19
Transfers Bishop Also Creates Three / New Cape Priests Parish ; Drive Group Plans 1961 Appeal The General Meeting to plan the 1961 Catholic Char- ities Appeal in the Diocese will be held Monday after-. noon at 3 at Jesus-Mary Acad- emy in Fall River. In attendance at the meeting will be all pastors, assistants not needed for pressing parochial services, parish chairmen and 'trustees, and other interested members of the laity. Invitations have also been extended to an past lay chairmen of the AppeaL The Appeal this year will take place in the 109 parishes of the Diocese from May 7 to 17. Spe- cial gifts will begin on April 26- Lay chairman of the Appeal this year-:--:which coincides with Bishop Connolly's tenth anniver- sary as Ordinary of the Diocese -is Joseph E. Fernandes of Nor- ton. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, is Chairman and Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Considine is Director. Parishes, as usual, will suspend fund-raising activ- ities during the Appeal, starting April 23. . FATHER CHAREST FATHER BESSETTE The transfer of one pastor, the appointment of au. administrator and the transfer of an assistant are an-. nounced today from the Chancery Office by the Most Reverend Bishop. Rev. Henri J. Charest, pastor of Holy Rosary Church, New Bed- ford, becomes pastor of St. Matthew's Church, Fa II River, succeeding the late Rev. Aurelien L. Moreau who died March 12. Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, assistant at Notre Dame Church, Fall River, becomes ad- ministrator of Holy Rosary par- ish, New Bedford, succeeding Father Charest. Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, assistant at St. Mat- thew's, Fall River, replaces Father Bessette at Notre Dame, Fall River. Father Charest Father Charest, new pastor of the Fall River parish, was born Jan. 9, 1908, in Fall River, the son of the late Albert and Regina Fortier Charest. He studied philosophy and theology at the Quebec. Seminary and was or- dained in the, Semiqary Chapel on May 1, 1932. For the next five years, Father Charest taught at the Quebec Seminary and then became as- sistant at Notre Dame Parish in F'all River. He served in that capacity; in St. Joseph's and st. Anthony's Parishes in New Bed- ford and became administrator of Holy Rosary 'Church on Feb. IO, 1960. Father BesseUe . The new administrator of Holy Rosary Parish, New Bedford,' Turn to Page Eighteen New Bedford Nun Will Mark Jub.Uee T.his Sunday . SIster Mary of St. OlIva, C.S.C. wIll be the most surprised nun in New Bedford this Sunday. She knows it's her golden jubilee but what the principal of St. Anthony of Padua grammar school doesn't know is that Rt. Rev. Msgr. Albert Berube, pastor of St.. An- thony's, will celebrate a Solemn High Mass for her at 11' in the parish ch.urch. Scores of parishioners, former and present pupils will be ift attendance, all with the purpose of. wishing Sister St. Oliva well. She has been principal of St. Anthony's for 27 years and for five years previously was at Sacred Heart School, also New Bedford. Previous Service was in New Hampshire. Mass will not end the day's festivities for the jubilarian. In the evening, the 600 pupils of St. Anthony's are dedicating their annual play to her. Between Mass and curtain time for the play, her 40 fellow-religious of the Congregation of the Holy Cross and the Seven Dolors at St. Anthony's convent will have their own celebration for her. More festivities will follow ift ,May, when the community will , Turn to Page Eighteen SISTER MARY OLIVA. C.s.o. .FR. STACHOWICZ. dained in in 1927., , Father served as assistant ill parishes in Holyoke and Balti- more and spent 13 year.s on the mission band. eye Seventeen Father Hogan PortChaplain Th.e M.ost Reverend Bishop haS announced the appoint-· merit of Rev. John F. Hogan of New Bedford' to be Port Chaplain for the Diocese of Fall River for the Apostleship of the Sea. ;Father Hogan is Director of the Catholic Welfare Bureau of New Bedford and the Cape and 'Director of St. Mary's Home. The Apostleship of the Sea is a unit of the National ·Catholic Welfare Conference, the central administrative board of the bishops of the United States. of the Apostleship of , the. Sea is to assist those who earn their living on the water by providing facilities in port for .the benefit of their spiritual lives and their. social and cuI- well-being. Sunday, May 7, has been desig- nated by the national group and by . Bishop Connolly for the Diocese of Fall River as the day on which the faithful of the Church in the United States will ceall to mind the rieeds of those whose iife and labor is on . the seas. © 1961 The Anchor PRICE tOe $4.00 per YCXM Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass. ' An Anohor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUll. The ANCHOR Vol. 5, No. 15 Bishop Approves Pastor For New Bedford Church The Most Reverend Bishop has announced his approval of the appointment of Rev. Seraphin Stachowicz, O.F.M. Conv., by Very Rev. George M. Roskwitalski, O.F.M.Conv., Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Friars Minor Con- ventual, to be pastor of. Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New Bedford. Fr. Stachowicz succeeds Rev. Adolph 'Banach, O,F,M.Conv., a classmate and friend, who died April 2. A n.ative of Chicopee Falls, Father Stachowicz has been serv- ing as pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Church, Athol Springs, N. Y., since 1948, where he built a new church, grade school, con- vent and rectory. Born in 1903, Father Stach- owicz attended parochial schools in Chicopee and Springfield and entered the Franciscan Fathers in 1921. He studied in. Detroit, Rome and Assisi and was' 01'- NEW PORT CIHIAPLAIN: ,Rev. John F. Hogan, right, newly-appointed Port Chaplain for the Diocese, is congratu- lated at the New Bedford docks by Harbormaster'Larry Chongarlides, left, and Harbor Pilot Capt. Jack, Saunders; eenter, as he discusses his new post with'them. ' Immaculate Conception Churc.h in East Brewster, long a mission of St. Joan of Arc Parish, Orleans, haa has been erected to the status of a Parish by the Most Rev- erend Bishop. Selected to head thin new parish,' which will assume that title next Wednes- day is Rev. Joseph Nolin, M.S. }'ATHER NOLIN. M.S. Father Nolin, a Missionary of LaSalette, will be the first mem- ber of his Congregation to head a parish in the Fall River Dio- cese, although the LaSalette Fathers have houses in both East Brewster and Attleboro. The LaSalette Fathers are, " thereforE;, no strangers to Cape Cod, and they have long supplied week-end and Summer assist- ance to many of the Cape par- Ishes. The new parish, to be known , lIS Immaculate Conception Par- ish, is the 109th parish in the Diocese and the ten th to be established by Bishop ·Connolly. Parishioners of the new parish Will be those persons living Turn to Page Eighteen

