministry by which. gation in.depth.Only in· that way <loes the shOddy'blow-away , ·it is to be forever celebrated is, and the solid endure. '" .' " . communicated to ,the Apostles,

, .. ), And the same'h;' true of' religion'; I{men"r~fuse.tO The washing otthe-feet after the.. . , Gospel is a dramatic sacramental

discuss religion, if they avoid all mention, of it, 'then th~y 'of the love of' brothers of whichare taking the easy way out ~nd the ·basic.corieern of~very the Eucharist is sign and source,man 'is' given short shrift.' alove which eschews no service

In ;both politics arid religion of course the essential and rejects no demand. .. . " . .. '.,.', .. - - ,The recommended celebration

element: IS to preserve respect -for trutl:I al1d ·z:espect ,fQf, 'of' the Eucharist once in eachthose with wh0m the matter is be~ng discussed. : :,.;'. parish today; 'for the whole par­

The Diocese of' Fall Rivet gave out fifty thousaiId 'ish, points out the ideal of each~ booklets last'Sunday bookletsentitl~"Fifty Quest'ionsand ,Christian commul1ity gathering

F. ' .. ''- . .. . ' - -.' :,. together" every Sunday to par-

Answers o~ ederal AId to ,Ed.ucabon and Related Matters., . ti~ipate in one great act of pub-'CatholIcs are thus ,encouraged .to. get the, facts,. 1;0 'lic worship and common prayer.

acquire a respect for the truth, and -to 'be tnusequipt>edto ' . :On' this morning .there is an­.'speak intelligently and with charity about both' thei>olitic~ ,~ther ill1-portant liturgical event

d 1··' , .' I' 't' .. f t'h f d' l' "d- -. 't"· ',. in the cathedral church of each"an re HPOUS _Im~ lC~, IAons;.~ ,. ~ . e e~a .&1 '. ques.. ~?~. '.'\' .':" diocesC'-the Mass of the Chrism.

. Yes, ,Catholics an~ ,other's are certain~y'-inv,itedto,dis- '- Here t~e' bisl).op consecrates theeuss both politics and: religion:- .As. both' Gatholic$' and· holy oils to b.e used in the ·cel.:.citizens, they dare do no other.' - ... , '. '" ,." .. ebration of ,Baptism, Confirma-

'. .,.., '. , • ',' '_ .. tion, Holy Orders and Extreme

W t . 'd N- -.' d ' Unc'tion in all parishes, unitedan s an .. ee S: w'ith him' during the' following

. "We" cannot· 'afford 'the undisciplined child 'today.' year.' " .Unfortunately weare. i>assi~g, through :a .. period in,"'whichTOMORROW-Friday of the

, ma'ny parents who should' know:'better and wh6, want' to be .PasSion and Death of !heLord­gOOd to their children forget their morai duty to rear their' .Aga~n :~his aftern~on or,. even~ng

. .. . . . . . • :'. ' ,: - . , ... '. .. .. "":. ,ChristIans gather In their parishoffsprmg and conf!1s~. the~_lft of a.•motor, sc.oo,ter ·Wlth :t~e, church for a service which in

.gift of good' home training;" " .. " ..' ,:,' . /" . ~ '.,' " some ways reveaJs, the ancient. .These words of the presid~nt,Of , th.e Ohio Boar,~"of ~ liturgi~a~ 'p~ttern ,,:ery clearly.

Education are what churchl,llen ind'-'sociologists of balance ,~t btzg~ns .w1th 'Scnptu~e .rea~-h . b '. t f .. 1-- . t'" T" ". .. ts' . mgs,Sll1ce, for the ChristIan, It

ave een ·crymg o~ ~r a o~g, Ime.:" ~ many, paren .is God 'who sp~aks first, it is Godconfuse what the chIld wants WIth .what he ~eeds. He wants who initiates and the act of. Hismany things, material things to give him pleasure, He needs. people Is to ~nswer, to resp-ond,security and affection and underst~nding and the feel ()f to. a~cept. The. last, of th~se ill.authority moral things to give him happiness' '. '>. '.' the. fmal narrative ~f Jesus su.f-

.. _ ',_ . , .' __. .• .. .... , '" _.'. i fermg and death, from the ..Gos-And ~o~'be to chIldren'-'and tJ:1e!:r: parents. :'::"",.wno pel according to JQhn. .

confuse the twq. ' '. .' -, "And then the Church' prays asin the ancient "bidding prayers"

. formerly a part of every MaSs,for aU' sorts and 'conditions ofmen. The sacrifice of the Crossis a sacrifice for all, a sacrificewhich offers to every' man themercy of God.

The veneration of the Crosswhich follows is an act of'thanksgiving for God's love mademanifest. It is an act of penanceand reparation for sin, since

.man's sin and failure is -repre­sented by the Cross. And· it is

,an act of petition for grace toaccept the Cross, to accept suffer­ing borne out of love. Finally,Holy Communion is shared, thefruit of the Cross, the Sacramentwhich builds the Church foundedon the Cross

Page 7: 03.30.61

7

','

You can take' a' :sev~'hweek tour to Eu~ope­first c1as~ hotels' '..:..,major shrines and

,fifty days ,of fun' "O~i.Y,$79~,

" ,All cxpen.s~ includedl" ,~t ,free information, no'WJ

,:" ..FATIMA'TRAYEL ,WAS,H~NqrON, NEW,JE,RSEY

Freedom of Sehools

April-That freedom of schoolsin missionary countries may beupheld or restored.

May-That by means of a moreintense devotion to the HolyEucharist priestly and religiousvocations in the missions may beincreased.

June-That by the restorationof true unity among Christians,the way to the Catholic Church,which is the Church of Christ,may be revealed.

July-That the religious artsand literature may be pr~motedworthily and fr:uitfully, in themissions. '

THf ANCHOR­Thurs., March 30, 1961

:WHAJEVERYBODY,SHOULD KNOW

Pontiff Approves'62 Pray~r;Ci~~ls

For Missions,ROME (NC)-The mission

'news service, Fides, an­nounced that Pope John hasapproved and blessed thefollowing missionary intentionsof the Apostleship of Prayer for1962:

January-That the ecumenicalcouncil may spread the true light

, of the Gospel truth even througbthe non-Christian world.

February-That the rulers ofthe new nations, moved by adesire for justice and equity, mayprovide for the true good of theirpeoples.

March-That the preaching ofthe ~spel may lead the faithfulin the missions, by the use of thesacraments and the practice ofvirtue, to ,a more complete hou.­~ess of life.

"DAUGHTERS Or: n. PAUQ.-. ",.- ~.

'nvito "oung girb (14-23), to labor IIIChris9's vas; vlnoyard au 'an ~Iikl of tIMEditions: Pross,' Radio, Movies 'and fel...vision. With t1te3o modem, mllOM, tllessMimooC7\' Siston! brlno Chmre Dommoto an, reaard!eS3 d' raca, ccto7 m croW.~ lnfonnatioll write kn

REV. MOTH!:cl SUIi'ERto:lSO ST. PAUl'S ~VIS. BOSTON 31). MAliS.

'manhattan7'U1e ,?'Udt'?~

Botried by

MANHATTAN BOTTLING CO.o INC.Jase Mond~ & Sons

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",806,NO.,MAIN STREETFall River" 05..5-7497

, 'Reds 'Att9,c!(,Co,rdinqL': BERLIN (N~)-:-~a~loMoscow"has claimed' tha't Francis' Clir:'

dinal Spellman;, Archbishop ~~New,York, istl'yi/1g to "arm the 'criminals whq f~ed from Cuba'

'because he recentiy' urged Cath­olics to help find homes and jo~ ,for refugees from the pro-Redregime of Premier Fidel Castro. ,

remainder in Somerset. When hearrived, Father Dupuis turned

. "his. attention to' the.' rectory:which he had completely reno- Oftioe of Teacher

"vated. ' . August-That the Church 'ID.At present, the parishioners missionary lands, according to

are assisting .in painting and re- the character and demands of, decOrating' the parish' hall, and' 'the different races, may be able.. in acquiring new sanctuary fur- -to fulfill effect.i.vely: her office of,niture, hoping "to complete the Teacher.tasks by Easter. Last year, the September-That aU in mls-church was painted. sionary territory who are suffer-

The Ladies of St. Anne: Soda1- log for the Faith of Christ 'and'ity'of'the'Blessed Virgin, League' .obedience o£ the Church mayof the Sacred Heart and the Boy unflinchingly, endure, persec,,",

,Scouts, l\re ,active in the parish, ,tion.'and' a, CCD program is being October-For the training of'organized for the 160 children lay missionaries in Latin Arnel'-: attending' classes each ·week. ica.

November- That the social. Father Dupuis !S now planning doctrine and action ot"the Church.a new school, which' also will be"built on the cpurch property. He may save the' under-dev.elopedis assisted b~ his curate, Rev. countries from the danger ofErnest Blais. The first curate in atheistic materialism.

'the Swansea 'parish was Rev. Decernber~Thatthe Gospel of'Louis Boivin,: who was assigned Christ be spread more,ef~ectively

, there about 1950.. ", " , ,also among Moslem peoples.,: ' • I- •

ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE CHURCH, SWANSEA

lA~JVIERE/S'

Pharrm@cyPrescri~tions C(!lIlned fw

and delivoredHEADQUARTERS FOR

DIETIETlC SUPPLIES600 Cottage St. WY 4-743'

New Bedford

St. Louis, de France C,hurch, School' Ser~eFrench Pa~'ishioners of Swansea, Somerset

By Marioo Unsworth, In, 1928,. when Rev. Loui~ E. Prevost left St. Dominic's Parish, Swansea, he went to

anoth,er s~tIon' of that town where 80 Cath olic families of French descent became thebeginnings of a new parish, St. Louis de France. Situated' on the Swansea-Somersetline, tJ;l~, pari~h land at that time wayl noth ing but,swampland. Today there are a church,~~~7;onPi~:th s~~l l=d~ I' ,;', ", ~Jti" ~;'" ," ,,'--"'-.-.--.----,'

wit)l ,tentative plans for a ' ~l(l;A' "'~

new schi)Ol in the near fut-ure. '

IiI. the words of the presentpastor, Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis,"Monsignor Prevost was the soulof this parish." PastOr for 26years, Father Prevost lived atfirst, with the Desmarais family,while he completed plans for hischurch. By late in 1929, St. Louisde ,France Church was com­pleted, and Father Prevost be­gan immediately on the nextbuilding, a rect~ry . The firstchurch is now the parish hall.

General Welfare S~ the parish was so spread'While non-Catholics have an out, i~cluding Somerset and

-Obligation" to give serious at- East ,Swansea, and transportation· tention to the "Catholic griev- was so difficult at the time, a

ance" that justice is violated by school bus was purchased tobring the people to Mass. Thisdenying aid to private education,

the Catholic community "must' system was carried out until thenot advance its own ~'~:""''l at arrival of Father Dupuis in 1959,the pxoense of the general wel- by which time most of the peopleIf.are," he said. ~aat~o~a~ ~~~~U~a;~nd'trans~r-

,Specifically, Mr. Clancy stat- Rural Schooled, it would be "tragic" if Cath- ,olic opposition were to bring The people wanted a school,

, . aoout the defeat of needed legis- and by January, 1931, a convent-, btioit to aid public SC"'''015. school was erected Of! the parish." . llilid:' Accommodating 90 chil-' ,Rabbi Gilbert declared that in ,,". ':;~ It)g years American Jews . drep. i~ first to eighth grad:, the

"whl use all their power to hold "schC?O~ w,as staffed by f?ur ~ISters'.,~~,ltne on the,pre"ent arrange-' of,~t. J?seph, for whom thIS was That night he died. In June the

;;;ent of Church-State separati~n ,t?e~ ifI~sf- rural ~h,qol !a,the colonial' !!Oifice, built to blend, ,~' AiMrica." " area. , " ," • ' , ,with itS tUrill ~tting, was dedi-,'" " , ' ' By 1955 the school became so cated.' " ' " "

,"'They 'trust a neutraJ-.asfar crowded that two rooms in the In April o~ 1954 the first pa~orlIS religion is concerned-secular "'l?a'dsn'hall were taken, over for at St. LOuis, 'Father Prevost,

, ~,S~te, ~n~ J?ublic school. ~ver .. , c18ssfoo'ins; making first to sixth left to take up pastoral duties• Gltrlshamze.d, par~h18lizc:d ',separa,te grades for the present in New Bedford and Rev. 5tanis­

.S~~e ,and pUbh~school. And. Ln . enrollment of 202 pupUs. laus Goyette replaced him. 'ItthlS, the JeWlsh commumty 'Father Prevost then desired a was he who cOIlverted the parishfint'!~ it~l~ ?u~king a. fierce ef- permanerit church for the ap- ,hall for uSe as a' school; and fin­fort to relIglonIze society on, the proximately 350 'families now ished payiilg off' the parish debt,

· part of Catholic and Protestant 'part of, the parish. By 1946:"47 '8lthough his· pastorate lasted,gro~PS, in a, .markedl~e?st- 'plans wer~ begun, and when per~ only five years, 'until his death,C~nsha!1 era 10 America, he 'mission was granted by the in April;'1959.lSlud. Bisho'~'in' 1950,con's~ruction Was 'Third Pastor

The Rabbi stated that as Am- started the following year. , ' Father Dupuis was nameder:icap. Jews and Catholics leave ,. 'Father"'Dupuls recallil that 'one ,third pastor' of ,St.' Louis' de!their "ghettos." "It is inevitable of the last' visits made by the France Church;' which 'now'hasthat we . ~ . 'bump agains,t each "l~te 'B'ishop' Cassidy was t(j the "some 482 families, about' 80' ofe>ther." " 'construction site at Swansea. whom live"in Swansea and the

,,',~Tbe' resulting conflicts will " ; 'j , ',/' ' ',1, ", "

::'~:\\~~:c~no~e of'~i::al~,efe:11; ",.Pub~ncotion, ,li$ts '.OnbY', 'Oru~ ,"P'~,e~$tI'~'eome to terms ,with the fact that "7.,,AmC1l19 ,1 08 Cha~,~,ag[l'tl~. c,f,'Con,,g',r,e",Si,',~, '

our American society is plural- t'I'" ,;'istiet" he said. ' " WA:SHINGTON'(NC) - There alists, 3; Christia,n (Dil:!c,iples ,of

, . . Merit in Call "haslbeen only one Cathoiic'priest :Christ)" l;,l,JAi;ver~l~st,.~;,~u,th-

· '" ,: Rabbi Cilbert in his dlsclis- among the 108 clergymen who erim, 1; Gatholic, I., '. ,Ii'-'on:of tfue sch<X:I aid issue' e<>D- ,,(;bave served' as"chaplains of the -: .,IVietho~is~ .. have serv,ed as,.:' ceded that there is "merit' in, the'IVn,ited States,~nate and 'Ho~se . chaplai~ Ii; tOta~ ,l?f ,'124 ',~~~,, 'cMhoil~call'for some considera- ,-.of J~epfesentatlves..... , :,' ", ., fres,bytetiap.s 76 years, ,Epi~Fo-

,tion of the economic plight of .' 'This' haS been' brought out in -palians;53 y~a.rs" Bap~is,ts, 30,th~ir mushrOOming' parochial 'an 'editorial in the 'Capital: Bap- Univ:ersalis~, 2u, Unitarian!! ,.15,

, schQol system." ' ,'tiSt, a'weekly'publication, which ,Lutherans, 7"C;:hristi!m,Ghur~h.4,'; Bl;It" he ~i~, i£ a "disp~ay 'of' h.as cauSetl consi~er~ble discus- 'Catholics, 1, 'power polit1.Cli" ,by Catholics re- :SlOn here. The edltorIal.proPose~ 'W~Dld' Limit Term "sults in defeat of general school "that 'Congress set a time limIt The' sole' Catholic chaplain, toai'dlegisiatioQ; Catholics would ,o~ ~e number of 'year~ a chaP-serve at "tl1e'U:S. Capital was"e guilty of "an act of irrespon- laIn could serve eIther houSe of Father Charles Constantine Pise,sJl?iiity."" ". Ctingtes~; 'that successo~s ,~ome who was ,distjnguished as a

"",As 'for general interreligious from different denomtnatI(~ns, s,chola;; i>o~t"autho~ ll,ni',i?n~~~h­".,rnlaH0l)s, the ,Rabbi said, "the ,,':~iI~ t!M,t the ,'clergy,men:' servmg er. He was made chaplam of the, .:n:tos1; exciting new trend" " is;,';~,e '~en:ate and ~he, ~ousebe of ' 'S~ilate 'em' -the motion of'Sen.,:that we are at last really talking 'dIfferent denommatlons. "-Henri tiay, and se'rved 'tlie' ~ear< too" 'e~ch other." Discussibnof j" "The, 'edito'rial Said'" ih~ periOds "1832-'33 durih;;:' the" 22i1:d'ICon-

issues, he said, 'llolds out the ,1.·~erve(1 by individJ.l~(~h~·p~ai/ri~ 'in '" grE!ss.. ,rl 't, .' "'.'~:~':promise that there may yet be the past have not'beeh e4uitable. The Baptist pUblicatiorl's\' edi-

,,~'a;,profounder level of under- "A,Methodist, it'was doted; served 'toriar would' leaVe 1t to Congtess ""r, standing ... :than ever hereto- ,.the 'House ,for 29 years'and"his to fix the lertgth 6f tiine'a "chiIp-

iilore achieved." 'successor; a Universalist, ::,26 lain might serve either house of. improved Relations' year&'-only two chaplains in 55 ' Congress, "J:lUt Sllggeste'd, that -the

" 'Mr.' 'Cowan' said relations "years. ":' ,.,' 'term,might be two,or foui"ye'ars,, -, '" , ~odists Lead preferab1y the 'latter. It"advo-

, among U.S.' religious group3 , , . 'M .' 'catetl '''impartial' seIediori" of"'have improved' considerably '0=1 ',' Chap1llins ~erv~ng in houses,of 'those'servirig in this h~h office,"

· ,~ "upper' levels ;in recent Congress" acor~ing to, d~noinipa-, 7ea'r~." ,,' , ' ti<~ns, have belm as, follows, ao- ' G dl Sh h' d

"Buf"despite' 'reassurances 'by cQrd\ng, to ,the,~itJrill~: . ," N ' 1\)0" ,ep. er',' -':'Ame.f.i~an C,~tho,lics on their. In- Methodl'sts, 36', Presby,tArI'ann ,,' ELSqN. (NC)-~ishop.W.E.te t ' t d US ty '" •..., ,Doyle of Nelson, British Colum-n IOns owar " SOCle, 28' E . l' ,19' B 't' ts,' ." ",j, ", C th Ii . still f--' i , " pISCQpa lans, .' ap IS bia has called' on the laity to take· "many non- a 0 CB ' t """ TT" 4' Co ' t' , ' " ,.. , ..C'"f "th' he t ted. ,,', 14;;,umtarIans,' , ngrega Ion- p'art" in a door-,to-door"Good

"I ear .on ~s ..score, sa' " " " ' ., ",. ,. , ,'. ... "'" Shepherd. Crusade'~ to invite

,.,J 1 StIch' fears "may be exag- .,On~@§~ Religaon, ,Te§\i" fallen-away' Catholics to' return, gerated, but they are not with- ll"'1F ,, .' out'. substance," lti! said. He f@f PQ.Ilfi»lic T<eiacheD'$ ,to t?e Churc/l" The crusade will

urged Catholics to take these "AUST,IN '(NC) _ prote!ltant " begm o~M~y 7.'fear,s ,'seriously and 00 deal' church leaders sharply criticized ' IF"-~------....._-_...fmnldy: with' their causes. Il bill,,in the Texas .legisillture

'. '.' ' whi~h would bar persons who do",Rosary in Arabic ' , not believe in a Sliprem1') BeingDHAHRAN (NC) -"- Catholics from ,teaching in state-supported~m 'Goa in Portuguese India, schoo!-s, 'whose Born Jesus church' con- The measure would require anbins the body 'of St. Francis tea~hers iD. public' schools andXoviel', have met every Friday state-SUpported colleges and uni­fOr the past five years in this oil versities to swear to their belief~nter in Saudi'Arabia to recite in the' 'existence of a Suprem2the Rosary in the Saint's honor. Being.'