04.13.61

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© 1961TheAnchor eye ACTIV~TIIES NEWPORTCIHIAPLAIN:,Rev.JohnF.Hogan,right, newly-appointedPortChaplainfortheDiocese,iscongratu- lated at the New Bedforddocks by Harbormaster'Larry Chongarlides,left, andHarborPilotCapt.Jack,Saunders; eenter,as he discusseshisnewpostwith'them. ' The General Meeting to Immaculate Conception Churc.h in East Brewster, longamissionofSt.Joan of Arc Parish, Orleans, haa FATHER CHAREST FATHER BESSETTE AnAnohorof the Soul,Sureand Firm-ST.PAUll. SISTER MARY OLIVA. C.s.o.

Citation preview

TransfersBishopAlso Creates

Three/

New CapePriests

Parish

;

Drive GroupPlans 1961Appeal

The General Meeting toplan the 1961 Catholic Char­ities Appeal in the Diocesewill be held Monday after-.noon at 3 at Jesus-Mary Acad­emy in Fall River.

In attendance at the meetingwill be all pastors, assistants notneeded for pressing parochialservices, parish chairmen and'trustees, and other interestedmembers of the laity. Invitationshave also been extended to anpast lay chairmen of the AppeaL

The Appeal this year will takeplace in the 109 parishes of theDiocese from May 7 to 17. Spe­cial gifts will begin on April 26-

Lay chairman of the Appealthis year-:--:which coincides withBishop Connolly's tenth anniver­sary as Ordinary of the Diocese-is Joseph E. Fernandes of Nor­ton. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard,D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop ofthe Diocese, is Chairman andRt. Rev. Raymond T. Considineis Director. Parishes, as usual,will suspend fund-raising activ­ities during the Appeal, startingApril 23. .

FATHER CHAREST FATHER BESSETTE

The transfer of one pastor, the appointment of au.administrator and the transfer of an assistant are an-.nounced today from the Chancery Office by the MostReverend Bishop. Rev. Henri J. Charest, pastor of HolyRosary Church, New Bed­ford, becomes pastor of St.Matthew's Church, F a IIRiver, succeeding the lateRev. Aurelien L. Moreau whodied March 12. Rev. Ernest R.Bessette, assistant at Notre DameChurch, Fall River, becomes ad­ministrator of Holy Rosary par­ish, New Bedford, succeedingFather Charest. Rev. Adrien E.Bernier, assistant at St. Mat­thew's, Fall River, replacesFather Bessette at Notre Dame,Fall River.

Father CharestFather Charest, new pastor of

the Fall River parish, was bornJan. 9, 1908, in Fall River, theson of the late Albert and ReginaFortier Charest. He studiedphilosophy and theology at theQuebec. Seminary and was or­dained in the, Semiqary Chapelon May 1, 1932.

For the next five years, FatherCharest taught at the QuebecSeminary and then became as­sistant at Notre Dame Parish inF'all River. He served in thatcapacity; in St. Joseph's and st.Anthony's Parishes in New Bed­ford and became administratorof Holy Rosary 'Church on Feb.IO, 1960.

Father BesseUe. The new administrator of HolyRosary Parish, New Bedford,'

Turn to Page Eighteen

New Bedford Nun Will MarkG~lden Jub.Uee T.his Sunday

. SIster Mary of St. OlIva, C.S.C. wIll be the most surprisednun in New Bedford this Sunday. She knows it's her goldenjubilee but what the principal of St. Anthony of Paduagrammar school doesn't know is that Rt. Rev. Msgr. AlbertBerube, pastor of St.. An­thony's, will celebrate aSolemn High Mass for her at11' in the parish ch.urch.

Scores of parishioners, formerand present pupils will be iftattendance, all with the purposeof. wishing Sister St. Oliva well.She has been principal of St.Anthony's for 27 years and forfive years previously was atSacred Heart School, also NewBedford. Previous Service wasin New Hampshire.

Mass will not end the day'sfestivities for the jubilarian. Inthe evening, the 600 pupils of St.Anthony's are dedicating theirannual play to her. BetweenMass and curtain time for theplay, her 40 fellow-religious ofthe Congregation of the HolyCross and the Seven Dolors atSt. Anthony's convent will havetheir own celebration for her.

More festivities will follow ift,May, when the community will

, Turn to Page Eighteen SISTER MARY OLIVA. C.s.o.

.FR. STACHOWICZ. O.F.M.Co~

dained in Ita~ in 1927.,, Father served as assistant illparishes in Holyoke and Balti­more and spent 13 year.s on themission band.

eye ACTIV~TIIES

Pa~ Seventeen

Father HoganPortChaplain

Th.e M.ost Reverend BishophaS announced the appoint-·merit of Rev. John F. Hoganof New Bedford' to be PortChaplain for the Diocese of FallRiver for the Apostleship of theSea.

;Father Hogan is Director ofthe Catholic Welfare Bureau ofNew Bedford and the Cape and

'Director of St. Mary's Home.The Apostleship of the Sea is

a unit of the National ·CatholicWelfare Conference, the centraladministrative board of thebishops of the United States.~urpose of the Apostleship of

, the. Sea is to assist those whoearn their living on the waterby providing facilities in portfor .the benefit of their spirituallives and their. social and cuI­tur~11 well-being.

Sunday, May 7, has been desig­nated by the national group andby . Bishop Connolly for theDiocese of Fall River as the dayon which the faithful of theChurch in the United States willceall to mind the rieeds of thosewhose iife and labor is ~pent on

. the seas.

© 1961 The Anchor PRICE tOe$4.00 per YCXM

Se~ond Class Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Mass. '

An Anohor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUll.

TheANCHOR

Vol. 5, No. 15

Bishop Approves PastorFor New Bedford Church

The Most Reverend Bishop has announced his approvalof the appointment of Rev. Seraphin Stachowicz, O.F.M.

~: Conv., by Very Rev. George M. Roskwitalski, O.F.M.Conv.,Minister Provincial of the Franciscan Friars Minor Con­ventual, to be pastor of. OurLady of Perpetual HelpChurch, New Bedford. Fr.Stachowicz succeeds Rev.Adolph 'Banach, O,F,M.Conv., aclassmate and friend, who diedApril 2.

A n.ative of Chicopee Falls,Father Stachowicz has been serv­ing as pastor of St. Francis ofAssisi Church, Athol Springs,N. Y., since 1948, where he builta new church, grade school, con­vent and rectory.