:~ Chcn~gi'.'g Era·<; • :, Continued' from Page ()ue

The challenge facing the ,na­tion is to' "continue 110 function

· as a society in spite, nr such,, : 4iffer~nccs, Mr. Clancy declared.

· He sald discussion of differences, 'arbon'g the religious groups is, inecessnryand added: "The time

b 'propitious for this in Ameri­can life," ,

Aware of DutyMr. Clancy said U.s. Catholics

· have' left their "immigrantphase" and have abandonedtheir 'previous "largely negative,largely defensive" attitude ta­war d American institutions.

, Catholics are now conducting II

· fur"far reaching" evaluation oftheir attitudes, he stated, andare becoming more aware oftheir duty to promote the gen­eral good of American society.

He cited Federal aid toedu­,cation as an issue on which

Catholics must recognize theirres~nsibility 110 the common

'8OOd.

Page 8: 03.30.61

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St. Anon Hospttal Nur~Alumnae Association will me.at Ii Tuesday night, April 4 iathe hospital conference room.The gathering will be precededat 7:30 by a board of directonf

· meeting in the medical libraqof the hospitaL

Miss' Alice Bourassa, nomln-.·ating/committee chairman, willreport on ballots for annual elee-.tions to be held in May. Programco-chairmen Mrs. Lorraine Lus­sier and Miss Elizabeth Parenilare in charge of arrangementsfor a talk by Paul H. Lamber~

M.D., whose topic will be "Mod­em Concepts of Obstetrics andGynecology." -

Members are requested· tobring prizes for use at the unit's

· annual fund-r~isi:ng pI:oject, ~ ,Nurse-a-Rola to be held the last

, week of May.

, Holy Cross SistersTo Present Coricert~CHESTER (NC) - 'Nlo'

_Holy· Cross Sisters will stage thofirst ~-n\ln pUblic musical coo.cert here April 23, with a repeatperformance in Na~hua, Apr~l 28.. The concerts will feature 9$

.'nuns in chora~ selections, piano;,organ and other· instrumental

• Quml;>ers, as well as solos by nUIlilwho teach in Manchester and.

, Nashua schools.The concerts 8Jle for a building

found for future expansion OfNotre Dame College here. ,.

LegiOftPhone Service',Draws Big Response

WASHINGTON (NC)-A teJ.­ephone, service here devoted to

· National Legion of Decencymovie ratings received aIniost

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C'athol'!c Women/s"Groups Urge UNTo Help Outlaw Child Marriage

GENEVA (NC) -The World ing hi,! or, her, destiny," saidUnion of Catholic Women's 01'- Agnes de Killbermatten for theganizations has urged the United Catholic union.Nations to sponsor an interna- She was testifying here beforetiona1 agreement outlawing child the United Nations· Commissionmarriage. . on the Status of Women.

"To decide on. ma.rria~e is a Miss de KaU)ermatten said·that~u':ldament~l chOIce ~n lif~, and in view of ,the complexity of theIt IS essential that thIS ChOIce be problems of modern' life, '~r,m~de by a person who has ~t- organization believes that ittame~ complete ~un.:'an maturIty . would neither be judicious !lOr'and IS fully enJoymg freedom ev:en poSsible to seta universtllfrom any sort,of pressure'reg~d- : miniqJ.um ag~ for marriage.

. Soon after her testimony, thecOmmIssion passed a draft: con­

'Vention that would outlaw forcedmarriage and b.ind contractingcoun~ies to fix a minimum ageof marriage. An attempt to intr-o-duce a minimum age of 15 for P1 'niarriage into the draft conven- an New ·Dormitory "tion was defeated. - - CJ;.INTON (NC) - Mount st.

Miss de Kalbermatten referred Clare College here in Iowa wiltto African systems of endowmentconstIjUct a new dormitory with,of brides. accommodations for 179 students.

'<xt ·may not be wise· to plan it was announced. Tentativeimmediate eradication of this plans call· for the building to besystem, which is part of a tradi- reaciy for use by the Fall of 1963­tional African civilization," she - Mount st. Clare College is asaid. 'women's school conducted b7

"But where it gives rise to the Sisters of the Third Order ofignoble bargaining, governments St. Francis. 'should take drastic measures tostop it or at least limit it to a

.symbolic gesture."

BREAKFAST: Four Knights of Columbus Councilsjoined to· hold " Communion Breakfast at Stang High

. School. Left to right, main speaker State Deputy JosephBoothroyd of Maynard, Mass.,'Bishop Connolly, and DistrictDeputy Arthur S~aw of Msgr. Qor1E(C9u.ncil, ·Taunton. .

Sitvet' Tea Win J:fonorIsabella Chaple;tin

Benedict Circle, North Attle­boro Daughters of Isabell8, willhold a silver tea honoring Rev.

-Armando Annunziato, chaplainTuesc;iay, April 4 at Hotel Hixon.It will follow th.e regular month­ly meeting of the group.

Mrs. Robert V. McGowan is,chairman of' the refreshmentscommittee and Mrs. FrancisMcQuade heads the programcom~ittee.

Writers to Take Pa~

In Grail SessionsLOVELAND (NC)-Three au­

thors will he among the speakersat the· Summer sessions of the.International Grail MovemeRthere ill Ohio. ,.. They ue Dr. Karl Stem,· a,Canadian psychiatrist and authorof ~'Pillarof Fire;" Father JeainDanielo\l, S:J., theologian of theCatholie Institute of Paris andauthor of "Salvation of Nations;"and Father Josef Goldbrunnet' ofBerlin, author ot. "'Holiness IsWholeness."

The Grail Movement prep8l'eSyoung Catholic women for apos­tolic work· in misSioR countries.Anne Mulkeen is director 0( tlbe~ .Ceata'. Au&.

THE ANCHOR-,-OiOeeee.of Fan.~'RwN:Mar. 30; 1961.' ".... . -, '. -, - .. ',' ".. ~ - . .:"". .... -" . '. .8

Real ChaUe'nge·· for ,TeenagerTo Plan Pretty,. Cozy, Room,

By Alice Bough Cahill. A group of young girls who'd signed up rora course

in Decorating were, asked why they' joined such a groupand the general answer was that each girl wanted to dec­orate her own room. The approaehto helping a teenagerdoesn't differ too much from useless, ugly articles helps tothe advice you'd give a bring a sense of quiet into 'aveteran homemaker. When room.asked for favorite coiors, the There are certain things thatgirls gave such answers as tan- are never outmoded, such as agerine, orchid, gold and a lineup good comfortable mattress, butof exotic hues, the bed could well be quite old-w h i c h would fashioned. Donj; despair; some-c e I' t a i n 1y be ,thing can be done. Maybe youpretty difficult want to do away completelyto live with, but with the bed frame. You can buy

, it was possible legs and simply attach a box'to satisfy their spring to these legs and do with":-·

out a headboard. Or if your wallslikes by suggest- are plain, you might try painting·ing that these a headboard design on· the wall,ehoicesmight beused as accent or you can have· a headboard cutcolors. ,.' from plywood, attach ~t~'the.

Every' YOUng; wan and finish it ia naturalcolor, or paint it to matcq o~iier_person, wants. a _ ' ,.

room of her very own, a room _pieces of furniture in yourro~where she may enjoy her treas- Want Foui-Posterfares (which' may not seem like . For the gid who longs :llor a

,treasures to any, one else), a four-poster bed.; btIt finds it out,place for· 'her' f\lvorite books, a of her'reach #nancially, here'splace iO be' ~l<?r:ie. ,This is. ~e an idea. If someone around the

, room where the young -person house is handy, you Clan go to a,would like.to 'experiment 'oWth lumber' yaid'ilnd hav~'fQ1.!l' ~".color. . posts "turhed" and ,atta<;hthem'

Must Be Orderly to a frame on which Y0\ll' springThe most i~portant<;ons~dell8- and mattress rest. '. _ '

tion is that to be attractive a If you want. a _dust- ,ruffleroom 'must be orderly. More im- around the bed, inspect'the linenportant than its fine ·furniture, closet and remove any wornits beautiful drapes and lovely sheets. These·you can salvage forrug is ORDER-yet this costs a dust ruffle and possibly therenothing but .effort to obtain. may be enough for cafe curtains.Cleanliness also affects thei ap- You might make the upper part

:pearance of a room. ·n always of your· curtains from old sheetsseems to be, related to order ,and· for the lowe!' half, use aand cleanliness,'like order, cosU printed material that matcheslittle but effort to maintain., . drapes or pillows in the ro,om.

'., If a girl~s room is, to be eon- : ,Gather together all the pic­\'enient it must have the furlii- ,tures you'd like to use in your'

.-ture and: 'furnishings needed for, .r~m and plan interesting group­..the' purpose'it serves. A bedroom 'ings. Maybe you'd like to have a

15 a place ·for sleeping, resting, family corner. Keep these to- Women to Heardressing, and caring for clothes. gether, either framing family .It is a ~lace where a girl wiU .pictures all alike, or varying the 'Bishop Sheenstudy read and write letters and frames with different mats. Itfrequ~ntly,'when some member may be that yo~ could tint a mat WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxtl-

-of the family or a chum comes to match a solid color you are iary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen ofin for a chat, a place where one using in your room. If you have . New York .will speak April 30will visit. a number of small snapshots, you : in Rome at the congress of the

One needs furniture for sleep- might attach the frames to a wide World Union of Catholic Worn­Ing and resting-bed, bedside -v~lvet ribb0!l and suspend this en's Organizations.table rug and lamp. You' need 'rlbbon vertically. A series of Mrs. Arthur L. Zepf, presidentfurniture that will make dressing ,baby pictures taken, at various of the National Council Of Cath­convenient; a dresser or dressing s~ges of a child's growth migbt, " olic Women,· who is heading the

,table with storage space, and for ,even be arranged in one frame, American delegation, made thestudy a table or desk, a chair, thus ~aking a more important announcement. The congress isstudy lamp a comfortable chair, large pIcture instead of a number 'scheduled April 29 through Mayand book shelves. of small pictures. ' , 5. ,'Planning to improve the fu~ The most important thing Bishop Sheen wili speak OR

nishings of a room at little, if we've saved for ,the last, because "The Unity. of the Modern Worldany, cost is a challenge to a you must give it a lot of thought. -in Christ and His Church."young girl. Why don't you make It's your PRAYER CORNER. Theme, of the congress is "Thea project of it? We'd suggest that Here's where you erect your Catholic Woman, Promoter ofthe first thing to do would· be crucifix and Madonna shrine, Unity at the Heart of the Modernto look critically at each article hang your holy water font and World in Christ and' His Church."in the room to see if it is useful keep your missal and special U. S. women attending includeand if it is beautiful. It is sur- prayer leaflets, so you will al- Mrs. Albert R. Spillman,prising how just cleaning awBtY ways know just where they aN. WUCWO vice president general,. and Margaret Mealey, NCCWMoVe ,t,o .Simpli.f.y. E.ighth Grade executive director. The delegates

include representatives 01. sev-;Graduation Has Mixed Reaction eral dioceses in the countrY.LOUISviLLE (NC)-Therehas' muniOR breakfast. Many of the delegates will also

been mix'ed reaction. here to a But a group of eighth-grade take part in the NCCW-~pon-.move to cut down 'on the cere- giriS who were interviewed sa,id .sored, 4O-day tour of· seven Euro­mony in eighth-grade gradua- that things should stay as they Pean countrles. .., .tions. are, with, caps, gowns and rings;,The Catholic School Board Some eighth-grade boys ques­

suggested that the ceremonies be 'tioned were inclined to foregoless elaborate. Msgr. Felix N. the rings, but not the caps ~Pitt, school board secretary, said gowns.in a bulletin sent to pastors and Several parents estimated thatprincipals that the ceremonies it takes from $35 to $50 to grad­are expensive, unnecessary "and uate a ehild from the eighthgive completion of the eighth ,grade.grade too much importance."

Several pastors interviewed,tna spot survey favored a simpleceremony, iR which caps aridgown's are not required.

Girls Pro~M 0 s t parents questioned

agreed that it would be sufficientfor a graduate to receive a diplo­ma and attend Mass'and Com-,

Mission-B'ourid Nu~sTOLEDO (NC) - Four nuBS

from among 108 volunteers havebeen selected to establish thefirst foreign mission station of.the Toledo province, Sisters 01.Notre Dame. Going, in July tothe Vicariate of Mount Hagen,New Guinea, will btl· Sisters M.

. Magdelida, M, Claver,· M. AlexiaaDd M. Marilla.

Page 9: 03.30.61

9

Em",

May SupperDCCW

SetFor

lHE ANCHOR-Th~rs., March 30, 1961

Diocesan Nurses SlateMay Plenary Meeting

The Fall River Council ofCatholic Nurses will hold itsSpring plenary meeting at St.Anne's Hospital Saturday, l\.'Iay13. Sister Marie Ascension of thehospital staff will be programchairman.

Also on this year's calendar'for the Diocesan group are a. pil­grimmage at LaSalette Shrine' in

·.Octoper and the annual nurses'retreat at Cathedr8l Camp laNovember.

Preliminary plans for a MayCommunion supper were an­nounced by Mrs. Timothy Nev­ille, president of Taunton DistrictThree of the Diocesan Council ofCatholic Women, at a meeting ofcommittee chairmen.

Taunton and Attleboro womenwill attend the supper, to followa dialogue Mass at St. Joseph'sChurch, Taunton. Rev. PatrickHurley, pastor of St. Joseph's,will be celebrant and Rev. Cor­nelius O'Neil, district moderator,will direct the dialogue responses.The' congregation will also par­ticipate in the singing of hymns.

A chicken pie supper will fol­low at Roseland Ballroom, Taun­ton. Members of the Coyle HighSchool Glee Club will entertaiEil

. at the supper.

Children to Wear AlbsFor First Communion ,

MONTREAL (NC) - Childreuof several Montreal parishes' willbe .wearing long white ,albs whenthey, make their First Commun­ion.

The move for plain, similardress. stems from a speech givensome time ago by Paul EmileCardinal Leger, Archbishop 01Montreal. The Cardinal said itis a sign of vanity when mothers

. . spend large sums of money for. dresses, crowns and jewels for

their daughters' First Commun­ion.

Under the new plan, girls willwear the white alb over theirregular clothes and have a sim­ple, white veil as headgear. ~heboys will h!lve a cowl on theiralbs. Each parish rents the albsto parents for ~ smlill fee.

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. VOCATION EXHIBIT: Jacqueline Robert (left), St.Bernard's parish, Assonet and Diane Ferland, Notre Dame,Fall River, both students at Notre Dame grammar school,view collection of 44 nun-dolls, part of vocation exhibit atschool, staffed by Religious of Je~1,l~;Mary.,.

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New Rochelle Faculty Member,To Receive Magnificat Medal '.'

CHICAGO (NC)-,-Mrs; George .a U. S~ Catholic woman's collegeVeragara,associate professor of who has demonstrated out~tand­speech and English at the College ing' leadership and accomplilthoof New Rochelle, N. Y., will re- ment iIi social, cultural and reli­ceive the 1961 Magnificat Medal ~ gious activities.'of l\:iundelein College. Mrs. Veragara, an honor grad-,

. SIster Mary Ann Ida, president uate of the college ,at which sheof 'Mundelein,: said the medal teaches, will, receive the medal.;is given annually to an alumna of from Albert Cardinal Meyer

Archbishop of Chicago, on T\les~GoidenWeddingCoupledaY, April 18.

To Have Special Day UN ConsultantLAFAYETTE (NC) -Couples A consultant to the Economic

,in the Lafayette diocese who and Social Council of the Unitedhave been married 50 years.~ Nations for 13 years, Mrs. Vera­more will be honored May 'f at gara has given more than 100special ceremonies in the Cathe- talks before that council. Shedral of St: John the Evangelist. also, spoke to' !l congress of 1,200

Bishop MaurICe Schexnayder . socillIworkers at the 1958 Brus-of Lafayette' will preside at the oel's World's. Fair. .diocese's first annual, "Gold_Anniversary Day." She is a director 01. the Amer-

Pastors of the diocese have ica~ Association for the UnitedSod I·ty Sal been asked to mail the names of Nabons and a ~ember of the DCCW .Convention

a I . e couples .in their parishe<l who" Cat~olic AssociatIon for Inter- The annual convention of tbeoUr Lady, of GoOd Counsel, have 'been married 50 years or nat~onal Peace. Diocesan Council of CatholicSodality of Holy Family High longer.' A personal' "invitation She.. founded the Catholle·· Women will be held Saturday,School, New Bedford, will spon- .SOl' Ii 'cake sale SatUrday,'April 8" from' Bishop" Schexnayder will" ;Interracial Council of New: May' 6 at St. John the Evangel­

. be extended to each couple to 'Rochel,le and is a director of the ist School, Attleboro. The pro­at the Star Store, New Bedford.' attend the ceremonies. The eveRt New Rochelle'Citizens for Public gram will include registration atP~oc~ds 'from' the 'sale will ". is being c:ospl)Dsored by the . Edueatioo. . . .. H ~nd a luncheon at 1.

help to defray' the expenses of . 'Family Life B'ureau' of the Dio-the Sodalists who will attend the . cese of Lafayette and by theSummer School of Catholic Southwest Louisiana RegiStetr.Action in New York this Sum- diocesan newspaper. .mer.

Miss Cathryn Brower, chair- 0' B 'dman, will be assisted by Anne essert 1'1 geMurphy, Jeanne Harbecl,t,John ' Fall River Queen~s Daughter'sO'Rourke, James Dufficy, John will hold a dessert bridge at 1:30Coocci, and Thomas Doherty. Saturday afternoon, April "8 at

. Hotel Mellel1':.,Proceeds will be&-Name Non-Catholic Tot .efit the" ,White. "SisterS. Mrs.· ...

, f' N .·William'T. DonnellY.is.cha.irm.an,For Patron 0 . un~ 'aided by Mrs: Charleo T. Br", SINGAPORE (NC) - The ·first. co-chairman.,~ .~:' .. ..;baby. .born m Singapore's new .... . ....__~

·CaijJ.olic hospital has been named .:after ·St. Francis of Assisi al­;tho~gh h~6 parents are nOtCatb­oIle.

Francis Chan, fifth child of •Chinese diamond merchant, wuborn in Mount Alvernia Hospitalshortly after its opening.

The $540,000 hospital was buRtand is staffed by Franciscan Mis­sionary Sisters of the DivineMotherhood, wilo provided mostof the money out of their salariesas nurses in government hospi­tals for tuberculosis and. Han­Ben's disease· (l~rosy»~~

On Good FridaY, our homesreflect the somberness. of theday. Children, even the smallest,will perceive that this is a dayset apart. Quietness, a willingcooperative quietness prevailswhen meditation on the Passionof Christ is uppermost. Radio andTV are stilled. There is no idleconversation. Telephone calls arecut to the minimum.

Meals are purposely the sim­plest of the entire year, withperhaps a reading from the Pas­sion preceding dinner. In manyfamilies, as in ours, this is "Hot.Cross Bun" day-the' only des­sert. The Good Friday service inchurch is an inspiring experi­ence, including as it does readingof the Passion, prayers for theintentions of the Church, vener­ation of the Cross and, since1956, reception of Holy Com­munion..

Holy Saturday, now becomingknown as "Great Saturday,"comes with preparation for theEaster vigil and for Easter itself.Everything at home is still sub­dued, .but preparation for theGreat' Feast continues. ComesEaster egg dying, a remembranceof the egg as symbol of the Res­surrection, decorating the eggswith Christian' signs 'such as thechil'iio, c~ndie9, a lamb. ' '.

Easter vigil service, with therite' of Baptism administered 'torecim«:onverts is an electrifyingspiritual experience for' those

,who 'can 'attend. Unfortunately,in many localities, this exp'eri­enctflS Umitedformany becauseof the sIze of the church. .

But there are the EasterMasses for . those' who" can'tsqueeze in for the vigil, and forthose who want to attend stillanother Mass on Easter.' ,

Then come the "d:i:ess:,ups"-:­fruiy Easter bonnets, spanki.p.gwhite gloves, .the hunt fQr Eastf;lr .eggs for c,hildre,n, .first at the!iown home, then at Grandpa's.It's a relaxed,' famiiy day, a vf;lryspecial occasion, a truly religiousfeast. :

Essen&ial17 Religious

~l'tunately, lnspite of effortst9 commercialize-to whip up asecond annual "spend-aU" pe­I'iod - Holy· Week retains itsessentially religious character."l'bis is reflected at your houseand at ours, in all families~oughout the Christian world;

This last intensification starts,of course, with Palm Sunday­now more correctly known l1Ill

the Second Sunday of PaSsion.:.tide with attention concentratedon ·the PaSsion of OUl'LOrd.· The'palms are significant, of course,of Christ's entry into Jerusale'mbailing His Kingship. '

That is why, after tlbe pI'Oces­lion in church, the family mightwell have a procession through­out all the rooms of' the house,tile father asking God to bless.each place to which these p~lms .have been brought, 'and intowhich a woven cross of palms isplaced. .

At our house, the Head of theBouse likes to'play "The Palms",.. that day, with every~

lIotDing in. Though we Imow. 1104;

tbe words, the tune is great.The first few days of: Holy

Week, we try to get cleaning outOf the way, givihg unused cloth­Ing' to those hi 'need. Indeed, wewish that the Bishops' Reliefwould have 11 second clothingdrive now when, if you'll pardonfile expression, income taxes arecoming and we have Dl()re cloth­tog than cash.

Then Holy Thursday, Ubi Car­ba day, one of fraternal chari;ywhen, in reverence for the insti­tution of the Holy Eucharist andof the priesthood, family mem­bers can practice extraordinarykindness and consideration with­lID the home. Following the par­ish, Mass on this evenin~,;whenall grown":up members of thefamily have taken pa.r:t in theeervice, comes Holy Thursdayte8st at home, symboUcof theLaSt Supper. A sense of UbiCaritas prevails: "Where charity~ love abide, there is God."

Easter, Peak of Church·Year;,Is Truly .~eligiou,s 'Holiday

'. By Mary 'rinley DalyAfter three unsuccessful "leads" for this column, the

Head of the House, knowing that a "lead" is like meat for• meal or guests fora party, offered to help. He came upwith "an original, hitherto unpublished poem" whose titleis longer than the verse!Entitled "Easter Is Here" itgoes like this: "Lent Went."More truth than poetry I Bythe time this column is readHoly Week will be over - oreImost over - F;.~;;;~'f:~~:~:H,':~,..depending on rA" ,whether YOU~'I' e c e i v e your I".'paper in the I'mail on Thurs-·day or pick itap at church on .",Sunday.

Holy Week­peak of' theChurch's litur­,leal year.

Thanks tQ thenvision of theliturgy of HolY W~ek' es~blisJied... 1956, the people are enabledBlore closely to participate in theceremonies of the Church in this

. the most important season. Be:.8id8 it, Christmas is secondary~ ,

SUpreme Court JusticeTo Address D of I Club

Ron. William E. Powers, asso­.ate justice of the Rhode IslandSupreme Court, will be princi­pal speaker at the biennialluncheon of the MassachusettsPast Regents Club, Daughters01. Isabella, on Sunday, April 9lit the Red Coach Grille, Boston.

~I's. Lillian Riley, president,... announced that reservatiODQ~st be ~llde b!' Wedn~sdllJ'.Ap!ril 5, with' Mrs. Ellen' Mll!'­~, 54 prospeet StFeet, New­~rt.

(;olden Anniversary"all River Catholic WomanlalClub will mark its 50th anniver­sary Sunday afternoon, April 30with a 4:80 Mass at Sacred HellltCh.urch, followed by • batlquet,

..... Wbl................ '.

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"10 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. 'Mar. 30, 1961 ;,c

HOLY THURSDAY BLESSING OF OILS AT CATHEDRAL: Topleft, the urns for the three oils - Chrism, Oil of the Sick, and Oil of theCatechumens - along. with the smaller container of balsam are l'eadie'd

, in Cathedral vestry. Botton left, Bishop Connolly pauses after consecrating

the Sacred Chrism as one of the twelve Assistant Priests kneels andsalutes the sacred oil. Right, the assistant priest kisses the urn containingthe newly consecrated chrism. Blessing takes place at Mass of ChrismHoly Thursday morning.

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. Catholic UniversityIncreases Salaries

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheCatholic University of Americahas announced an annual salaryincrease of $500 for fulltime layfaculty members and $200 annu­ally for priests on the faculty.

Msgr. William J. McDonald,university rector, who made theannouncement, also said .thatFrancis G. deBettencourt will behis personal representative for

'furthering university expansion.Mr. deBettencourt was the co­ordinator of sponsored researchat the university. .

Sign Estimates 900,000 Catholics Catholic Youth Liturgical Conference AnnouncesIn Secular Colleges by 1970 Edit Magazine" Nationwide Membership Drive

UNION CITY (NC) - There "Father Bradley l1as noticed Ab t.....· .WASHINGTON (NC) - The of the-Church must be lifted ..will be 900,000 Catholics attend- that Catholic undergraduates OU .~a.zls national Liturgical Conference, active par,ticipation is' to being secular colleges and univer- . fluctuate between active reli- . DUESSELDORF (NC) is launching the "biggest mem- "sities by 1970, compared to .about. g~ous practice and ipactivity. " Germany's Catholic Youth' bershlp drive in its 22'"year' his-" more 't~an external conform"

, " 400,000 in Catholic institutions;' , Fat~er Br~dler, like m~n>, New- ", ., .. tory," Father Frederick R. to law. .'<Sign m~gazine has esti!l1l;lted.: man ~haplain~, reports'a greater" ,Fede!.atio,~,~edit,ing'.~a ~ie- McManus, the president;' an-: '. John B.MannioJ1; the Lit\nlOo

. The monthly published here loss of. faith· through romantic ture magazme. re,mmdmg Bounced here. gical Conference's' executiVlOsaid that· today Catholics at·. entanglements than.' intellectual; G.ermans of "the .totalitar.j~nism "If the sacred l-iturgy is to secretary is conducting the memo-Hstate secular and' Protestant- difficult,ies,'" . . . of .Hitler's ,Ge:rmany and. the. have its proper place in the'con-., bership c~mpaign, .Mr. ManniOlll

;': related colleges ~n'd uriiveb~ties" . , . . ..... .' ,totalitarianism of R~sia'::; Ger- sciousness of the Church m defined the conferenCi!. thtIJ'), . total 500,000 . 'Yhile there are Ask :Referendum '. ~any, the S~v:.iet East Zone. . America," he said,"more priests; way:.

'- ": 275,000 students' at 256 U. S. ". . ." ,The, magazlOe, known a::;, .Kon- and' people must become 'active, . ,"'It is. a voluntary assoCiatioaCatholic 'institutions of :higher, On Bus Bill,,:· . ,- tra~, (~ontrast),: is a~,a,nsw~. in the progrci'm of renewal out- .. of bishops, priests, Religio.us and '

'," education. . . AUGUSTA '(NC)~Th' .' . .:. .. 110 the char~l,!,that Ger~ans Will lined by the Holy See." ley. people who are' interested/' ., S'g' 'te' "lower·costs'prox.. · . . ." .. ' .. . ree mm., not deal With the eXistence ol '. '. t' t ._.' 1 n Cl s . . . '.' " Isterlal aSSOCIatIons have issued' '. . . ,.' " ,Father McManus, a member of 1n,promo 109 gi"ea, er. apprecla- .i.,,: ' Imity to'· home, specIal COurses, . 'f ....., '. . hI ·t·lli· f'" n~zlsm.,in Ger~any:s hl~tOry.. the. Canon Law faculty at· the.. ti9n of. the Church's worshi~

. . h' " thl t' " . t·· a ,our-i>age pamp e ..ca .~g or The magazine's first,. issue. d . 11' i t' . <OJ...-!,' scholars IpS, a e IC gran s, .. a' referendum on the controver- ' ''''.'' .. . qath~lic University of Ameri:- '.' . an .especla .~ In ass s Ing~n u,_, ,I lower. admission requirements, '. l' "'h" '1 b'b' 'II .,.' be'f' carnes, ,pl1oto.s .and reports of ea, said more than 55,000 let- implementatIon of the Ho.. Slasc 00 us 1 now ON h' . 'tr' 'ted' b th . ,

graduate opportumtles or famuy th" tate 1 . It' '. orr.ors r>~rpe a. .. y. e naZI .ters are b~ing mailed in the see's instructio~ and wisheltradition" among reasons Cath- ~~eglS a ur~: h ill bel regime: It declares that the past first pha~ of the campaign. eoncerning active congregationalolics choose a non-Catholic iR- . e ~easure,.w lC. . ore must be faced even though' The letters will go to all pas- participation in the Mass.",stitution. . the lledglslat~dre In btl~o bVer~I?~~ young Gerql~ns.knowlittle of it.· .. "B' i h te th· to wou provl e pu lC us rIUQ> Kontraste also records how tor'S and· diocesan clergy in the -,------------.

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' a ,verM he. rea.so~~ for private school students. . Germ.ans fought bravely and in U.S., to 'some 15,000 lay people, .says e 19n s arc Issue, ~1o ."." • . . .,' .' .'. • to religious orders, and to maD¥is clear that. the majority of po- T~ree,Aroost~k Cou.nty Mm- large numbers ~gal~st Hi.tlenSID, Catholic institutions. 'tential Catholic lay leaders.'win istepal. associabons Issued. a, and gave thea' livee m thatbe the products of non-Catholic pamphlet. calI,ing ~or a ~tatewld.e, s~~ug.~le. '... '" .'. '.....1, ,. The, second phase af. the,~riV'8

referendUm re to f' 1 It that 1iben rot}.;. wi.ll..include efforts to reach na- 'su "higher education for decades to· . . ' ~ ,a 1 n.o a speCla " say,s ...man! ...• :a tional,.aiOcesan and parish 01'- .; U'IVA'NBROS.coines." ' . , '. Ghurch-State'. prinCiples com- lion German, men and womelt., g~nizatioos .0.fie.y ........pIe.'.: ,', . ',',' . ,

'Some LoSe Faith ·'·'m.ittee':md tabling ofJ~e,SchooJ, ..w.ereth~9Win into. ~n~ntratiOft· ..-~'. '. , ..... ' . bus ':blll . iiitroduced' bt Sen. camps Qefore the war fqr. po- 'Father .. ':McManUB said,.; "the

, The' SIgn quotes .Father John . Sylvie) 'J. Gilbert.__ .", . , l-itical reasons only; and' toot in level of ,knowledge' and ,under- ':Fla'. ~r~tdtleh'y; UNe~ma?tClufbMc?ahJ?- . . ,. .. <itiote Preside~': the saine pe'riod 225,000 men and standing' of too sacramental life

In a e Olversl.Y.. O. lC 1- . . .' women who . resisted, ·..nazism.. ., '.gan, asestiniatting ·that "about The pamphlet said that· "in t~· were' sentenced by Dam .courts :' "'"Hospi~ol'DriYe10 per. cent of the Catholic stu- light of, President ~ennedy's to a total of 600000 years in .dents abandon their faith during rece?t ple~ for 'res~r~int' in con- jail. Kontraste sai'd there' were BANGOR' (NC) - Dr. ABaft'the four years on campus; some necbon With pubhc support of 'extra-legal executions by ~. Woodcock heads a campaign forreturn to the sacraments in later parochial school ,aid, there niust Gestapo but DO ·statistic.s of $800,000 to help finance a newyears. , be proof" that Sen. ,Gilbert's bHl these e~ist. St. Joseph's Hospital here. The'

"On the other hand;" the mag_ "w111 not be used by churches for campaign was launched at a din...azine adds, "between 150 and 200 undue advantages aPpertaining Liturgy Study ner attended by 250 resdents ofnon-Catholics annually enroll for to ChiJi'ch-State relationships." PATERSON (NC) _ Bishop Bangor and neighboring com-instructions in the faith and an . "When Sen. Gllbert' hea~d that James A. McNulty has announced munities: MSgI",' Edward C. 0'­average of 60 students a yeal ar-e a statewide . referendum was that the Liturgical Commission Leary; diocesan chancellor, watt

baptized. being proposed, he said: "... I of the Paterson diocese will the principal speaker.consider it unfair to attempt to sponsor a thre~-day study of too' .---------------------------~foist a statewide vote OR thiS liturgy April 8-10. . SH'ELL "'Premsum'" Heating Oilsissue. I favor allowing each com-munity to make up its own mind, . Famolls Reading HARD COAL ~";'D' ri~and that is exactly what my bill OI"fhe Family That NEW ENGLAND COKE .ifii§~Wj "'O~~provides." ........,;;; _

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H ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30, 196-1 11

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consecrated. Center, Bishop mixes balsam in a dish for Chrism. Right.Bishop pout'S balsam into urn of olive oil for the Oil of Chrism.

Missioners to Bolivia Now HopeTo Add Spiritual Results

NEWARK (NC)-U. S. dioce- rive, he said, completed a churchsan priests serving as mission- started by the Maryknoll Fath­aries in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, hope ers. They also began building ato add spiritual results to the rectory.

. list of changes they have already In July, 1960, they were joinedmade there. by seven more members of the

So reported Fathet' Martin R. society, which was then placedKelly, a priest of the Newark in charge of two priestless par­archdiocese who went to Santa ishes and charged with foundingCruz less than D year ago as a a new parish, St. Joseph themember' of the Society of St. Worker. There Father Kelly andJames the Apostle. The society Father George Flynn of Bostonwas founded in 1958 by J;t~chard are building a rectory and plan­Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of ning a church.Boston, to send diocesan priests Sickness and Deathto Latin America as missionaries. .As for the life of the people,

SpiritulW Good Fat\1er Kelly said, "sickness and"By July' of 1961," Father d~ath are a common affair,'espe..

Kelly said in a letter home, "the. clally among the children.",Society of st. James will have He told of visiting a sick',child.contributed to the Diocese of 1ft the same room neighborhood~anta Cruz 13 priests, three- w.omen busily served a burialpossibly four-rectories, a COR- dx:ess ·fol' the youngster. Askedvent to house three nuns soon to if they had sent for the doctor,.arrive from Spain, and two the women only shuggged.churcl;les. And may we add e-.. They might be able to pay forpectantly, a great deal of spir- the doctor, Father Kelly e_itual good in the ~ry near plained, but they could neverfuture." have afforded the medicines be -I

The f,trst three priests to llI'- would prescribe.

Dub' ·to ProtectJustice Tom Clark; sPeaking

for himself and four other jus­tices, said: "Chicago emphasizes.here its duty to protect its' peopleagainst the dangers of obscenityill the public exhibition of ID6-

lion pictures. A."To this ai"gument (Times gency Gets Grant·

"Film's), only. answer is'that re- .NEW YORK (Nt::) - Thegardless Of the capacity for or ,~ockefeller F 0 u n d a t i oin aA;"the extent: Of .an evil,' preY-i";" nounced hehre it has made aous restraaiht cannot be justified. $10,000 grant to Catholic .ReliefWith ,this we cannot .agree'." Services-National Catholic Wei-'

Foe,," Disse~ ~re Conference to help the re..,Foul'justices dissented. Chief li~f ()rganization of U. S. Cath­

Justice Earl Warren said, in his olics to meet the expense of itsdissent that the majority ruling program of caring for Cuban"presents a real danger of even- refugees in this country..tual censorship for every fOFm _

of communication."The ruling was sharply 00­

tacked by various communica­tions and entertainment mediaorganizations. The Times Corpor­ation, ·in its petition for rehe8'r­ing, said the ruling's effects were''so far reaching that it ought tobe made crystal clear" on whatgrounds it was based. .

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BISHOP CELEBRATES HOLY THURSDAY MASS OF CHRISM:Left, Bishop Connolly reads preparatory prayers over the. oil to be

Churchmen Accused of Aiding Nazi Supreme Co u r tActua lIy Risked Death for Jews / . Refuses Review

ROME (NC) -A Bishop and that provided needy Jews with Of FOI D··two priests who have been ac- funds and documents, and helped I m eCISIOncused in the popular press of 1,500 of them find safety ia 'WASHINGTON (NC)-helping nazi chieftan Adol£ America. The U.S. Supreme Court hasEichmann escape Italy for Helped! Thousands refused to review its recentArgentina actually risked im-prisonment and death to help Father Weber was assisted by decision 'upholding p r i·G rJews escape Nazi persecution, F'ather Benedetto, a Capuchin, . censorsh.ip of movies.according to a Rome magazine. who was described by the The court turned down wfth-

The three clergymen iny.<;>lved headquarters' of his Order as ' out comment a petition for Pe­

ate Bishop Louis Hudal, titular': having. "belped thousands ot hearing submitted by the TimeIJBishop of Ela and at p'r~sent a" Jews." Capuchin officials .also Film Corporation.

, C'~ultor of the Sacred' Congre-'c, denied having harbor~ Eich- 'The court, in a case brought,gation of the Holy Office~ Father. mann at the inter·national col- by the Times Corporation, held .Benedetto da Bourg d'lre., O..F.M. lege of ~e <;:ap~chins in Rome. ori. Jan: 23 that it is constitu-

t They acknowledged a possib,ility. .. C . to, Cap., and Father An ,hoDY tional for the city of hlcago·Weber, S.A.C. I, that Eichmann, ~ing aA a8-' require that movies be shown

H dal sumed name, was one 01. the fAustrian-born Bishop . u . .many who h.adhad oontact with 'to a city licensing board be ON

. was rector of t.he German Col-', . Father Benedetto. they are generally exhibited.i,' lege at the Church of Santa; 'The case involved the movie

dell'Anima in Rome from :4932 A. I"' P ° h A °d '"Don Juan," which the Times,10 1952. During the war 'years,· n9 Ica.. arls I SCorporation had refused to'sub-Bishop Hudal helped~more::than" Catholics,Methodists, .' mit to the Chicag6 film .re~w3,000 Jew.s escap.e from n.llzi,ter-' ' ... PERTH (NC)-Parishioners of board.rorists, sheltering many of them St. Peter's A.nglicim parisJi here ,within the walls of the college. in Western" Australia . have

Protest fOl' Jews donated $180 to' help relluild aOn 0 tober 16 1943 Bishop Catholic and a Methodist church .