Born in 1903, Father Stach­owicz attended parochial schoolsin Chicopee and Springfield andentered the Franciscan Fathersin 1921. He studied in. Detroit,Rome and Assisi and was' 01'-

NEW PORT CIHIAPLAIN: ,Rev. John F. Hogan, right,newly-appointed Port Chaplain for the Diocese, is congratu­lated at the New Bedford docks by Harbormaster'LarryChongarlides, left, and Harbor Pilot Capt. Jack, Saunders;eenter, as he discusses his new post with'them. '

Immaculate ConceptionChurc.h in East Brewster,long a mission of St. Joan ofArc Parish, Orleans, haahas been erected to the statusof a Parish by the Most Rev­erend Bishop. Selected to headthin new parish,' which willassume that title next Wednes­day is Rev. Joseph Nolin, M.S.

}'ATHER NOLIN. M.S.

Father Nolin, a Missionary ofLaSalette, will be the first mem­ber of his Congregation to heada parish in the Fall River Dio­cese, although the LaSaletteFathers have houses in both EastBrewster and Attleboro.

The LaSalette Fathers are," thereforE;, no strangers to Cape

Cod, and they have long suppliedweek-end and Summer assist­ance to many of the Cape par­Ishes.

The new parish, to be known, lIS Immaculate Conception Par­

ish, is the 109th parish in theDiocese and the ten th to beestablished by Bishop ·Connolly.

Parishioners of the new parishWill be those persons living

Turn to Page Eighteen

/

",

,', ',.

11,/,

,',• li

GasolineFuel and Range "

OIL,S,Oil BURNER~

CITIES SERVICEDISTRIBUTORS

. :,1

For prompt, delivery& Day & Night Service

Rural Bottled Gas Service

6' COHANNET'ST.TAUNTON

'Attleboro - No. AttleboroTaunton

W.H.RILEY,& SOM, Inc.

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.. NEW· ~EDFORD, MASS~. .. ,. "

Marlri~ge Danger'In Good Life

BIRMINGHAM (NC) - ~danger to marriage today doesnot come from drink and riotoUIIliving but rather from a generalfeeling of good order and regu.­lated life, according to Arcb.obishop Francis Grimshaw.

People seek a life of avoidingpain and inconvenience,' theArchbishop of Birmingham toldthe Catholic Marriage AdvisoqCouncil. He added:

"This attitude leads to trouble.Life always has its difficultiesand even the best ordered exist­'ences will have their setbacks.We have to live'our lives all,pilgrims on the way to the nex*world. Slick solutions are thina­we'have to turn our back on."

Southorn ,,!ow England',Large,t Millinery Fashion S'­

134 SOUTH' MAIN STREET

FALL RIVER

Are You Wearing A,Pretty, Hat?

It's

,~'~

AnLEBORCYS :Leading Garden Center,

.' CONLON 6',:(,DONNELLY"

" ~uth Main & Wan,~:>

'ATTLEBORQ,':,,"CA 2-0234

Dssue New, Li'$.t.'..Of Good Books, ,',

The Spring edition' of Vi~J,'t~­while Books, a brochure ,iss.uedperiodically' by New '~~dfor~members of the Legion qf ,!,VIary,is now available at all branchesof the New Bedford Free Pui>iicLibrary. ' , , ." "

Books in this'latest listing in­clude The Everlasting Priest;Brother Rice, Moulder, of Men;Catholics and Protestants; Immi­grant Saint;.Treasure in a Field;Mary vs. Lucifer; Fate Is theHunter; Annie's Captain; JohnHughes, Eagle of. the Church. '

Also Unprofitable Servants·Padre Pio; The Edge of Sadness:'The Ladies of' Soissons; .. Now;Popular Patron Saints; MargaretHaughery, Bread Woman' of NewOrleans; D,i:vil)~ Masterpieces;'The MOl)ks, of , Qumran' ,TheWater and ~he,Fire; The Ligh;t~:Heart.

Comlr[r\H~lll'ilder to Visit,TaYll'flt@li1) War Vets

Father John P. WashingtonPost 1799, Taunton CatholiioWa! Veterans, will have as itJguest Friday, April 29 James va,Fay, national commander of ,th:Jorganization.