BudaI ;rotested 'to a'GermeR which .were destroyed in recent .general in Rome against the per- brushf~es southwest of here.secution of the Jews, and WOll The gifts were presented tothem a brref respite from perse- Father Harry .Brennan and thecution. .' : ."-Rev. S. Jenkins, pastOl' ot the

His protest was latIN" de-'" town of Dwellingup,' about 50scribed by a Jewish publication' , miles from Perth. The two werein Rome as a "courngeous net introduced' to the 'gathering hereperformed by no one else.~ ..',,' by the Rev. Ralph Thomas, who

As to llJl1Y' dealings with Eich-' ,said he hoped the gesture of hismann, Bishop Hudal told 'Villa Anglican parishioners 'Would in-:that "after 1945 more than 4() spire other congregations to siJn,..' ,people came to ine" car~ying nar acts.Nansen passports, which are is- Father Brennan told the groupsued to stateless persons under that the gift would not be putterms of the Geneva convention. into rebuilding St. Matthew'sThese people told Bishop Hudal church at Dwellingup, but wouldthat they "were persecuted b¥ be used to buy something for thethe Soviet'S as anticommunists altai." of the new chl,ll'ch. Heand that their lives We'l'e ill promised that the altar piecegrave danger," he said. would be engraved as a perma-

Nazi List nent record of the fact that it'ft\e Bishop pointed out that wa~ a gift fro~ t~ ~ngiican

he was a priest and not a police- pansh of Perth s Vlctorl~ Parkman. He said: "1 can neither an~.n token .of. the ~mvel'salaffirm n(}l' deny that Eichmarun desIre for ChrlstJan ul'U~

was also among those refugees t------------------------.....-"""lIbecause none of them confessedto me their past im the ThirdReich, and moreover Eichmann'sphotograph was net known tome at that time."

Bishop Hudal said that himname had been placed on a listof those to be ai'rested b\Y tOOnazis.

Father Weber, a Pallottinepriest, directed the St. Raphaelorganization which during theperiod 04: peroocution gave hetpto more th8!rl 25,000 Jewa. It~ted wi1h orgon~

Page 12: 03.30.61

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.}Vhat. 'iii 'the, Il'overnmimt doing with,. its, Peace Corps exceptfinitating m', a' secular way wiiat thl2 missionaries of the Churchha.ve.' been doing for twenty centuries? The government wantsyou to help people in the name o~ America; the Church callsiOlll to 'save ,people in the name of Christ. The government wantsyou to' voiunteer; Christ called 'you to offer yourself as a 5JOidierof ,Christ on the day 'of'your Confirmation.

Has the role the laity played at the tirst Easter ever beennoted? They were the first at the tomb early on Easter mom: "MaryMagdalene, an~ Mary the mother of James, and Salome came withspices to anoint Jesus," The fact that they brought sPices to anointthe tocly of Jesus ana their worry about who would roll back thelarge stone in front of the tomb prove that they were not expectingthe Resurrection. FInding the tomb empty and "the stone movedaway from the tomb door," Mary Magdalene "came running to SimonPeter and that other disciple whom Jesus loved, saying,They havecarried the Lord away from the tomb and-we cannot tell wherethey have taken Him."

" WIH you jotD a Chi-1St:Co~?' Will YCHI pay yoUI' way to the'missions' and hac'k?· Bot' you nlust have skills--as a nurse, ateach'er, an electrician. Send us' yoUr name and qualiflcatl-oBB andwe will give your-name to a missionary bishop who In turn will

, eontaet you., 'Our addres's:366 Fifth Avenue. New York 1.'New York., <',

, The EaSter iesson f.or- this Yeai' of 1961 Is, th.ls: ~l~ved lalt,.,blessed people of (}od! You. are called to a"more eommunal lifewith the Church. There' will be moments'when tour' sanctitywrit be a' goad and a spur to ,us .priests andbtShops; YOU willeven "force"us into action as Magdalene moved Peter. But it,~iil 'always' be Peter 'and the ApostleiJ:'Who will' give you theauthority to work. You good people' have a desire for sanctifica-

, tion, Ii yearning for dedi~ation, ~~passi,)n, for apostolate whichmany of us in' the Church have noi yet tapped or utilized. But

, now "Peter 'alid those who, w~re with him" summon you to ashare:'iJi our apostleship. We want 1'011 to be catechists, that Is,teachers 'of the.unbtHievers; we summon you to the missions,eJiPecially those.of ~oa who have:.no skills.

, '.'

The ,dead', are 'every,where iii the world-dead to sin, entombedin ignorarice,buried in want, sepulchered in loneliness. 'The Churchn·eeds.you, under, Peter and the Apo~es, to teach them, heal them,hospitalize-them that the Risen.Christ may make their tombs empty,that th~y '~ay walk in. tlie hewn~ss of the joys of 'the ResurrectioB.

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HATHAWAY.,OIL CO. ,INt

The laity were the first to witness the bare fact of the Resur­rection, a pfivilege which shall never be taken from them. Andalthough the laity were not expecting theResurrection any more than Peter. andJohn, they nevertheless set these Apostles

MISSION BISHOP.,'.' Fr. in motion. Speaking lightly, it 'was they,who told Peter to' get' a move 'on, to·.

Vincent McCauley, \C.S.C., '~, investigate the ,facts and the~ to make the,native of Council Bluffs, . official declaration that Christ':'had risen."Iowa, has been 'nalried', by ," ,,' .'.Pope John as bishop. o.J. the. - ~'From that point on tn hist6~y;,both the

hierarchy. and the laity ha:v~:functi~ned asnewly created diocese of ~~rt'· a,.Unit. That is yvhy we 'fhid' ScriP~Ure at,Portol in Ugand~; E~st, one time desCribing the faithful ~ as . ~~qseAfrica NC Photo r ':",who were "rlth the Twelve" and the Apostles ,

. . . as uthose who were with Peter." In mOderniangullge: thebisb,ops are with, the HolyFather,' 'the laity with and under the hier­~hy go.verned by~e Vicar of Christ.,'

Emphasizes l-angllage

"We do a great- dis~ervi~ .~, ourselves and to those whom' we

teach, if we think that teaching,cultural background is teaching. a language. There must be a

subtle blend of both elements,with an emphasis on becomingproficient in reading and pos­sibly even speaking Latin;". ~said. -"Latin has a' valuable' contribu­

tion to make to our 'overallefforts to improve curriculum.and instruction," he said. uTherewill always be found those 'stU"..dents who are willing to do, alittle more than the minimwn.We think that providing 'an op­portunity for such students iri thefield of Latin will be'of ~mensevalue to them and. to the' futuro ,welfare of our'country." ,

Parish Home Show'FLORISSANT (NC)· "7 Par- GOD LOVE- YOU 110 Mrs; J.E. for $2 "In thanksgiving for the

ishes where the traditional fund graces we .have received. in the past." • • . to M. for $10 . . . to, raising ventures have run out of 'B.V.O. for .. $5 "I made out my own income tax return and saved

,: steam might take a leaf from (the fee I would, nave had to "Pay an accountant."'the book of Good Shepherd ,. " -,--here in Missouri. The parish' '. Cut' out this coli.unn; pili your sacrifice to it and mafl it to thesponsored a home show, with Mo!ltRev. Fulton J .. , Sheen;- National Director of the Society foradmission one dollar per person, the Propagation·of ,the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y..featuring exhibits by more than,- or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,30 home suppliers and manu- 3~ No~ ....~tiir:' Stree~ FaH River, MaS3.

, facturers. .

lated by extending that aid, inany form, to students pursuingtheir education c outside thatframework, he is eminently en­titled· to speak out, as Mr. JohnF. Kennedy.

He is not the only Catholicwho thinks this way, and thereis certainly no indication thathe would' be penalized 'for sodoing.

Ponders Enforc'ingAncient State Law

MONTPELIER (NC)-A statelegislator resurrected a NewHampshire law passed in 1797­and now is wondering about theadvisability of enforcing it. .

The law specifies that toopeople of New Hampshire can-

'oris Police Seize not use the highways on Sun­days, except to attend, religious

iCatholic Paper services and retlir!i'home; WitIt- 'iNDusmAi. ,01.1'PARIS ,(NC) ....,.. Paris police out the permission of a justice

seized a complete issue of the of the 'peace. HEAT~G. ,0&$,:" '- ,--;._Ca~holic wee k l·y :Tem'oignage ,', 'State Sen. Marshall DunhamChretien (Christian Witness) of Franklin County some monthsTIMKINfeaturing reports by ~ge.riluis ,,:ago, <tisco~eted a well-preseryed',; , '; , ';'. " ,liv~ in Paris on violence per:- copy of the old statute while he Oft. BURNERSpetrated against .. ,them ,by: ait -was,engaged in settling an estate.' ,',,', - .·c· ", .',' . '~" i\.'

aux)liary pOllce force cOmposed Mr. 'Dunham said he has found Sales. & Selviee"of ~lgerians, , "no, evIdence that the law eYer

•. The weekly final appeared 'was repealed.' 'minus the reports but with three ':I'm going t'o make sure first,"empty 'pages bearing the single the Senator commented with' awotli, "Censored." grin. "If it hasn't, been repealed,

The .auxiliary police force ·of-~ '1- giiess 'riI.lru'n 'forjt1stice of theAlgerians was formed here a peace and set myself up to ea-year ago. . force thiso~e. la,w~" , _ .. _. ~,

~~":o,(~~' ...(.•...:c....;..::~ ..;..;.:.;..'\.~,~.;.,....:-, \ ."' ... :.... .....~,,-,,;.~.:~; ....<..,;.~,~,/;..:.~- ...,;,",..,...:.........-~ ..........~.............. .- ........-:.-.::~......"'-A.~ .......... -..... ••~••, ......... ~',. _ ... ~' .' ... -~~""~""'" ,. :.

1,~!, T~~'I~~~,~~,~~,:'i,~C,~~~:,~.~~I ~:~~r-T,~~r~.M~~;~~~~::,l!~(

Suggests President Po~derLimiiatcons of Infallibility

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.Bishop of Rene

There is U'Maffi'l"lg 'delight in recalling that loyal son'of Erin who regretted that the Pope was not an Irishman,for then he could be so much more infallible. Somehow thisoome to mind when we read, the other day, that PresidentKennedy, at Mass at HolyTrinity, Georgetown, hadlistened to a sermon onInfallibility. The Protestantpress took this in rather bad part,commenting that it was a pitythat he was notfed more timelyspiritual far e.But aside fromthe question ofnutritive value Subject to Errorof dogma, it But when he speaks as thewould seem that President of the United States;the topic was of and speaks in a way quite clearlyparticular time- meant to close debate, then weliness. Infalli.. have the right and duty to object.bility is in dan- He is not infallible; he is as sub-~er of spreading ject to error as any other Amer-like mumps. ican, :

The Jesuit preacher was at When he lends the weight ofpains to delimit, with theological his office to the support, of aexactitude, the sphere of Papal particular thesis, a debatable Latin Study

....lnfaUibility, stressing that it was thesis at best, then he does a. .. t' to th se who Continued from, Page Onemuch less a matter of defining grave mJus Ice 0

everything in sight than a guar- must reply without that enor- matter said, gives the study of.antee against error on the rare molts moral power of persuasion. '"Latin "an added ~ignificance."occasion when definition be- By his intransigence he has .~.! Father Strittmatter said thecomes necessary. forced ~he American Hie~archy.,study of Jhe Roman cultural her-

So emphatic was he on this into the unpleasant positIon, of, itage "is another notable factor"point that some blithe reporters opposing him on an issue ~here,._in Latin courses, but he addedpresent concluded that -th.ere ,was' "opposition was unnecessary. that "it must .necessarily take ~a

no Infallibility left worth speak- Quota of Trouble second place in any,' language.ing of, and sO informed·their For that, in the current phrllse, \ course." ,readers. . . .', , ,is the operative idea. There was

Here is a cautionary for those ,'reaihr no need for the 'President'who preach to Presidents: The to take such a position or to dic­Holy Office may be looking over ' tate the terms of his legislation.your manuscript.· ..,' . ;" He wants Federal· aid,' for

Salutary·Reminder..;>, "... ,:;-;sc~'ools, well andgoo~, Tl:ier~ a~eFor Mr. Kennedy, surely, this those who believe that sU?h aId

was no novel doctrine. Papal is inevitable. and . ~ssentIal toInfallibility pales to inconse- correct the mequltIes of ,thequence beside the infallibility American system; there are thoseof the average man, not to say wh-o oppose it ?s the ente~ing(

too average President. wedge o~ educa?on~ltyr~nnr' .Without any wish to sharpen' If he IS to gaIn ,hIS pomt It IS

'he critical axe we would wish- actually for Congress' to spell·,~hat Mr. Kenn~dY reflect upon out the terms 6f ~ligibility andthe strict limitations of the Papal for the Courts, ultImatel?" ~ de­prerogative by way of a salutary cid~. upon the .con~tItutIonalreminder of his own fallibility. valIdIty of the legIslatIOn.

For there would seem to be a Prudence would seem t? dictate,tendency on his part to pontifi- .,)on the J?art of the. PreSIdent, ,ancate mucH more positively, on a open ml~d on POInts, not a?~­much wider range of subjects, lutely settled by the famIlIarthan the occupant of Peter's "due pro~e~". It is hard to resis~Chair would ever think of doing. the suggestion that Mr. Kennedy

Q t· f C has gone fishing for trouble andues Ion or . ongress has caught his quota.

The obvious instance in point, Ask Prudent Reserveof cours'e, is the President's It is perfectly understandable:.:omment on the e?,clusion of the that the first Catholic President,')rivate and relIgious schools elected by the thinnest pluralityfrom his Federal educational bill. . should be reluctant to :ideilt~::-Ie pronounced tha: aid of ~y himself as supporting a measureform to no.n-p,ublic education which, by any imaginativewas unconstItutIonal. stretch couid be labelled Cath-

He did not suggest that there olicwas any' room for debate in the B~t in this instance we are notmatt~r, or that it might' be a asking ~or his support, only for

~'Iuesbon for the .Congr~ss ~nd his prudent reserve. ~here'con­,he Courts to deCIde. HIS mInd stitutional experts are divided,'Nas made up, and he spoke out as on the present issue andwith that franknesb which is not where the Supreme Court'decJ­:he least endearing of his quali- sions are of such dubious appli­',ies. But he spoke as one dellv- cability that, to say the least,cring as near to an infallible pro- would ~eem to be the part of!10Uncement as it is possible to wisdom.ma~e without actually saying so. .After all, we are quite content

Has Right to Opinion with one Pope in the Vatican.Now we have not the slightest Another__ in the White House

'lbjection to Mr. Kennedy when might prove distracting.:le voices an opinion or evinces::trong feeling on any suhject.'fhat is his right as a citizen.

In the question at issue there isno involvement of Catholic doc­~rine. If he honestly believes that~~ederal aid to education canonly be extended' to mstitutionsolperated by the State, or that:00 :Constitution would be vio-

Page 13: 03.30.61

At.thisgloriOus

.Easter:Timebuy ..••

Easter

SealsHELP

CRIPPLED

CHILDREN

This M.essage is Sponsored B', The Fonowing IndividualsGnd Business Concerns iD Greater Fall River.:

13

..."

Ann Dale Products, Inc. Brady Electric Supply co. .Enterprise Brewing Co. GlObe Manufaduring Co. Gold Medal Bread

lalernational Ladies Gannent Worken Union Mason Fvmitvre Showrooms, .

GetvId Eo McNaU~ Contractor George R. Mode, Plumber

Sobiloff Brothers Sterling 8e¥erages, Inc.

'lextile Wodcea Union of AmeIIica, AFL-CIO

/

CaScade Drug Co.

Hutchinson Oit Co.

MacKenzie & Winslow. Inc... ....

Plymouth Printing Co... Inc.

Yellow Cab Company

Page 14: 03.30.61

. '.,'-'

e14 .THE ~NCHOR-'Dioc:~se of.F;a'!}L~eJ-::":llU{~;'l,\a~ ...3~:-,1J61t,\ :tB~ishoj)s !~See:lt~'ly

.L' d r " t· I 'I- "" - t ·lForemo;s·tl';Maker~: ',' au .5 lIdI<ana or S'~, \~\I,eWpQln.j·

On -DiffQ!Jsion p{ P9'W~,1',·O!o~~~(~.nGt.~~~By Msgr.George, G. Higgins. ' .., 'Bishops have wimed that

, .' .' Director, NCWC Social Action Department" . [taly is apparently on the way," , ... , . Pr'esident Kennedy's recent ·ni·essage6n. '~he' farm to hecoming' the" foremost:_·i'li~r.,Qblem recommended that authority to draft 'a 'domestic '. producer of "rhor~.lly nega.-.. :,agricultural program be ~hifted from the Congr.ess'to the tive movies" in the ·worlci.~..'Citizens directly concerne.d. Unde,r. hjs ':pl~n 'agricultural Their pastoral letter followed

months of debate raging' incommodity programs will' beistered by' the Federal govern- political, journalistic and artistic

.~ .drawn up by a commodity 'ment. We could have decentral- circles over violence, sex andadvisory committee elected .il~ea· .. administration, 'fith. the sensationalism in Italian movies.by producers of the various .' government financing part of the The Bishops' joint letter noted

.crops, The proposals of each . cost, with" the responsibility that in 1960 "the percentage ofcomlpittee would be submitted 'lodged in: states and localities morally unacceptable movies in-for approval by and' ia" increasing measure in creased in an impressive way.the Secretary of . voluntary organizations outside Within the fiamework of worldA g ric u I _ of government. . production Italy unfortunatelyture who, in "That is one of the needs of seems to be advancing toward a

" "turn, Vi 0 u 1d'life today ... namely, '. that we,.. sad primacy of morally negative· 'silbmit them to should. have constituentso'cieties movies.",.:. 'referendum of between the individual and the LEADERS AT usa SESSION': Several hundred dele- Brutality, Perversioll· the respective . state. which can perform very gates from all over the counf.- .attended 'the'sixth annual 'The Bishops asserted that re-'. 'producers. vital functions in the field of . -, cent Italian movies portray life, "';'The Adminis- insurance, in the field of health, usa National Council meeting in Washington. Pictured as an uninterrupted flow ofbru-'" trillion contends and in the field of the distribu- above at the meeting are: Edward B. Hariify of Boston, a tallity, licentiousness and sexual.;·.that thi's pro- tion of charity," Fall River native, chairman of the National 'Catholic perversion.,. posal is com- One Step Further Community Services who was elected a USO· vice-president; "'Considered in general there is, .pelled by a rec- Douglas. has Iiere suggested aMP no sign in them of an efort to

'ognition that is it increasingly very practical appiication of the sgr. aul Tanner,. general secretary' of the National understand and accept the spir­difficult for the Congress to so-cailed prmCiple' of robsidiar- Catholic Welfare Conference; and the Hon·. Stephen Jack- itual dimensions of man," the

...legislate effectively in the com- . ity which holds such an import- son, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense. NC Photo. Bishops declared.plex area of commodity ~ro- ant place in. Catholic -social . "Every human activity mustgrams. teaching.. . Two Pastors Take Pres.8 dent's suhmit to objective moral norm,"

The President said: "I am.' Very often this principle 'm they said.':'deeply concerned,., that ourinteriireted too rigidly' to mean Presence at' Mass 'in Stride' "A fr-eedom that claims to be"farm program is drifting inti> a 'that voluntary groups, unaided . an end in' itself develops fatally"'c'h'aotic state, piling up surpluses, .by the government, siiould WASHINGTON (NC) - How Sermons 'that could be takel\ into shameless license and an-~:-'Jle'rtalizin'g efficiency, rewarding ~handle theIr own'probfemsto the does it feel to preach a sermon in. a political ~ense aren't the a.rchy."q liI'ertia and non-compliance, and ~ fullest possible extent and' that with the President of the United .'only hazard. Father Casey said 'The letter emphasized that'''''~~hstantly being torn and weak- "the government, unaided by the' States in the congregation? th~tafter a ta~k on papal infalli- . "the demand for morality in the'i·.!ened 'by disputes and conflicting volunuiry groups, ~liould handie According to the two priests bility which he gave in the Pres- movies does not mean to ignore

pressures." . ..' ·:those problems whlchthe.voluh";. in a 'position to' know' best; the . ident's pr·esence,.he received evil existing in, the world 01' to~'t,J "He suggested the situation 'tary .groups are unable. tOtak. presidential presence 'is a 'source letters of cODurtent and critfcism run away from. the· great prob-·,d....ould be itDproved if Congress .care of themselves.' ,~", ';. ' " : - . of. both new prObi.eins and newf.rOm, all '·9~er."t~ COun~.M· ~ms assailing our times."'/'jltiengthened by Administration's At the present time·,thevoltu.~· ·opportunities.··· '. well as overseas.' . . : .But the Bishops·implored pro-t;'luiiiority"to exercise responsible . tary... orgariizationil, 57are: :"eoR"," . But Fathers Martin'J:Casey, Father Pereira' emphaSized ducers, writers and 'ac~ors to put,r"leadership" in 'consultation 'with sulted'~:about,the adminiStration'. ·S.J" and Albert.F; .pereif:aboth that he 'wap.ts to do andgy ,. out films f'teaching people to live\~':those farmers' most concerned." : of ciertam laws:): DOiigias .•wOtitd insisHhat·it doesn't JD.llke them .nothing 'th~t"eQuid .be, taken aa.llDd tQ ,hope.'!·, • . , .\ 'j'.<! ' . / Long Advocated -go-one' step further and"author- ner:vous.·" , . , , "e~loit~pg'1 th~'Pr~sidenVfl pre&- 'l;'hey ~aUed for movies "which

.. ' , ',. • rizethe: vo!untafy ~)l;gariizationS . Between them the two prlests ence. .' . ." .' can help our people'to face' their. A ~l,Ishmg~on ne.wspa,per,.in ,actuallY,. to adniinister. certain ,figure to' pr~ach the bulk of the Asked ifbe .considered news- everyday. problems with cou'rage, .' reportmg the ,PresI,dent~, pro- laws:" '. . ' .'" . . . . sermons President Kennedy will 'pa~coverllieof his. sermOns a and confidence,: which promote

pOJHlI c~ar1,lcterlzed It as revo- B k N G oaiuI . .' hear for the next few years chance, i9'. rea'chpeople· with lofty and. noble 'sentiments re-lutionary." B\lt it is not at all H' rbea sk' ew r 'd '- Father Casey is pasto~ of vihom he' would ftot otherWl·'serevolutionary .. e IS. rea mg new groun UJ. w:" '. " .minding man of his moral dig-.. ,. .. . ..., the field of political economy as . ashmgton s HoI y ,T r 1 hIt Y co~e, II} COll~ct,)lf~ replied. with ,nity', and which create a bridge

'; . ". The prtClte of a~mi~~trati~e '.far 'as the' United states is con- church, for which the President an emp~atic..no; .' 01 understandin~' and brother-· dece?tra ~za I~n un er ymg... e cerned. . . . has shown a preference since his "Tba~ wo~ld, be, taking unfair hood ~ongnations."

PreSIdent s proposal has long In ert· E . - , inauguration, The historic parish advantag f the 't ti:.'been advocated by a number of '1 ii' ~ .. tm uropeanicQuntpes. 'is located in the Georgeto'wn sec- . eo· .,SI ua on,"',he .EducationConfe'ren°ce',' {political theorists and practi- a .totrdanto mdan~g.emt en

lar.e

lpte.r- tI'on of WashI'ngton where the said. .". . .. ' .'mIem'.:Fath.ers Case,y and Pero;ra ,saI'd s'r pAUL" (NC')' T'h" "

.~ Honers, including Senator Paul a 'thlnIsh:rh eghls a Ive President ilved when he was stI'n ~. . '. . ' - e biennial

I D I fIll" d t l' programs WI w IC t ey are ' .. . ,tQE7 presepce.,orreporters,. Secret national"educati'bncoii!erenceof

\ oug as 0 mOls, an , 0 a Im- d' tl d' junior senator from Massachu- Service men' d th th S·;' ited degree has been written Irec ~ concern: ' tt' ' ...... ::. ' . _. . ,'. .,an,·0 er members e Isters of St. Joseph of Car-

~ into Federai law, '. .... ,< ~ut In t~cr UIUteej., States, even se, s~ <'.~ ';'. ' 'j...;. .~. ~ , of the presidential entOurage ondelet, 'who .staff 335' schools

I;' 'D I' d the voluntary organizations Ff!tb}~r,.P.~r.eJt:als pastor of St. does not. ~'~dulYlUpset the parish . will be' held, at' the Colleg'e of\ Senator ouglas de Ivere an th 1 h' John!s "church . 'Leesburg Va routine.' .}. address on this subject in. April, t' e~sel ve~ t ave ~~v~r bee~ p~r- MasS 'there is offerechn' th~ Mid~ . , . St. 'Catherine he're.AprH 8 and 9.

"

:' 1950 to the Ahterican' Academy '.' t~U ar. y 'm ~~~s ef m.clalmmg dleburg l)(hilrnimity center." v: W. ':'1'.' V. ~ ~';"f': . ~. '. '.' .,} of Political Science. This address, IS ITPor unctIon . ~nd Both p'i-fest's" say the prospect: .~'.~ ..~"@h".4Jh: d1Ih .~;.d!\hTdJ!h!~TdIIh.'~dllhT~~dlIb!d1IhT d1Ih~

l~' entitled "Freedom and the J)iffu"~ ,~any,,o iU~ go.ver.n~entoffICIals . 01 having 'the ;President' in their "<:I ~

Il~ sion 0': Power," takes on added ave no :en a~xlOu~ to en- <~ongreg~tions.·.a't .SuilClay.' Mass .... ;~: :. ,:lJoolc..w"cif.·You;co~ do with '0".'" . ~). significance today in the light ~ourage suc a radlcal.d:part~re has inade,.,them extra careful"to ~ ,.0 ~~ of preside~tI~etnedY"Spro~osal. . p:~~tice~ccePted admInIstrative avoid saiin'~{~anything in th~ir>~"';, . ,:,<" '~':'~:(;:l:' .,.; ~>, ~HO'j~"E '.. . .'~ .,.' :.4) OCla Forces Ri ht Di t. sermons that might be misinter- a...: , .," __ ' '.', " ,"..'-.' " ..I' ,,"'" ". ~.) Douglas was concerned about ,g . rec Ion preted They are both . . ~ ~~. the:', 'concentration of' 'pbIitical' . ;.~~c~~: :e,~~tQ~po~nt'of. vie.w. ", ihat there are rieWsmeric~~s:~~:::"v~~.,: lMPROVEMENT·~·LOAN·!'.:."~

po\Ver in the United Sta~es, bu~ h" t k nInth erIca, ",e will on their every word. , : .!.dI .. , '.; ...... '" '.'... ;. ;.... '. :.4I' he.~explicitly disassociated him- fO~ve da .enthanoChe! '.long· step Father Pereira reported ,he~.. • ., '~:.4'

I· If f th h . th rwar In e rIstIan recon- . , f"": ., ..

· sfel... rohm ose

fw o. ra,~se, e struction of the social order' . nh?w. takes more time preparing ,. ..:~. ,.. ;',\ .'eo,

a ~ c arge 0 statIsm. as a D..· t' , h " .. IS sermons than he-used to But·,· I:>"~. !' lit' 1 h'bb 1 th ... AI7 coopera mg WIt one 'an-' . ~:.. po.. Ica s 1 o.e . . other and with the overnm the effort is "mostly negative"~ "~, ..~ ,~

: ~ a profeSSIOnal economIst, in th d" t t' .g . ent 'an attempt to avoid possible a...: I:>"! he";,knew that the size of our t' e, a mIlll~. ra u;m 9f:leglsla- slips he'said'~'" '.' :-4: . goy:ernment effort in the eco- Ive programs,' labor, manage- ' . -,' I::!' 1# .I, , Alent and agricult '11 b '\I Il:th A . . , ,.f"": ..: .: :,." " ~;l nomic field'was "the riaturaHe- "'~h '..,' .. :' .. '. ~r.~ .. ~~.,. ~ ,", "..,. J .' II'ilnlYersary'. ~ ..." e:!'I', sult of certain social forces which . eadmg In the dIrectIOn of the MADISON (NC) B' h' W"'l a..:: I:>", . .,.. Industry; Coupcil t . h" hI. . . - IS op ~ - '. r:! .~. ~I'> have created the ncces!,Ity'for .its belle\. , : '. .tii ". ·lY.,s,~~rq,~ .. IC ham '-P.' O\CbtInor ·will offer,' a,.. ~. e:!'

I\. use." .. ' ., . " '.', \. e IS e .on ¥·A.li~ech:ye an- Portifical Mass in St,.Ra hael's a...: '1:>"

~ Not the I,CaS,t-. of' th,ese~."social ~rle~~ ~,tv~J:Wt' ~fQ)4,..I1I;pq,~em?,- ,,':(,~'a,'the,',Ct,'tai:'nejc. t sU,,"n,'d,a,~,' t:ma,'rk ~ :.4t forces" is the concentnition :'6f d c?tf.en(1; I~~,,! .Q~~,epQMmlC ,. the lSU{' 'anni~ersary of ihe ~ ~r.; econOO\ic"p&wer;,·.ab9ut 'W!itCh :; pOI qCd~ bJ}owS,~J;,·§.q·w~~~und- . f0w1din:8..~6f·t&~~adi&o)1 dioce'se." ~...... .'~I~ Douglas is also very much con- ana yze ., y, .. ~~~~or;.:pouglas.- . I '. .,. . ..;, ,,\ ~.: •• , ';4nce~h~d'senat~~',:~ 'soluti'on 'i'; t~~- Defr"if)pran.ni.,g~'New ~ .:.l~ ..~, ': .' I ,.. ' , . .".. -:,' ..... , '~i.. fold: qp,~t b~sinessmen, work- Graduafe':Prb'g'rcuns.· ',~.,.". Malee :those·· ne~eJ REPAIRS· ,'"'''~I' ers ,and farm'ers.,voluntati}y"get DETRO~~ (NCj~Tlieunive~.. ' ;; '. &>:'. ",: .,""!i: IMPROVE ;;":'REMOO:ELJ'" ,.~ :04I b.ehInd, anl;!fe,c~Iv~ 'pro~r~~ ~~- sity of D~iiQit ;gra<i:ua~:,~chool .~ .. - . .. " " '. .,. " '.,:, . ~

-' SIgned to decen~raltze'econ~)J'rllc has announced "pl~nstO offef: ,.. , : ~. .; t..·•.' '. ," ,•.... with "Gf.l·' .. ,.: .,". ,'; , .. :.41

-'. power; (2) let the Federal gov- doctora~s in" cheritiSh-Y' eco- '~ . '.. ~" ern~ent enc~urage . subordinate nomics and Engi{sh:'" ,~. . . .. EASY· ·TO·PAY' '!": lOW'COSlI .:-4!"pohtlc~~.bq~:lIe,s.an? yolunta,ry Father'A:.P.,Farre'n,'S:J':'·grad_ ':"'~ H@AAlE"BMIPROViEMEN1l" LOAN" ~!: eC~)l~Omlco.rga.n~zatIOns to; ad- uate school" dean; 'said uik first ~"" .'. "'.. . .' . ,. ".', .' '. .... " .." ,. '. ,,, :04I ~Inlsterasmanyof?urlegISla- program in these fields may get :..~ , " ' m ·· .. ' ,:' ',.J "'''';:'''' •.. ~!';' tlVe programS'as pOSSIble. unde~ ...waYI' ~n': September, 1962.. .i \"', ,~ Meakin€) necess6'ry' repairs NOW will save you fro;';-'~

I>, Signifi(l~t Remarks .. '. ';' He also announced that master .. • :., ~ h Ii>'\ f t ,"··r 'f:' . . aving to make major rel)oirs LATER· ~

I:' Douglas' concluding remarKs ? '. ar s '~egr~es in econo'~.its arid' c ,,, .....i. ' .X ' ,6ll ~) about the relationship of volun- IndustrIal psychOlogy 'will be .. ..., '~. ~Is tary organizations to' the govetn- offered for', the 'first time}n the .",. ~.".' . ., ~ ·1 ~.:1/ , , .., .... ,.'. '-" i:!J

I~ ment was. Elxtt:emely, sigl,lificant: 1961 Summer school.' ,.,.' i' .•,'. ,. -' 'R ' ' ~ ': ". i'~~'.':~~" I:>"

F "I would suggest, filially, that I .• ' " '" ;', ". "<:6.'.~~@.: ' ,~ . ~·lI'~~~A.Ai.mt..6\m~ . ~i i many of the activities which'the P:l...O 0 U· ~:. 0 •• c>: ~.ID9..ft?1.11.~~ ~

;1':.. ~~~:r;~e~o;~~:~:~;~s:~U~~~~ !i'~@rr.~B$fflJ~:tl.G"utfu~ !.' - ." ~nn. B~I1llNEftM! ~ ~,',. ' . \ . . " SHIl:IET N\IETAiL' VIi!: II' (S;~.1l lY: CENTER ~AN~-p,urchG$e Cllnd WiIIiGM. Sts. ,~

'['IIa' t.:: Rn~e free· . J, .TESERi Prop'. &180 complete· Boi!elI'-BUIl"D~ ~ ~.S·. LUANDA (NC)-The g'overn'_ RESIDENTIAL or. .Furnac;e Units.. EBicient ~ NOetlM lEND BANIC-Cov. Acushnet. Ave. Gnd Coffin Ave. :~~. ment of thi~·.PortugueseAfrican 'INDUSTRIAL ;'. ~:~ ~~ttS:I~~t~:d :,~~:. and .~ SOUT~ END -BANK-~O!. Cove St. 0. Rod~y French Blvd. ~1 territory has' ordered that all COMMERCIAL S· .. ,····· ~ ~

:1'1~·.. missionary personnel aJld goods' 253 Ced~ St. New Bedford t~n~~wOn~ C@og h\)~. .~ Membc;a' f~derCl! Deposi.t Insuran~oCotporatioo E4are to receive free transportation wy 3~3222 480 Mt. Pleasant Sweet "<:I I:>"

,on government railways. New Bedf"rd WY 3-2667 ~'!.A.~.!.A.!"'~A'!.~4.'!.!~~~.!A!...lijJJl.~~lijJJl4~

Page 15: 03.30.61

/

WI'LLIAM J. CYR CHAPTER OF-,. .- . '. '.

Bishop

, TAUNTON'

Taunton Municipal FCUCity Hall, TauntonSt. Jacques' FCU248 Whittenton St.

NO. WESTPORTWestport FCU90 State Rd,

NO. DARTMOUTHSt. Isidore FCUP.O. Box 62

ACUSHNETSt. Xavier of AClllsbnet C11Acushnet, Mass.

THE' ANCHOR- ISTiwrs .• ,March 30,196-....:1 _

Dwyer .. JStresses Need tOf Prudence

SACRAMENTO (NC)­T!:e tmdcrstanding and prao­tice of the virtue of prud­ence is sorely needed in thisage of sldting standards, BishopRobert J, Dwyer of Reno, whosecolumn appears in The Anc~said here at a Red Mass.

The Bishop preached bllBlessed Sacrament Cathedral tGmen of the legal profession ~nC'l

members of the California legis­lature, led by Gov. Edmund Q,Brown of California.

Bishop Dwyer said that man ..forever tempted to escape fromreality, but "prudence is the vip.tue which '~nables us to accep$,re~lity, the reaFty of truth." ,

He stated that lack of prudenCf)is the unfailing cause of humammise~y,"and added: "It is impru­dence in statesmen which hat)brought great - nations to ti'ieb'downfall; it is imprudence inlawmakers and lawyers whicl:lhas brought contempt upon thelaw; it is imprudence in church- _men which has made religionlllridiculous,"

Bishop Dwyer also deploreci\the lack of consideration in mod>­ern times to the virtue of justiee.,"Justice," he said, "is almostnever considered as a virtue, 01'as having anything to do w~tin

the nature and destiny of mlWoor as rooted in the reality. oYtruth." .

"Justice f-allows the virtuediprudence," he added, "in ,theordering of the moral virt~

which are essential to manh~"Where virtue ceases to be all

operative principle," l3illhO!'Dwyer stated, "man is ther.less 'a man; where prudence illscorned. as it philosopher's m..s'ion, reality is lost sight of anatruth becomes a process of ao­commodation; and where justieeis no'longer a reflection ·of rna"'"social nature, tyranny is the ooJI:

'safe refuge." "

... " ~ ..U-Strayco CU

"i959 Purchase St.'Vanity' Frocks FCU86 ChuI:c~ St. . " ,Southern, Mass. Telephone

Workers' CU '" 390 ~cushnet Ave. '

SOMERSETSt. Louis' de France FCU767 Buffington St.Somerset CoinmunKy CU1166 Cotinw St..

~. SWANSEA. St. Michael's Parish FCU

267 Ocean Grove Ave.

UNIONSMASSACHUSETTS

.> :'

Tri~mphant, ioyous and deep,ly inspiring

is ,the ~r~mi~ of spiritual rebirth,

so beau,ifully reaffirmed' at East.r.

NEW BEDFOR.D

Frat. Order of Eagles FCU1851 Purchase St.Freeman Shoe FCl]94 Sawyer St.N. B. .Joint Board

TWUACIO FCU888 Purchase St.'St. Anne Credit Union43 Rodney French Blvd.St. Antoine FCU112 Deane St.St. Joseph Parish FCU119 Howard St.St. Therese FCU974 Darling St.

St. Anne's Crcdit llJnion "286 Oliver St. 'st. Anthony of Padua FC1J722 :Bedford St.St. Eiizabeth's FeU1158 Stafford Rd.St. Jean Baptiste ]FCU9 Stockton St.St. Mathieu's Parish F'ClJ

,'138 Fulton St.St. 'Micbael's FCU1654 No. Main St.St.: Roeh's FCU421' Bedford St.'Santo Christo FCU48 Colurt).bia St.,

ALBERT CWIKLA,

CREDITOF .SOUTHEASTERN

FALL RIVER

Blessed Sacrament FelJ2532 So. Main St.i:astel'll Mass. Emp. FeU450 Stafford Rd.Espirito Santo FCU266 Alden St.F. 'It. Grange' FeW145' Charlotte St. 'F.It.)ler~ldNewll Emp. FCU203 Pocasset St.' '".It. Municipal EmP. (llJ198 Bank St., '.