John Coady, Taunton COIXP

mander, is in general charge ctl,the program to' welcome Com;.;mander Fay. He named' dinn~

. ':::''-''''1) ,1~.... publicity, guest, hall, ·ticket·')a~

Catholic: U:, ThE;ate~ 'flower committees for the evenCb

A • G'0 ',l The Taunton post will be f~,gain oes Ye~SeaS only Massachusetts .unit, of tIw

WAS H I NG TON '(NC) , :,,::.'---veterans' organization visited bIr~layers Inc., the tour-ing ~t- <;:ommander Fay,' who will, berlcal r~pert~ry company of,' the enroute to New Hampsp!rti'to ,•,Catholic,Umversity,.of,Ame,rica, ,State convention Of 'the c'W'Y.will take off for Europe May 5 ':' .. " " l.'fOr five w~~s of perf(lr~a~~t ,U.S. mili~ry ,i~tal1l!tionJ.under sponsorship of the Depart­ment of, Defense. The, CQmpanywill' ,pre sent S'ookespeaa-e's"Merchant of Venice." ' ,

: ,

II(J, " W'"'C-

t, h' ~ f 't' " ,,';;,'i

, UJave, ,,". " Ula ,~y, :,',

New"-Bedford' '& Acushnet." ,(A)...Opera#ve Banks

! '1"

Fall River.,,;~.,C:"aplain S.ays,Cubans Loyal to u.s. '

The United States Navy has no intention of abandoniRgits Guantanamo BaY,b~,e in Cuba, nor is there any questjoaof the loyalty to. thei~; po:s~ ,of Cuban nationals emploredat the bas~. So declarEl~i Rev. Robert Stanton, chaplain to theFall River Naval, Reserve' .Training' Unit, who' has J'u'st ' . $50,000 in American cash, the.

decamped to the Cuban moun-returned from a '16 I I day tains, leaving the governmenttraining cruise with the' At- that mUlih short in revenue. -lantic fleet which to~k him to Silent Treatmentthe Latin American trouble spot. Cubans on the base point oul

Cubans at the base are fierce- government spies by the "silently.loyal to the Navy, says Father treatment," noted the Immac1l­Stanton. Some have served at late Conception curate. LoyalGuantanamo Bay for upwards of workers ostracize suspected in.­30 years and are appreciative of formers and it is easy for Am­the fact that their wages and erican security officers to singltlliving standards are extremely them out.high by Cuban standards. ' No military dependents have

The employes resent, however, left the Guantanamo base, saidthe fact that Cuban tax collec- Father Stanton and recent erec­tors are stationed outside' the tion of a new hospital with abase on paydays. They e;O~l~ct .large wing for use of wives andthe Ameri~an money in,wpi,ch children of servicemen givesthe Cubans, are, paid, dedllct a proof that there are no plan:!Jheavy tax and return the bal- for evacuation.' ' ,ance 'in pesos. In ~his vray, theCastro government obtaips asmuch American currency as' pos:''sible for its own business trans­actions, for the Cuban peso' isnot so valuable on the 'worldm!!rket. '

This system backfired recently,though, said Father StantOn,when a' tax collector amassed

NecrologyTHE ANCHOR lists the death

'anniversary dates 01 priestswho 'served the" Fall RiverDiocese since Its formation in1904 with the Intention thatthe faIthful ,will give them aprayerful remembrance.

APR. 14_ Rev. Louis 'N. Dequoy, 1935;

Pastor, Sacred Heart, No. 'Attle­boro.

,,;t~'gi.onof Decency" The following films: are to be

added tQ. the lists, ,in their re­spective classifications:,

Unobjectionable for generalpatronage: Fabulous World'ofJules Verne; Fronti~r Uprising.,tJnobjecijonable for"adults":

Ring of Fire.Objectionable, in part for aU:

Bimbo the', Great (suggestive,c;~,stuming,an~ dancing); The:!;tIght, Approach ,<,(low moralton~" ,suggestive dialogue' andsituations), " ,

To f~te Acolyteslit Hyannis

Father' McSwiney Council,Hyannis Knights of Columbus,will holds its third annual AltarBoy Night' at 7 Thursday night,April 20 at VFW Hall, Hyannis., " Altar boys from Our Lady ofthe Assumption parish, Oster­ville; Our Lady of Victory, Cen­terville; St. Francis Xavier, Hy­annis; St. Pius X, South Yar­mouth; and Holy Tri~ity, West'Harwich will be honored. '

Rev. Charles W. McConnellCYO Director for the Providenc~Diocese, will be main speaker.Father McConnell directs activi­ties for 25,000 CYO members andwas previously chaplain for Boyan<~ Giils Scouts in' the Diocese.