., Firestone Emit. FCU, $ Anawan St.

FRELCO Emp. FeUHathaway St.Garment Workers FCU

, Garment, Workers Sq.ImmacuI~teConception FCU

, 15 Thomas st.Jewish War Ve~erallS CUP. O. Box 1243Knights of Columblls FCU209 Franklin St.Musicians Local Zl6 FCUP.O. Box 265Notre Dame Parish FCU1727 Pleasant St.Our Lady of Health FCU1173 Rodman St.Rudolph Souza Post

APWV FCU88 Pleasant St.

The son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Patrick's., parish, Albert at­Cwikla o£ 241' Griffin Street, tended St. Patrick1s' Gramm&'Fall River, a'nd a member cr'- St.. School.

Accepts Challenge,To, Debate Religion

,PARIS (NC) - Freemasonsfrom throughout France, are ex­pected at the masonic lodge of

, Laval to hear a'celebrated Jesuitt~ke up a MaS9n's ,challenge tod~bate the CathOlic Faith with'him. ', The ~ason 'threw down hischallenge pUl;ilicly: "I,~y aCatholic priest to come and jus:'illy his belief in' a debate at theMasonic lodge." ,

Father. Micilel ,Riquet, S.J.,prisoner in a Nazi concentrationea,mp in WorldW'ar II, obtainedpermission from his religious su-:.periors to accept the. challenge.The debate· wm' take pla~ inwhat French Masons call' ,"awhite meeting," M closed sessioli,~, the lodge. '

Santa Clara DecidesTo Admit :Women '"

,SANTA, CL.o\RA(NC) - '!'he 'University of Santa Clara winadmit women in all 'departmentsfor . the Fall· semester,: 1961,- it 'was announced by,Father PatrickA. Donohoe, S.J', university pres-ident. .

,The decision,: reached 011. the,1tOtb ~nniversary 01. the hsuituni:versity, ia in response to num­erous requests :born civic leadeNand alumni.

CtJyle Student Body President Also'Yearbook·Editor, Honor Stude1l,t, on Baseball Tea·m

By Marion Unsworth"Coyle is tops. It can't be beat," says t he president of its senior class, Albert Cwikla.

The articulate young man voiced a ready enthusiasm for his four years in the Diocesanhigh school. "There are great advantages in' attending a boys' high school. The atmos­phere is easier to work in. Being around th e school you can see how the students respond

to it. There is great schoolspirit because Coyle becomespart of you. 'You respect itbecause jot respec,ts you.H Anhonor roll student who has re­ceived a scholastic monogramfor the past three years, Albertadded, "The Brothers are fabu­lous. They are really good, bothas teachers and as men."

As senior class president,Albert is in charge of collectingclass dues, appointing the seniorprom committee, arranging theclass picnic in the spring, andrepresenting the class at funeralsand several other functions. Hewill be a speaker at graduationand receive the' salutatorianaward,

Yearbook EditorA major activity for Albert

this year has been that of editingthe Coyle year book, the Viking.The 192 page book, the largestCoyle has had, is "pretty wellfinished now." His interests arenot limited to the scholastic andthe literary, for he also is amember of the Young ChristianStudents and plays third baseon the Coyle baseball team.

Speaking of the recent basket­ball season, Albert said, "Natu­rally, we don't like to see theteam have a losing season, butnext year they'll be right up·there again; Coyle's overall rec-

, ord is certainly' one to be proudof."" One project imputed to the"Class of 19fh is the inter-schoolradio station which was 'organ-

, ized and is run by Joseph QuillJr. School announcements areissued from the radio room, aswell as music during the lunchhour.

Albert, who bas taken the'classical course, at Coyle, willenter Providence College in theFall and study toward a bachelorof arts degree with a concentra­tion in letters. ,He plans to teachon the' secondary school level'after receiving his degree.

BE-oPENS'THlJRs., lUilRlJH 30

Famous For Fifte Food

SUNDERLAND'S, '; TNtRfON, R. L

Air France' Pilot,·Now Trappist'

PARIS (NC) - ,A formertransatlantic pilot for Air Francehas bee'n ordained a" :Trappistpriest. ' ;

He is Father Baudoin, b,c,s.o.,who was born Bernard' Cordierin 1912 and fought ill Britain'sRoyal Air Force during WorldWar II. After the war he headedAir France's advanc~ :tI';lini~gcenter for navigation and be­came president of tile CivilAviation Navigators, ,A6SOCia.,;tion. I

He waS chief pilOt:o£ ,AirFrance's fleet of transatlantieConstellations, and h.Mt j 150 At­lantic croSsings. H'~. has a' totalof 8,000 flying hOlJ'rs and is 'a·lieutenant col~l in': the ' airforce reser.ve. ' , :; ,

Bernard Cordier entered themonastery of Cite:aux ,in 1950.He was ordained in the Parisiansuburb of Neuilll" "

YouthOrganizatioilPays for Hospit~1

BOCHUM (NC) -:-' Bochum~Catholic Youth ~gani2\atiOft is'paying, for a 'new Hansen's die­ease (leprosy)' hospital :at Kan- .chanaburi' , ..in Thailand'.on'grounds provided by, the Thaigovernment. "

Cost of the, 120-bed :bospital,is estimated at $50,000. The Ger­man Catholic organization plansto obtain part of this' moneythrough selliD:g foreign' postagestamps. '

The hospital will hav.e:a chapeland a l'esidence for tbe;mecHcalstaff.

Theatre OwnenPlan to DiscloseContents of Films

WASHINGTON (NC) ­A theater owners associa­tion has announced plans toset up a system for inform:..ing members and the generalpublic of the content of movies.

The Board of Directors ofTheater Owners of America cited·as a reason for the action its"broad responsibility to providethe theater-going public with themeans of determining for them­selves and for their families thedesirability of seeing a givenmotion picture."

The owners group also stressedin a resolution that the motionpicture Production COde "shouldbe construed and enforced with agreater degree of self-discipline,with good taste,and consistentlywith the original principles andobjectives for which the codewas established."

The board said it "adheres un­equivocally" to the idea thatfilms merit "the full protectionoffered by the Federal Constitu­tion,"

"Any ,invasion of that constitu_tional principle is offensive, notonly to the interests of the mo­tion picture industry, but to thebasic philosophy underlying ourAmerican way of life," the boardsaid.

Available to PatronsOf their intention to set up a

system for publicizing the con­tent of movies, the theaterowners said:

"Theater Owners of America'resolves that it will establish asystem which will offer informa­tion to its members concerning

\the subject matter and content'of all motion pictures availablefor exhibition, to the end thatthe members of Theater Ownersof America shall make such ma­terial, and any other pertinentinfo'rmation at their· command,available to their ,patrons."

Page 16: 03.30.61

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C - CondemnedMademoiselle Gobette ia..enMagdalena Ro<:snnaMating Urge Sa..age EyeMiller's Beautiful Wife Savage TriangleMiss Julia SeVeft Deadly SinsMtsou ScarredMom and Dad Sensualita (BorefootMoon Is Blue . Savage) ,Naked Night she Shoulda Said' NoNona Sins of the BorgiasNever on Sunday Smiles of a Summer NightNight Heaven Fell . StellaNo Orchids for Miss Strollers, The

Blandish Third Se", \. One Summer of. HappinessThree forbidden' StoriesOscar Wilde Thrill'That Kills, TheParis Night Trials of Oscar WildePassionate Summer ViolatedPlease! Mr, Balzac Wasted Li..es and Tho·Pot Bouille (Lovers of Poria) Birth of TwinsPrivate Lives at Ways of lov,e

'Adam arid Eve Women .without NamesPrivate Prop'~rty Young and the Damned, ...Question of' Adulter)' .

Adorable CreaturesAnd God Created WomanBaby Dollled of Grassled, TheCome Dance with MeDesperale Women, The~presso BongoFlesh Is WeakFrench line, TheFruits of SummerGame of loveGarden of EdenI Am a CameraIllicit Int~rlude

La Rand.le Plaisi.Letters from My Windmillliane. Jungle GoddessIlo..e Gamelove Is My ProfessionLady C!'· . ',loverLaver'sLovers, lhe

~1€:",. ,....."..~~~~~

r;,e Partitular Council of St, Vincent de Paul Societyof the Attleboro Area Spo:~50rs Legion of Decency List GS a

lpublic service to readers of rl,'.! Anchor. . , '. I

tL~SJg@fi cf Dec®~(,JA~l' - UnobjectiQnable for General. Patronage

Absent Minded Professor libel The Amazing 'TransparentAlcimo little S';vage ManBeyond the' Time Barrier Mighty Crusaders The Sand CastleBig Night Modern Times The Sword and tho DragonBlood and 'Steel. Noose for a. Gunma~ The Teacher and theBroth of a Boy Passport to China ' MiradeBernadette of lourdes Pepe There Was a CrookedC-imarron Power Among Men ManDays of Thrills and Question 7 13 Ghosts. laughter Serengeti Shall Not Die ThirtyDesert Attaek Story of Mankind .Three Came to KillFcIce of Fire Swan Lake Tomboy and the ChampFlaming Star Ten Who Dared Town Like AliceIlor the First 'Time The Boy Who Stole a Twelve Hours to KillGallant Hours, Million, J Twelve to the Moon

• Gorgo The Lost World Walk TallGreat Dav The Loll Dawn / Warrior, Slave Girl'invisible Invaders The Magic 'Boy Watch Your StemI Was A Parish' Priest The Police Dog Story Wings of Chance

, Ileft, Right and Centre The Trapp Family ,

A-2 - Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescent.A Raisin in the Sua I Aim at the StaN she Demons

• Baffle of the Sexes Illegal Surrender HellBlueprint for Robbety Jail Breakers Tarzan the Magnificentiridal Path . Journey to the lost Cltr Ten Seconds to HellCage of Evil Magnificent SeVeft The Steel Claw&azy for Love Marie Octobre The Tormented

· .rse of the Undead Miracle Time Machine, Devil's.Disciple Mountain Road Trapped in TangieR

IIOur.D Man Mummy Village-of the DamnedGeneral Della Rovere Prisoner of the Volga Walking Target

_ ,8oIiath and the Dragclll School for' Scoundrels Walk Like a Dragoll, Homicidal The Canadian. Wild and the InA~

"ollday for Lovers Secret of the Purple Reef World of Apu, lome' is the Hero Seven Ways from SundownWhite Warrior

A-3 - 'Unobjectionable for Adults• in A Night's WCMt HeI: is a City" Savage Inn_..

',All the fine Heroes Die Young Se..en Thievo.Young Cannibale' He Who Must ~ie' 'That Kind of Wo.man

Angry Hills . Home From. \h~ Hill The Angel Wore Red· lig Deal on Madonna' House of IntrigUe" The Captain's Table

:'Street ' Hypnoiir Eye The Unfaithful.: Calleg" Confidential Magician The Young One

Coover Girl Killer Make Mine Mink Third Voice, Etanes Are Flying Man Who Could' Cheat This Earth is Mine

COr/mson Kimono Death Thr_ Men in a BoatEnd of Innocence hWrder, Inc, .Tiger Boy~Odus Music Box Kid Tunes of GlorY.FGcts of Life Odds Against Tomorrow Touch of Larceny

-lltist and Sexy One Foot in Hell Upstair. and Downs"fever in the Blood , Once Mare With Feeling 'Why Must I Die"

, Jour Fast Guns Ikiru Virgin Islands ,<tOO Blows Operation Eichm01'" Virgin Spring (prints "'-Ilour Skulls of JonathOSl Our .Man In Havana in the United Statelt

Drake Possessors Wild Strawberries 'french Mistress Rue de Paris Wonderful Country'.au is Greener Spartacus Young Philadelphia...

, . Separate Classit~tion,. Me..er Take Candy from a Stranger (deals with molestation of small chR­

dren and, although tre ated without sensationalis m, could have harmfuleffects !'pon young and uninformed unless accompanied by parent. Ad.._thing carries warning: "Notice to parent.. No child will be admittedunless accompanied by you," '.' .

. il - Objectionable in Par..t for AllAnd Quiet Flows the Don H Man " Rise and Fall of'Beat Generation H'appy Anni,!er~ary Legs DiamondBeloved Infidel Head ';f a 'Tnant Road Racer.Between Time and Eternity Hercules Unchained RookieBlue Angel Home Before. Dark . ,Room 43Blood and Rose's Horrors oi'th'" Black MuseUm Room at the TopBluebeard" Ter House on the 'Waterfront 'Sanctuo'ry

Hon~ymo"'ns Hiroshima. Mo;, AmoVI; September StormBorn Reckless I, Mobster . ." Sex Kiltens Go To CoIfegeBramble Bush Intent to Kill Sign of the Gladiator i ~,'.reath· of Scandal Inside the Mafia Solomon and Shebalucket of Blood It Started With; Co K-kt Some Ca!!'e RunningButterfield B\, It Takes a Thief" Some Late It Hot

· Can Can. Jack the Ripper Sons 'and LovenCarry on, N.,'rse JaR Boat Squocf Careircus of Horrors lod ,Mile Studs Lanigan

·Graek in the Mirror Let's Make Loft Subway i" the SkyGry for Happy Lil' Abner • Summer PlaceDaddy-O Macumba Love Surprise PackageDesire in the Dust Mania Take a Giant Stet-

'- -Eighth Day of the Week Middle of the Night The Curse of tfteElectronic Monster Missile to the MOOR WerewolfElmer Gantry Millionairess The Mi'l.otaurFemale Naughty Giri Thunder in Caraliftafeinale and tne Flesh Never So Few Two Faces of Dr. Jek1'8Esther and The King Of love and Lust The Entertainer, '.'!!ive Branded Women Party Girl . ' The Marriage Go Roundforbidden Fruit Patinum High School Three MurderessesFrankenstein's Daughter Perfect Furlough Tunnel of Lo.veFrom 'Hell' To Eternity Portrait' of A Sinner, Virgin Sacrifice"'om the Terrace Pretty Boy Floyd What Price MurdfirGangster Story Prime Time Where the Boys AroGene Krupa Story Private Lives of Adam Where the Hot Wind Blow.GI Blues and Eve '. Who Was That Lady!

'~irl in Room 13 Psycho Wicked Go to' Hell "Girls Town Pusher Wife for a Night'~at St. louis Bank Queen of Outer Spaat Wild River .

Robbery . Rat Race Wind Across tho EvergladesGoddess of Love Rally Round the Flog, BoysWorid of Suzy WongSo Nobd in the World Rebel Breed Young Capti ..esGuns, Girls and Gangster. Riot In Juvenile Prison Young Jesse Jame.

Page 17: 03.30.61

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I ••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,

-

••••.'••

••.'

17

...,DELITE I

~~c I

SPLITS

BIG JUMBO

SUNDAES

Home for AgedAMARILLO (NC)-The Dio­

cese of Amarillo will build •$350,000 home for the aged atPanhandle, Texas.

CtU\]'U1o~ic 'iU~SS

For, Every ManOKLAHOMA CITY (NC) _

The Catholic press ought notevidence the, "timidity and nar­rowness" of a trade pUblication,a Catholic editor said here.

Speaking to about 150 personsattending the March meeting or .the Forum here, Robert G. Hoyt, .editor of the Catholic Report~

newspaper of the Kansas City-st.Joseph, Mo., diocese said:

"A Catholic press that is truly .Catholic will evidence no tribalspirit, no double standards, nodefense of institutional interestsabove the claims of justice, nospecial criteria of truth; it will be 'addressed not merely to the electbut to every man."

Speaking of the Catholic press"freedom, Mr. Hoyt said that "toestablish freedom institutionally."to distinguish it from license t~promote freedom without und~ly"challenging or weakening au­thority, all this takes a bit ofdoing."

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 30, 1961

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PARISH SERVICE: For the fifth year, students at Sacred Hearts Academy, FallRiver, who are members of Sacred Heart parish, will sing at the afternoon liturgy ofGood Friday in the church. Rehearsing with Sister Steven Mary, S.U.S.C., for the annualevent is a section of the 50-voice liturgical choir.

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s• • • • • •-. • • • • • • •• •• • •• • • • • • •-. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• I , I.•

Cape K of CJohn NelSon, Monument Beach,

will serve as grand knight ofBishop Daniel F. Feehan Coun­cil 2911, Knights of Columbus,for the coming season. servingwith him will be Earl Dwyer,Sandwich, deputy grand knight;Joseph Zlogar, Buzzards Bay,financial secretary; Paul Govoni,Buzzards Bay, treasurer; PeterCostello, Cedarville, lecturer.

EducatorsContinued from 'Page One

on the "Objectives of ChristianHigher Education." David Ries­man, Henry Ford II professor ofsocial science at Harvard, willspeak on "The Forces of Con-.temporary Society which' AffectHigher Education."

The college educators make upone of the seve"n NCEA depart­ments which will be holding ses­sions. In addition, more than 15other educational groups willmeet in conjunction With the58th annual convention of tbeNCEA.

Expect 15,000Groups meeting with the

NCEA include the Catholic Busi­ness Education Association, theTeacher's Association of the Phil­adelphia Byzantine Rite arche­parchy, the National CatholicAdult Education Commission, theNewman Club Chaplains,. theCatholic Audio-Visual EducatorsAssociation, Delta Epsilon Sigmaand numerous associations ofteachers within one religiousorder, such as the AugustinianEducational AssQciation.

The convention annually drawsnearly 15,000 registrants and isdescribed by officials as thelargest annual national Catholicconvention.

Equipment ExhibitIn addition to the sessions on

academic subjects" the NCEAsponsors an exhibit of educa­tional equipment, from the latestin school buses to new, improvedblackboard erasers.

Archbishop Celestine J. Da­miano, Bishop of Camden, is hostto this year's convention whosetheme is: "The Objectives ofC"~istian Education iT' Contem­porary Society."

Goverrnm~ntLift~

Loan Ceni~gs

FOIr ~~5~diragWASHINGTON (NC)

The Federal government hasremoved the ceiling on theamount of money it lends topublic and private colleges and·hospitals to help build housingfacilities.

Commissioner Sidney H. Wool­ner of the Community FacilitiesAdministration said the step wastaken to accelerate constructionand to enable large hospitals toparticipate.

Hospitals formerly could bor­row only a maximum of $750,000to build housing for studentnurses and interns. In the case oflarger hospitals, the loan wasn'tbig enough to meet their needs.

PJrivate CollegesThe program's loans to private

colleges have been cited byspokesmen for the NationalCatholic Welfare Conference a,sa precedent for loans to non­public grade and high schools aspart of proposed Federal aid topre-college education.

President Kennedy has pro­posed to Congress that this pro­gram be expanded and a twinprogram of aid to colleges forclassroom construction be started.

Commissioner Woolner saidthe removal of dollar limitationswill not affect loans to colleges.These loans always. have beenadministered "somewhat fle:x;­ibly," he said.

LimitsPrevious limits on loans had

been $750,000 for hQspitals and$3,000,000 for a college or uni­versity for housing to be builton a single campus.

The government will continue,said Mr. Woolner, to demand"substantial participation" byborrowers in the construction O'flarge housing projects.

Classrooms and other strictlyacademic facilities are not aidedby the current program. Loansare given only for constructionof "revenue-producing facilities,"such as dormitories.

Page 18: 03.30.61

GovernOr to VetoAbortion Bill

CONCORD (NC) -Gov. Wes­ley Powell of New Hampshirehas' disclosed he will 'veto a billto legalize therapeutic' abortionsin New Hampshire passed by',both houses of the Legislature.

'The measure, strongly opposed'by Catholic leaders, cleared theState Senate by a 15-to-8 vote.I.t previously had been passed bytl?-e House after lengthy debateby ,a ,vote of 209 to 156.:

The veto of Gov. Powell willkill the measure for the timebeing. The show of strength inboth houses of the Legislatureindicated that a necessary two­thirds majority to override a vetocould not be mustered.

Gov. Powell, a Protestant,publicly announced that he "can­not support" the measure whichwas sponsored by the NewHampshire Medical Society. Ina 'statement, the Governor saidthe medical society was ~'sharply

split" over the issue.The Governor said he opposed

"writing an amendment to thecode" of the medical professionby the New, Hampshire govern­ment. He also stated that he feltthe government should "keepout of differences between reli­gious faiths." The bill had thesUPI>ort of the New HampshireCouncil of. Churches.

THE vERY NAME 01 the Congi'egatlol1 olSisterl In whlcbSISTER PIUS and SISTER ANGELUS are novices would make

~' . most of us want ~ help 'in the tralniq~ 01 girls In their CoJilmunlty - SISTERS.,;' OF THE DESTITU'fE. Many are the\sr various works that our Cathollo Slste~

, hoods are engaged in,' all' of them Impor­tant. Could all)' work be more Christlikethan the care of the destitute? Would youUke to share fa this work by flnanclng thetrainIng of 0118 of tho SlstersT The oost

training is $300.

~'l2ear tBstOlissioos~IIRANCIS CARDINAl. S'KLMAN. , .........

....... Jo..,. T• .,., SM'y, SeacI aU •

CATHOlIC NEAR lAST WILFARIASSOCJATIOH480 lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17i'N. Y•

plans we're made 1,,1' a new »"",,,d ci.... _d in GitA"'lR in L.,uA­NON. The money had been saved and, construction was to be­

gin in 1914. The First World War,howev!lr,prevented the start 01 thebuilding. At the end 01 the war manypeople had died, many had emigratedto other places, and the money had aUbeen spent. In 1930 the people beganthinking again 01 'having anewchurch. Ii WIIS 1939 by the time sul­ficient money was saved; the SecondWorld War began and brought them

_~ the same consequences lIS the War 01TIN HoI Fa/~'s Mission Aid 1914-18. Last year it became essential

~ to begin work on a new church. Plansfur lIN Orimlal Chmrh were drawn to build step by step ac-

cordinll' to, modern requirements and the work begun. The peo­ple have given as much as they can in money and labor andthe crypt is almost completed. This will have to serve lIS thechurch lor some :time to come. Now, however,' a' rool must bebuilt' over the crypt' and the estimated cost Is $3,000. Couldyou help,! The Church Is named In honor 01 the Assumption ofOur Lady.

"I AROSE, AND AM STILL 'WITH THEE" - these are tileopening words of the Introit of the Mass for Easter. To thepresent day Our Blessed Saviour Is still with',as in many ways, particularly In the Holy'Sacrament of the Altar. He will remain withas, ,too, un'tll the end 01 the world. For HisEucharlstio 'Presence a~ongst Us priestsare needed. Among the many boys alloverthe world studying lor the priesthood are'BENHAM HI~DO and JAQUES MAK-A, stu­dents at the' SYRIAN PATRIARCHAL SEMINARY in LEBA­NON. Will. yoU share in helping to educate one 01 these youngmen lor the 'priesth'ood by contributing $GOO? The money maybe given In Installments.· .'

,THE LONELINESS OF CHRIST ON GOOD FRIDAY-howterrible it must have been! The loneliness 01 ,peoplesuft'eringfrom Leprosy '.Inust 'at tUnes be frightening-how well Christcan understand their feelings!' In His Passion He was treatedas one used to be treated who had that dread disease. His lovefor ,Lepers and His understanding of their feelings is mademanifest by His care 01 them t1Jrough devoted Missionaries whowork in, and generous CathQUcs who support, Leprosariums.Could you help In the work of ,caring for Lepers by joining our,DAMlEN LEPER CLUB? The dues are one dollar a month.

HE IS RISEN'••• ALLELUIA, HOPE-the virtue which' gives meaning to life and carries

one :through periods of depression, and discouragement-Is keptglowing in the hearts of'the poor 01 the Near and Middle East

.partly through' help given by the Cat1Jolic Near East 'WelfareAssociation.

.. ,W;E ARE GRATEFUL. to all 'our friends ,and benefactors forthe, continuing' support 01 the work of the Association.' During

.the ~aschal Season it is our fervent prayer that the real mean­ing, of Easter, will ,brighten the ,virtue of hope in t1Je,hearts of .all· of our _benefactors and that the Risen Christ will, fill them'with true ~oy; ,

REV. KENNETH J. DELANO'REV. JAMES W. CLARK

Bishop AIroIT\)@MIfeCeS AssignmentsContinued -from Page One the son of Kenneth E. and

An energetic worker, Father Isabel (Tatro) Delano. AfterWalsh has the faculty of arous- receiving his early education ining the enthusiasm and support Taunton schools he attended Ourof the faithful wherever he has Lady of Providence Seminary,served. Warwick, R.I., and studied .phi-

Fat~," ShaHoo losophy and theology In St.. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, newly Mary's Seminary, Baltimore.appointed administrator' of St. Father Delano wa.~ ordaineq inLouis Church, Fall River, was St. Mary~s Cathedral on April 2,bor'n in Fall River on Nov. 7, 1960, by Bishop Connolly and

.1911, the' son of Katherine J. . has been assistant at St. Pat­,(Mara) Shalloo and, the late' rick's in FaH River since ord­Daniel F. Shalloo. He graduated ination.from Durfee High School in Fall ----------------------------

River and graduated with an ALMOST FIFTY YEARS AGOA.B. degree from Boston Collegein 1932. He studied at St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore, and theSulpician Seminary at the Cath­olic University of America inWashington.

He received his M.A. degreein Education fr{lm the CatholicUniversity in 1937, and wa,s or­dained by the late Bishop Cas­sidy in St. Mary's Cathepral,Fall River, on .May 22, 1937.

Father Shalloo served as as­sistant at Immaculate Concep­tiQD Church, Fall River, untilMay 4, 1942.. when he becameassist;ll1t at St. Joseph's Church,Fall River. .

Father Shalloo has been In­structor of Religion and Ethics

. at the College of the SacredHearts, formerly the SacredHearts School of Education, in

- Fall River since 1937. He hasserved asOhaplain of. the FallRiver Serra Club since its form­atiori in 1952, and Chaplain ofthe 'Fall-River Physicians Guild.in 1957 when Bishop Connollyexpressed his 'intention"'of found­ing 'a diocesan weekly news­pAper, he chose Father Shallooto ,draw up plan:s for the paperand -to launch thiS diocesanproject. Father Shalloo' , wasnamed General Manager ()fTheAnchor, a post which he 'willcontinue to· fill;

'Father Clark:Rev. James W. Clark, who

goes -to St. Joseph's, Fall Riv'er',as assistant, is the son of James-W. and Catherine (McHugh)Clark, and was born in NewBedford' on July 2, 1929. Hegraduated from Holy Family_

r~' :C~~~~~o~i~~~o~~~:ppo~School A~d . -g::.;~~c~~~~~:1~1:~f.:~~ar~:attendance is generally compul- ,Mr. Sokolosky, appearmg m . studied philosophy and theologylIOl'y. ".' the New York Journal, A.meri- _. in St. John's Seminary, Brighton,

"A tIlth'" 1 ,can and, other newspapers, wrote and was ordained by Bishopc ua ,y, ere IS n<;> aw ~n~-, that "the argument over .separa- (:onnolly in St. _Mary's Cathed­

Wh~re that compels a~y, chrld s tion Of Church 'and State is un- ral, Fall River, on Feb. 2, 1956.attendance at a pubhc school, . related to the Constitution which. He: has served as assistant. at '~ither 'at the elementary or the' has not one word to say 'on the .. St.' Plltri<;k's Cl1urch, Wareham,!gecondary level. subjeCt." . ' ' ' , , since his ordination.

Accredited School Father DelaJH)"What is set forth in state "Establishment ' , Rev. Ken!1eth ,:i. Delano, who

laws is that children shall get an, ,"The assumption," he wrote, will succeed Father Clark aseducation for a stated period at "that financial aid to parochial assistant at Wareham, was ,bornan 'accredited' school. Parochial schools 'establishes' a church is in' Taunton on April 12, 1934,~hools are 'accredited'-thatis,' obviously fallacious for rio, es-they satisfy the educationaltablished church, governs our 30,000 ,at NoYen~'standards'set by "a stare school' armed' forces which has the PAMPLONA (NC) -' About'board......,and this is an' ,that, is' largest ,and most effective chap-, 30,000 'young p'eople from Spain' .required of any' Protestant or lain ~~-"ice; also,every, meeting and abroad journeyed to XavierCatholic school or of any _other of ,Congress is opened' by' a, Castle-25 miles" southwest ofprivate'school," he wrote. clergyman who, if he, desires, 'here for the aimual "Novena of '

·'r.~e Federal government he' w~r~ the, uniform of his churoh Grace", to" St. Fr,ancis :Xavier, ,, , , , yo-on the occasion." ,Iadded, does not take part in any ,- : ' , •. ' , .. ,

'way. in so-called compulsory' The"Constitution is op~sed to .Church Contracteducation at the elementary or an established church, such as Continued from Page One~,onda,ry level. the government.:owned church. site of the old Benjamin Public

No Discrimina.tion ,in ;England, the Anglican, whose, Sch{lol. The property was boughtHe noted that the argument is titular head is' the Queen of ~ng:" ,by the parish last year and the

made that - once Congress gives _ land, he.wrote. old school demolished' to pre-~": money for education, it is con- "Opposition to 'establishment' pare a site for the new church.

8tit'··'-" ...lly bound not to dis- did not'mean'and could not mean . The new church, which willcriminate between different opposition to religion per se or hold about 400 parishioners, willkinds of religious schools or col- to the right of parents to send be a brick building replacinglieges, or to impose any handicap their children to denomination- the wooden' church that hason parochial or private schools aI, rather' than to secular served the people of St. Hedwig's.w.iclt satisfy state requiFements., schools,", he' wrote. .' Parish· for 52 ,years.

,r-~~ HiE ANCHO::--~j?ceS,e o(F~11 River-Thur~.. Mar. 30,,1961.

, AdV~~®$~ffi"Mdent Retg~ern1)~ce

As 'H@~IPJ~lTIj~SS' S~fegt{KQH[d',-, ' By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.'

~ Ass't Sociology' Prof.-St. Louis University"Should.a girl about to be married reveal her past? I'm

engaged and looking forward to a 'happy marriage, 'but afearful doubt casts its shadow' over my ~appiness. Long~fore I met my fi.ance I had a brief though sinful' 'affair.' 'The awful mistake has been ' 'experiences with others,~nfessed and deeply regret- This ,is unnecessary and even,ted. Is it" necessary or dangerous, Let 'the dead pastadvisable to tell my fiance bury' its dead! You love eachabout this previous fall? I dread' other for what you are .as youthe thought yet don't want 'any- know each other now. What is€bing to stand ' to be gained by making a "gert-

eral confession?" ,in the way ofeu.r happiness." To show how much you trust

each other? But there is no con-,As you have nection between the recital of

indicated, theremay be question past experiences or faults andof'strict justice your present love. Indeed, we.Msitnecessary? ,) may well question the motive,~ behind such confessions.or of s imp 1eprudence (is it One is reminded of the reli~a4.visable?) in gious revivalist leader whol'itKlhconfessions. stopped one of his penitents inLet us first con- the midst of a vivid public con-sider the prob- fessio'n of sins" "Brother, youJem"of justice. :r~~;,~ ,confeSSing,YOU're, brag-

Couples norm'ally reach their,~ision to marry on the basis of Intimate Bond

,'-' ~ iove and knowledge devel-' What if you fear that your'~d during cotirtship.. ln ahigh-' partner rna; hear about yourIv mobile society like our own, past mistakes after you're mar­however, the relatively brief, ried? Unless you are cer,tain thatshared ,experience of courtship he will hear, and, knowing himinay leave much of their past as you do, feel that he will beobscure. What are they obliged seriously disturbed, you shouldto reveal? say nothing now. Since you have

no obligation to confess· to himWell, let's put it this way. You he cannot blame you later for

ere now loved for what you are, failing to tell him all.not for what you were. 'you have But is it "fair" not to tell one's

,no obligation to reveal your past, partner all about oneself? Love'and as I shall point out later, you creates such an intimate, unify­,robably should not reveal it. ing bond that it seems only nor­Let the dead past bury its dead. mal to want to know all about

One Exception the beloved. Often the experi-There is one exception to this ence of love offers the one occa­

general rule. Sometimes the past sion many people 'have of com­Bctions of one of the partners municating their innermost re­involve commitments that en- flectio'ns and feelings about the\,dure in the present and for the ,past.future. The beloved is a highly sympa-'

Since marriage forms' a unique, thetic audience, and this mutualItOmprehensive partnership in communication of one's intimate

'which a couple assume mutual past serves to extend the knowl­lDesponsibility, each partner has edge upon which, love 'mustUte right to know what addi- grow. Would it not be a mistaketional obligations are being to start marriage without,know':'assumed; for example, if one of 1 ing all about each other?Uae partners has 'c'ontracted' Troublesome Seeds~ebts, or',as in your case, if your' One must distinguish. Tak~ng~ffair" , had resulte<t in a child. human nature as it is, some of~r w~lOse supporty.0~ were re- '. the'past should be left urirecalledsponslble, and so on.. '. _ and uncommunicated. Secretive- ,

,In all such cases, Jush~e ,de- ,:, ness Il).ay be, avice, but prudent,~apds t?at .one, reveal, t~e rele- , reticence ~s a virtue..-.nt ol:>bgahons or com~Tlltments. " -It: is, well to remember that,,j May, Be Dangerous ",the:'best of us a're none too strong" So much for the question, Mu~t" ' in' overcomirig jealousy and sus':I Reveal? Perhaps much more picion. Above all, the thoughtlessP.ertinent is the question, Should -confession ,of past experienceslilt, ,- , " , ' and errors with members of ·the

Because they are very much in', 'opposite sex can sow troublesomeDove and wish to share all they seeds' of 'distrust that may bear~ve, young couples in particular 'fruit o~ly many years later.are sometimes unwise in their ,- Why sli"oulq, engaged couples

...... ~nfidences with each other. or' '.newlyweds imperil theirThey all too trustingly corifess'future happiness with this possi­past mistakes or recounl' pilst. bility! '

Page 19: 03.30.61

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THE··ANCHOR­Thurs., March 30, 1961

I'M 'Informamm about the .

~ '1:roos IFcrthei'S orh~~Gro, wrots ~@:

~Ly C~OS;S fAiTME~.$~ ~sron, Ma<'o>Saeh!.lll~

C 0 a c D11 A@visesYoung ~li'~~etes

On Qu@ ~ o\f~esWASHINGTON (NC)

Al Severance, one of thenat ion's top basketballcoaches, 'advised high schoolathletes to develop the qualitiesof obedience and discipline tofit themselves for college andlater life.

Retired after 25 years ascoach at Villanova University,he dispensed the advice to eightsquads of the nation's top highschool basketball players as­sembled here to compete 1-n theeighth annual scholastic basket­ball tournament sta'T"!d by thf'Knights 0 f Columbus an c;Georgetown University.

Mr. Severence, who spoke ata dinner honoring the players,defended college athletic schol­arships. He said: "With all :ijl<,extra work he puts in playing rsport for the prestige of. hi:school, a boy deserves a scholar-

. ·l1hip." He, said there is nothinrbetter to fit a young man forany walk of life than the oom­bination of a Catholic educati~and character-building athletics.

"It matters not," he told t!b('high schoolers, "how good axeyour reflexes, how great yourability as a rebounder, how ~_

curate your aim as a shooter.how swift your speed. All ~('fine qualities are nothing UnliSl'r ou ~earn two things inc,qJle'gl'and In allhletics-obedienoo' an(

. discipline. It's these, more' t1i~11any other qualities, which: fi:)'OU for the role you choose'wfill in later life." : , ,

Mr. Severance warned' 'ilhcyou~gsters a g a ins t slight1hl.studIes. He said "it's tough :nov:

. for an athlete in college to ,keep

. up with required gra-'~s and it',;going to get tougher· with· theway Catholic colleges are over­crowded."

He told the youngsters to de­vel~p a moral life in college. HeadVIsed: "Play the game ·in lifea~d in sport hard and .p~ tow~.

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HIEADaUARYeRs .. roR" COLONIAL· AND

''il'RADIT!ONAL. filaJRNIT\mI

BRAILLE LESSON: A member of the famed VielmaChoir Boys, Johann Nistl, 12, left, receives a lesson' inreading braille from Judy Oammett, 8, a braille studentat the Perkins School for the Blind, Watertown. Thefamous Catholic choral group gave a concert for 300children at the school. NC Photo.

·Cleveland Youth Mobilize to' A,ssi·stVictim .of·Serious .Heart AUment·

CLEVELAND' '(NC) ~ Bill as Detroit, and the CYO thereCashman was a stranger in also said' it was ready to recruitCleveland-but ··whEm the 'chips donors if necessary.were down that couldn't havemattered less. Final Act .,

During the last week' of his But the campaign did .not stoplife the 23-year-old Bloomfield, there. Members of the diocesanN. J., youth was the obj'e'ct of a Council of Young Adults ,visitedmassive project of charity under- . Bill Cashman in the ,hospital.taken by Catholic young. people Parish clubs in Euclid, a, Cleve­here. .. , land suburb, provided him, with

The victim of a serious heart a TV set for his room. A rotating· ailment, Bill Cashman eritered visiting schedule was set up soSt. Vincent's Hospital to undergo he could have company everyopen-heart surgery. He came afternoon and evening if he

wished.here from Bloomfield, a Newark,N ..J., suburb, because of the local But young Bill Cashman washospital's record of success in the not destined to get well.· Hisopen heart technique.' cOl\dition worsened. and before

. . ., . the operation had ,been per-With the operation set,· it wes formed, he died. .