Guests, oJ honor.. for, the,pro­gram will include pastors fromthe five parishes,to be repre­sented, 'as, well as 'laymen fromthe various 'towns. ", " ,

'In general charge of arrange'­ments' areJ6hn Short, Ostervilleand John' Sheehan; Hyannis. '

• i ".;I,: .... I."j. ' •. '::

APR. 15Rev. Christo'pher G. Hughes,

p.D., 1908, Rector, .Cathedral,Fall River., '

'APR. 16Rev. Arthur E. Langlois, 1928,

On sick,leave, Denver,COlorado.

: ,APR.' 18, "Rev. Hugh ,B. Herroid, 1935,

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

P.R., 1956, Pastor, St. Lawrence.,New Bedford.

APR. 20Rev. E'dward F. Coyle;' S.S.,

:1954, St. Mary Seminary, Paca'Street, Mel.

VETERAN: Rev. John E;Morris, M.M:, a native ofSS. Peter and Paul Parish,Fall River; and a' Maryknollmissioner' for 47 years, isdescribed in a new book, TheMaryknoll Fathers, out this

,month. :Father Morris has, .always worked among the

Koreans. .

OFFICIAL

qiocese of Fa II River

THB ANCHOR

FO.RTY HOURS

DEVOTIONApr. 16-5t. Paul, Taunton.

St. John the Baptist, FallRiver: '

Apr.23-0ur Lady of theHoly Rosary, New Bed­ford.

Holy Ghost, Attleboro.Apr.30-5t. Michaei, Ocean

Grove.Our Lady of the Immacu-,

late Conception, FallRiver.

May 7-0ur Lady of the Im-, maculate" Conception,

North Easton.St. Vincent's Home, Fall

River. "St., Mary, Hebronville,

Second..,lass mail privileges authorlaedat Fall River. Mass, Published eve17Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue, FallRiver, 'Mass.. bY the Catlwlic Press of theDloeese of Fall River. Subscription priceb7 mail. postpaid $4.00, per year.

CLERGY APPOINTMENTS

DECREEESTABLlS~ING OF IMMACULATE, CONCEPTION MISSION

EAST BREWSTER, MASS., AS ,A PARISH

By authority vested in us, with consent and approvalof the Diocesan Board of Consultors, and having discussedthe matter with the Rev-erend Pastors of St. Pius TenthChurch, So. Yarmouth, and St. Joan of Arc Church, 'Orleans,we, by this Decree, establish and constitute the ImmaculateConception Church, East Brewster, as the center of a newparish:

The limits of this parish shall be co-extensive 'with thelimits of the Towns of, Dennis, East Dennis, West Brewster,Brewster, So. Brewster, East Brewster, 'together' withNickerson Park. Persons of the Catholic faith residing inthese areas will constitute membership in the new parishof the Immaculate Conception.

The endowment and benefice of the parish, will consistof the voluntary offerings 'of the faithful. The parish has ­the privilege of keeping in reserve the Blessed Sacramentunder the usual, conditions, and with proper provision forreverent devotion; of possessing a baptismal font, and havingall other rights associated' with the administration of thesacraments. '

With this Decree we appoint the Rev. Joseph A. ':Nolin,M.S., of the La Salette Fathers, Administrator'of the parish..The appointment of Fr. Nolin 'and ',erection of t,he' parishbecome E#ec~ive, Wednesday, April 19, 1961'; , ',' ,""

Given at Fall River this 8th day of 'April, 1961..1 • ·1 • # ; ,.

Roman Catholic Bishop of Fall River

Rev. Henri J. Charest, pastor of Holy Rosary Church,New Bedford to become pastor of St. Matthew's Church FallRiver. \ ' ,

Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, assistant at Notre Dam:e Church,Fall River, to become administrator of Holy Rosary Church,New Bedford.

Effective Thursday, April 20, 1961.

Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, assistant at St. Matthew'sChurch, Fall River, to become assistant at Notre DameChurch, Fall River.

Effective Tuesday, April 18, 1961.,

Approval given by the Most Reverend Bishop of hisProvincial's choice of Rev. Joseph A. Nolin, M.S., to becomeadministrator of Immaculate Conception Church, East Brew-ster. ~

Effective Wednesday, April 19, 1961.

Approval given by the Most Reverend Bishop of hisProvincial's choice of Rev. Seraphin Stachowicz, O.F.M.Conv.,to become pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church,New Bedford.

Effective Tuesday, April 4, 1961.

'\

THE ANCHOR--"Diocese ofFa'irRi~~;'-:"Tnur.s.,Aprfh3,'196.-f's,, ". .-~..

Legislature ApproYes Goyernor's Aid PlanALBANY (NC)-'-Gov, Nelson was passed earlier by the Senate

A. Rockefeller's' controversial ,despite opposition on the grounds"scholar incentive" plan for di- of constitutionality; wa's thenrect grants to p~ivate and.public' sent to the 'Governor to be signedcollege students was passed 'by, into law. " , :the Assembly."',.'" ," ',,"~ ",','.' ;':,The vo~l20 to, 26-came /,i Mass' O'rdo' '"after a, three:'hour' frequently,' FRIDAY~t. justin,' ·!Martyr.:heated 'debate: The bill,' which . Class III.. Red. Mass Pio~r;

Gloria; SecOnd" Sollect 58.Tiburtiusand Companions'Martyrs; no Creed; Preface of'E!lster,

, SATURDAY Mass' of theBlessed Virgin 'for Saturday.IV Class. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; no Creed; Preface ofBlessed Virgi~.

SUNDAY - II Sunday AfterEaster., .II· Class. White. MassProper; Gloria; Cree<i';Prefaceof Easter.

MONDAy.-MasS' of· preViousSunday. IV Class. White. MassProper; Gloria; Second, CollectSt. Anicetus, Pope and Martyr;no Creed; Preface of Easter.

, '" f; '.", ;', I

TUES:J;)AY, -.:. Mass of previousSunday. IV C,lass. White. MassProper;' Gloria; no Creed;Prefa~"of Easter. '

WEDNESDAY--:IVi:ass of previ:.,ous Sunday" IV Class. White.Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed;'Preface of Easter. '

THURSDAY --- Mass Qf previousSunday. IV Class. White. MassProper;' Gloria; 'rio creed;Prefa~,of Easter. _ .,

"

.501 COUNTY ST.NEW BEDFORD

WY 3-"1751

THe ANCHOR- 3Thurs., April 13, 1961

Scout Awa~dOn April 23

The St. George Award foroutstanding service by Cath-

/ otic laymen to the Boy Scoutmove,ment will be awardedfor the second time in the Dio­cese at the annual banquet of theCatholic Committee for Scouting,scheduled for Sunday night,April 23 at Kennedy Center, NewBedford.

Auxiliary Bishop James J.Gerrard will make the presenta~

tions to the men to be honoredthis year. Their names will notbe announced until the awardsare made.

oPhilip Tripp, st. -Lawrence

parish, New Bedford, will bemaster of ceremonies for theevent. General chairma'n is Fran-'cis Sheehan, New Bedford, headof the Catholic Committee forScouting.

The CYO Glee Club, directedby Rev. Paul G. Connolly, willentertain and Fourth DegreeKnights of Columbus of Me-­Mahon Council will· furnish anhonor guard for Bishop Gerrardand award winners.

No. Easth(O)mChapel To BeExpQrnded

Rev. James E. Lynch, pas­tor of St. Joan of Arc ParGish, Orleans, has announcedthat the contract for enlargGing the Church of the Visitationin North Eatham has beenawarded to Anderson Brothersand Strom of Hyannis.

Construction will begin at onceand the work will more thandouble the present size of theChurch which is a mission of theOrleans parish.

The new construction will alsl)provide a social center for par­ishioners of the North E~stham

area.

HATHAWAYOIL CO. INC.

INDUSTRIAL OilS

HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

OIL BURNERS

Sales &' Service

NEW BEDFORD

. .

ANDERSON & OLSENINDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING - PIPING andAIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS

-WM. T. MANNING (0.WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

andINDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES

• GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BATTERIES• PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

FAll RIVER'- NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS' - NEWPORT

.SEGUIN.''Truck 'Body ·Builder.

., Alu~inuiu or Steel944' Caunty St.