· necessary to find whole olood for , rhe ,.yo.ung· man was .burled ., the young man.. The .corytmunity from' Immaculate Conception,blood: ban~ was unprepared,·f,or Chur.ch, MQntclair, .~.J., where.,suc~ an.. emergencY,;anq tb.e.sIt- his,t~O friends attended a· u/ilt~onQegan:to appear :?egpel1ate . 'Requiem Mass'for him. ,:, (untIl th.e. local; ..Catholic. ~oung " 'Arid hi ~leveland the Diocesanpeople st:epped.m.;, I.,;'·Youth· 'Council made "arran:ge-, ~ack.. m Bloomfi~ld BIlJ..:was inehts' for' another' Mass iO: be

, .acb~e tnthe Catbolio Yo~th pr- 'offered 'for 'Bill Cashmah~their

I' ~amzationofSacred.. He/ilrt p;ar- final act of charity to'a stranger.,·Ish.perhaps,.'.lus,·relli!tIves··," .."J, "",. ,"';1 .;:

,thoug~t, , there might ~es4nilar ... VincentiansScheduleclubs tn,Cleveland WhlCh.W(».Ild

W'· ",' ,. .'. M" .. ~,." !.'

be able to ·help. . , ",' I " . ,estport· eehng "They contacted Msgr.John. J. '" . Members of the' Fal1:Ri-ver

Kiley, Newark archdiocesan CYOPartfcular"Council'of the'Societyd~ector, and he got in touch with of·St. Vincent de Paul will meet·his Cleveland counterpart, Msgr. at 7:45 Tuesday night, April 4 atThomas C. Corrigan. St. George Church, Westport. A

The Cleveland CYO. moved meeting in the parish hall willfast. Newspapers, TV and radio follow benediction. The 1961stations were contacted. They re- camp·season will be among mat­sponded by carrying appeals for tel's discussed.blood donors. The drive resulted Members are reminded that

· in offers from more than 100 Sunday, April 16 is a festival of· donors. The word even got as far St. Vincent de Paul and 11 day· on, ,w~ich :M'assis to, be at~nded

Puerto Ricoto,H~ve and ,Hob' Communion received.....lew··Cath !"' Ul' kl ,in pne.'s parish church. ,."

,I~ ,C) IC "lee. y I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~PONCE (NC)-EI Debate, a 1~1

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Approved by the Puerto. RicanHierarchy, the 20 to 24-page tab­loid' will make its· debut as aresult of the efforts of' threeCatholic publications - LuzyVerdad, official Ponce publica-

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,of theYoung.Catholic Workers.

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CYO Basketball TourneyAttracts Banner Field

By Jack KineavyA combined total of 51 teams entered the third annual

CYO Easter Basketball Tourney which is about to completeits second· week of competition at the Anawan Street court,Fall River. The field has been narrowed to the quarterfinalsin the junior division but game, after having missed thesuch was the response in the foul that would have ended it insenior grouping that play is regulation time, richly deservedstill in the elimination the MVP Award for his steadyrounds. The championship games playmaking, and general floor­are slated for Thursday, April manship throughout the tourney.13. Much of the credit for the

A couple of Friars' success must go to Coachrna j 0 r upsets Joe Mullaney who utilized hish a v e already personnel in a most effectiveoccurred. Junior fashion. Ray Flynn, Georged e fen din g Zalucki, Tim Moynihan, Carlc ham p ion Spencer and Dick Leonard who,OLOA of New at various times, complementedBedford was the Egan-Ernst-Hadnot startingousted by St. trio, all produced at vital mo-Patrick's of Fall ments to help the cause along.River and Santo Next YearChristo, 1959 And already. the cry "Wait tillSenior tiUists fell victim to St. next year'" has been sounded.Mary's of Taunton. Pulling the Not in the rueful sense, however,freight for St. Pat's were Driscoll as is the wont of Red Sox fan­and Bonalewicz of the Durfee dom, but rather in a pridefulJayvees and they were assisted manner, admonishing the col­ably by Coyle's Ed Gagnon. In legiate hoop world, "If you t~ink

OLOA's lineup was New Bedford we're great now" we'll pe nothingHigh's scintillating sophomore, short of phenomenal next year."Wendy Miranda, the recipient Giving rise to this ungraded op­of the 1960 MVP award in the timism is the '61-'62 ,varsityJunior division. availability of a couple of

Tourney buffs have singled out freshmen, 6-10 John ThompsonSt. Anne's, Fall River, St. John's, and 6-2 Jimmy Stone.Attleboro, and St. James', New Thompson, an All-AmericaI'\.

Bedford,. ~s teams that will bear high school player at Archbishopwatching in Senior play. Holy Carroll paced the Frosh to a 20-2Name of New Bedford, defending season's record" averaged 32.2champion is still pretty much of points per game, 16 rebounds anda question mark in that the team a 57 per ceqt field goal accuracy.having drawn an initial bye has In short, he does everything butyet to make an appearance. With take tickets,. Stone, a transferSt. Anne's are the Berubes, from Grambline eLa.) CollegE),Woody and Ron, and Roger Lord; was ineJigible this year. How­St. John's is spearheaded by ever, he was' almost as well­Lange, Higginbottom and Groch- regarded' a prospect in his highmal, all of whom starred on the school career as was Ohio's No.1Jewelers' championship club of . player of the era and everybody'sthis past season and St. James' All-American, 'Jerry Lucas.features Rick ·Tavares and Jeff Back for his final year will beRiley of N.~. High .fame and Jim Hadnot who did such a tre­Charley Palmer. mendous job all year. Ernst,

These are but a few of the host Zalucki: and Flynn, presentlyof former and current high sophomores have two 'seasonsschool luminaries who are par- left so there doesn't appear thatticipating in. the tournament. .' t!1eI:e will be a sudden dearthMaking a very fine impression in to the Friars' ho!>p. fortu,nes inthe Junior diviSion is Our Lady the immediate future. If onlyor Fatima of Swansea, which is 'Alumni Hall" could accommodatecomposed largely of Gase High· 10,1)001'.': ,: '.' .,'.Jay.vees.The highest individual Selected,,'oll t~e A,ll-:-'.rourna­scoring. effort ·to, date ·is. Rick lJ1~ntTeap1·.:w~th: ~ga~ andTavares' 37 point' output against .. Er.pst .,wa's; Ja~k. Foley ·.Oli HolyOur Lady of Mercy. Cross who with, bacJtcourtman

Not " in.. my., experience". has ,:' George .Blag,ey and Tim Sheathere·.been ·a· spor.ts- event' that'... kept the Cr.us.adersin contentioncaptivated' ·the':attention· of 'the .', all. the; w.ay: ,~oleyaveraged 30pe6ple·'·of this area' as ' did the' . pointl! per game;i{l.thed'our-gamequest',of :the Pr9vidence College "" compe,tition and,:is generally con­Friars for NIT honors. An esti- sidered by veteran' hoop 'observ­mated 25,000 gave the team a'" ers to~ have it brilliant futurenoisy welcome' home' reininiscent ahead of him' hi pro' 'ball..of the tumultuous reception ae- On the ESCIT scene in New­coraed 'Boston' College's' Sugar port, it· was St."Peter's of Newbowl victors'20 years ago. . Jersey over favored All Hallows

Later day Chroniclers will no of New York by a 63-51 margin.doubt pin the "team of destiny" .The victol'y' brought the thirdlabel on the Friars and with good ESCIT title. to the Jersey Cityreason. '.rhis was a club that at school which had previously'the season!s".outset ,appeared 1fo taken honqrs in 1953 ·and '54.be a year .away. The several nar- Only - Archbishop Carroll ofrow squeaks which ·the team had, Washington, D. C. had· formerlyits sub.,par performance in the .won three. times., Big man forGarden's 'Holiday Tourney· and . St., Peter's' and a boy ,in ,whomlate season defeats at the hands many schools ·are' interested wasof Rhode Island and Holy' Cross ·6-5. cen:ter Jim Barry. Perhapstempered whatever· aspirations the most colorful player in theeven the most rabid Friar pa'rti~ . Tourney' wlis" Bill Lawrence ofsans harbored."Yet, the club·went' Archbishop Malloy 01 NeW York.all· .the' way.' As one veteran' \coach observed,"They did it with . Debate ToulI"neymirrors."- '. Sacred Hearls Academy Mt.,

Captain John :Egan was alter- St. Mary's Academy, and' Pre­nately brllliant and erratic. His vost High School, ail Fall' Riverbackcourt partner, Vin Ernst, will be - among p'articipants i~who endeared himself to all wh'o • the fourth annual Providencewitne~sedhis clutch perfotmance College de~ate tournament Sat­in .the overtime of the Holy Cross urday, Apr~l 15. Topic for debate

will . be Resolved': That theRio Catholics Protest United Nations·should be signA­Tmto's vasit to' Brazil '. ficantly str~ngthened... '~... ~." , '" .

RtO DE JANEIRO (NC) ....:.Rio's Catholic Archdiocesan Con:' ' .federation has formally protestedagains! . the Brazilian 'govern­ment's invitatiohto Marshal Tito 'of' 'Yugbslavia' to visidhis' couo'" 'try. . " :

The protest against "the jailer"of Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac'was approved at a general assem­bly of the COnfederation. Jaime.Cardinal de BliIrros Camara, .Archbishop of Rio, said. that if •he came,Marshal rito would.~greeted QY .the tolling of churcQbells es a token of mourninB.· ...

Page 20: 03.30.61

-20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River-Thurs. Mar. 30,1961

COMBATS PERUVIAN POVERTY: Rev. O. A. Meunier of the Oblatesof Mary Immaculate, New Bedford native, has, dedicated ~imself since1957 to combatting poverty in suburbs of Lima, P,eru. Left picture shows

desolate shack area where Oblates strive to awaken sleeping 'faith inthousands of Peruvians. Inset, Father Meunier. Right, first Oblate churchin Lima,' ereoted last year. Note flimsy construction.

Gift of Rlee .

New England's Playground!

PiaU'll YCIIJJIl' DOlnce lPJall'~W

FasM@U'll Shows andl8al1'llltllue~$

cd lUll"icoin Park'sMllUON-DOUAR

BAUROOMCall ROLAND GAMACHE

WYman 9-6984

He was presented 'at the cere­monies by his adviser; U. Ohn,and by U Law Yone, editor of

. The Nation, Rangoon, daily, aCatholic alid one of Burma'sleading journalists. The PrimeMinister made a gift of 450 !?as­kets of rice for the people at­

:tending the celebration.

An earnest Buddhist, U Nu has, expressed his admiration for theCatholic Church publicly on sev-·eral occasions.

Replying to the Prime Minis­ter's message, Archbishop Knoxdeclared that "the CatholieChurch in Burma is ever con­scious of the contribution it can

'make to the unity, peace and.prosperity of this beloved coun-·try."

Cit Oil: (OMPANYV~ ~~~@~

66(fJ)00ff m@aaTtnoow (ff)nRfJ IVf1oolJaoIJJffif?DW IFf1'n(BoodJ~>O

.N

" featuring"ihe GClIsiughi Ro~m"Ideal for Communion Break­fasts~ Organization Banquets

386 Acushnet Ave.'New Bedford

Call. WYman 2-1703

Language LabST. MARY-OF-THE-WOODS

(NC)-A $30,000 language lab­oratory has been completed atSt. Mary-of-the-Woods Collegehere in Indiana with 30 studentpositions, or booths, e a c h

· equipped with electronic record-· ing and receiving instruments.The teacher's console has threetape recorders and a recordplayer: Four different language"programs" can be broadcast

· from it at the same time.

lAo W" AA~~u~~SCRAP METALS

WASTEPAPER - RAGSTRUCKS AND YRAILIERS~OL'l

PAPER DRIVESCHURCHES, SCOUTS andCIVIC ORGANIZATIONS

1080 .Shawmut AvenueNew Bedford WY 2-7828

:v 0 vv V' 'YV'V va 'V" 'V"V""V ;;::

S)~®elPloli1)® @D<alB'ilil'ST. LOUIS (NC)-It's about

time people quit referring to theCatholic laity as a ~'sleeping

· 'giant," Arthur J. Conley, insisted._Chairman of the family life'com­mittee of the National Couri<:il of

· Catholic Men and also father of· nine children, he explained, "Ihaven't had any sleep for twoyear~not because 'of NCCMactivities but because of all thekids waking up so early."

Ne1tv Bedi-ord Native,.Pe1rlU)M[ll,s§ioneY'~ A.ppeal~ B(LO~wn~se Le(1l~er

To Diocesan Men to Aid·Papal Volunteers 'FP~edcge$thEql~allty. B P .. M G ' or a 0 ICSy atrlcla cowan , .

Rev. O. A. Meunier, an Oblate of Mary Immaculate and Superior 'of Obla:te missions ~HAM? ': (NC)-Burmesein Peru, is a native of New Bedford. So is Rev. John J. Gonsidine, M.M., National DirectOr . PrIme M~ms~er U Nu hasof the Volunteers of the Pope, organization recently set up to channel aid to Latin asked ArchbIs~op James R.American missions. Now one New Bedfordi te is aiding another. Father Meunier, through Knox, ApostolIe Delegate to

. . ~ Burma, "to announce to thethe Papal NunCIO III ~e~u, ago the Oblates. moved into a people live there in miserable ,Catholics of Burma my solemnapplied to Father Considme second mission, in "what is con- huts. No water, no light, no pledge that there shall never befor some of his volunteers. sidered the most desolate, poor- roads but lanes, no church, no any discrimination" against them

'He has been informed that est and most shocking district of rectory, no Ilchools could be on religious grounds.: he will probably receive three . Li~a." 1 found to answer the vital needs The declared policy of U Nu'syoung men early in the Fall. More than 50,000 home ess of the tremendous population." government is to make Buddhism

They will act as catechists, I Sh' 1_ After a year of work, Father the state religion of Burma. Hisdirectors of youth organizations, Disc 05ure OCIll.. Meunier reports, the Oblate pas- pledge to the Catholics was partand instructors of Catholic action To Set'"'" HaIA tor, and his assistants have of a letter addressed to Arch-units, and will also train altar v I erected a temporary church, bishop Knox for the dedicationboys, lead church choirs and di- SOUTH ORANGE (NC) , secured cooperation of 60 social of St. Patrick's procathedralrect congregations in dialogue Seton Hall University officials workers, and called in nuns and here.MaSs res.po?ses in the. t~o . expressed sadness and shock at priests ,from the heart of pros- UNu sent his "best wishes andOblate mISSIons now active In . the disclosure th1!t two of the . perous Lima. "The 'place is congratulations" to Msgr. JohnPeru. school's top basketball play~rs, changing fast." . . J. Howe, Apostolic Prefect of

Since 195'7 . are being questioned in an in- "At present, six Oblates are . Bhamo and to its priests andFather Meunier has been in the ··vestigation into rigged basket- evangelizing the district. Street peOplE!.

,Peru mission's since 1957, when . ball games. .' pr~achin:g, public processions,he was appointed 'to establish Msgr. John J. Dougherty, pres- revival meetings in the open air;'the first Oblate "beachhead." iderit of the Newark archdiocesan moving pictures are being used"A vast city of 50,000 :"souls with institution said: "We, condemn - to attract the crowds.a single parish and a sirigle priest not the, players, but the fact.was split up to form a new par-' "The results are good. Ourish," he recounts. "We feel compassion for them, . people fill our churches and we

"Where there was no church, for no' doubt they feel it even now have four young men inno school, no rectory, I acquired more than we do. We teach them the seminary."

. a piece of land and erected the . the right way by day, but there Father' Meunier. makes anthree parochial units." , A year '. 'are men' who talk, at night to urgent plea for young men, of his

corrupt the youth of our country. -home Diocese,' which he termsThe playing field is a place of _"the little Diocese with the bighonor, and yet foul men prey heart," to join the Volunteers of

, about. What worse evi lis there?" the Pope "and give a himd inPledge Cooperation the awakening and strengthen-

Father John Horgan, in his ing of a sleeping faith."first year as athletic director,called the incident "about themost regrettable and saddestthing that could have happened

· to both the ball players and theuniversity."

University officials h a v epledged cOQperation with theinvestigation begun in New Yorkby Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hoganwho said he has reports of a"far-reaching scandal" of bribesto ball players to shave points,

· that is, to see that their teams_won by fewer points or lost bymore than bookmakers hadpredicted.

PIi'BS\t»IJ'\l®Ii'$ (Q}(]J)fr*Dil' ~@'W

f@!i' fDIl'S3t ~«llIJ'U'ilIJ1iilMlJ'\liOIJ'\lALGHERO (NC) - Prisoners

in the Alghero jail .on this im­poverished island of Sardiniahave made it possible for anorphan boy to receive his firstHoly Communion in style.

One prisoner received a letterfrom the boy, whom he hadkp..own before being sent to jail.The boy told him he was goingto make his first Communionbut wanted a pair of 'shoes for

~he ceremony. The prisoner cir­culated the request among theinmates and took up a collection.

As a result the orphan receivedapproximately $20, enough tobuy not only shoes but a newsuit and white tie.

--C@Mtri1' U'@ ~u!e

" OD'll MClrV~«lHr,dOs

Be~oef T~H~tWASHINGTON (NC)

Maryland officials have toldthe U. S. Supreme Court thatrefusal to declare one's be­lief in God makes a manunqualified to hold public officein that state.

State Attorney General ThomasB. Finan and Deputy AttorneyGeneral Joseph S. Kaufman alsoargued that there is no impair­ment of religious liberty in mak­Ing such a declaration a condi­tion for holding public Qffice.

The Maryland officials arguedthis point in a brief submitted tothe high court, which has agreedto rule on an avowed atheist'seontention that the requirementis "unconstitutional;

Challenges RulingThe case involves the appeal

of Roy A. Torcaso of Wheaton"Md., a Wash~ri'gton suburb~ Theprofessed atheist is challenginga ruling by the Mary.1and Courtof Appeals, which held in June,1960, that .it is constitutional torequire a statement of belief inGod as a condition for publicoffice.

Mr. Torcaso was refused alicense as a notary public inMontgomery County, Md.,' be­eause he refused to sign such' a Prelate Stressesdeclaration, required under ar-ticle 37 of the Maryland Consti- Human Rightswtion.

He contended that "a disquali- OKLAHOMA CITY-A bishopfication for public office because emphasized that human rightsof religious belief or non belief take precedence over property

~onstitu"tes impairment of reli- rights in a sermon\ deliveredgious liberty and an interference -here to the first Catholic Inter­with the free exercise of reli- racial Council workshop.gion." Bishop Victor J. Reed of

In their 21-page brief Mr.. Okl~homa City and Tulsa spokeFinan and Mr Kaufman state durmg a Mass he offered to openthat Mr Torcas'o's refusal to de- the workshop on "The American

, elare belief in God "clearly _ Problem" at McGuinness Highmakes him not eligible to hold Sc!1.0ol. More than 1,25 per.sonspublic office in Maryland." reg~stere.d for ~he day ~ meetm?s,

They say the Supreme Court whi,ch m~estlga~ed mterraclal"has on several occasions recog- ~roblems.m housmg an~ educa­nized that the holding of state tIon, publIc accommodatIons, em­office or employment is a privi- plo~ment and from ~he .psycho­lege, the qualifications for which lo~/cal aspect~ o~ preJu~hce.,may be established by state con- ~very ChrIstIan belIeves thatStitutional law, as long as they Christ was the Redee~:r ~ndare not unreasonable or discrim- that He made no dIstmctIoninatory " among men," the Bishop said.

. ,"Redemption of the wholehuman race has no exception."

Principle lIs RightThe prelate asserted that when

principle contradicts custom-aproblem in segregation~"prinCi­

pIe is 'right. and custom iswrong." He added that integra­tion, is "a problem to be facedsome day."

"Racial discr.imiJiation hasbeen shunted aside for years andfor decades of years. It wouldseem that today is the day," hesaid.,

In the matter of propertyrights, a defense cited in the caseof Oklahoma City's restaurantsit-ins, Bishop Reed said that

....-t.there are all kinds of peoplewho seem to think that propertyrights are more important thanhuman rights. And they're not."