NEW BEDFORD' MASS.'NY 2~61i

312 Hillman St. WY 7-9162 New BedFord

~ ..

the afternoon gathering. Otherafternoon activities will includea business session and election ofofficers and entertainment byStonehill College glee. club.

Joseph Reilly of Belmont, H()lyCross College graduate, will alsobe featured on the program. Theconvention will conclude withsolemn benediction at St. John'sChurch.

. ..

Maintenance SuppliesSWEEPERS - SPAPS

DISINFECTANTSFIRE EXTINGUiSHERS

SCHOOL

DAHILL CO.18B6 PURCHASE ST.

NEW BEDFORD'WV' 3·378'

'flhe Family That,Prays, Together

Stays Together" .

THE·

FI RST NATIONALBANK

AUleboro-South AttleboroSeekonk .

GOLDEN JUBILEE: Bishop Gerrard cong~atulatesMotherMarie De Piro, Provincial Superior of the Sisters of St.Dorothy, on the golden jubilee of the congregation's arrivalin the United States. The Bishop celebrated a Mass ofthanksgiving at Villa Fatima, Dorothean novitiate andprovincial house in Taunton.

Council Forms CommitteeTo Aid Bishop's Ball

Miss Margaret Lahey, past president of the DiocesanCouncil of Catholic Women and presently a member of thebo~rd of directors, has been named chairman of a new com­mittee of the DCCW, added to those already existing atreque'st of the Most Rever­end Bishop. The new unit,the' Catholic Charities Com~

mittee will have as its pri­mary purpose sponsorship of theannual ~ishop's Ball. .

AlSo discussed at the finalboard meeting of the DCCW fortliis Season were: plans for theorganIzation's annual convention,to be' held Saturday, May 6, atst John the Evangelist parish,Attleboro. Mrs. 'George Bauza,president of districtfo~r of theDCCW, is general.chairman forthe convention. She wilIbe as­sisted by members of her district.

. Convention theme ·will. be Ed­ucaiionof Youth: It will begin at11' Saturday' morning with - apanel discussion participated inby Catholic ,Youth Organizationmembers .represeriting - variousareas of the Dioces'e:. 'Bishop C~nnoliy will be guestof honor at the luncheon session

.of the meeting and will address

• • • • • • • • • • • • • •A. W. MARTIN

. SCRAP' METALS'WASTE PAPER - RAGS

TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FORPAPER DRIVES ,

CHURCHES, SCOUTS andCIVIC ORGANIZATIONS

1080 Shawmut AvenueNew Bedford WY 2-7828

BEFORE YOUBUY ~ TRY

PAR·KMOTORS,OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile. Peugot • Renalt.trl Middle Street, Fairhaven

learn a new job."A fixed person for a fixed job

used to be a. godsend; now he is .a 'problem,''' he said. "Studentsnow in high school will not gointo jobs held by their fathersbecause in a few years thesejobs will have dropped out ofexistence and new jobs will havebeen created."

LeisureAnother effect 'of automation,

he continued, will be greater'leisure time. "The teacher," hesaid, "will need to work assidu­ously to combat the idea that'leisure time means only self­indulgence.

"The idea of constructiveleisure time activities and activ­ities of a creative nature needsto be developed."

Montessoll'i'!lite method of education

named for the late Dr. MariaMontessori was explained anddemonstrated to elementaryschool teachers in another ses­sion.

Mrs. Nancy McCormick Ram­busch, headmistress . of theWhitby School in Greenwich,Conn., detailed the developmentof her school, described as thefirst permanent U. S. institu­tion based on the Montessorimethod,. Children and teachers from the

school demonstrated classwork.The school, situated in theBridgeport, Conn., diocese, isstaffed and operated by Cath­oHc lay people

Catholic EducationMl's. Rambusch told an over­

flow audience of more than 500that "there is nothing inherent inthe Montessori method that ex­cludes ·use of its principle andpractice. from the broadest ap­plication in Catholic education."

Many of the Montessori ap­proaches to learning' are quitedifferent from the conventionalU. S. school, she said. For ex­ample, children learn to. spellbefore they learn to write andare permitted to move about theclassroom, doing their wo.rk 011~tk table and flOO1'.

Notre Dame CCDTo Mind Tots

Parents will pray while tots.play at Notre Dame Church, FallRiver; thanks' to junior membersof the parish Confraternjty ofCbristian Doctrine.' .

Beginning ,Sunday, April 30,baby sitting . serviCe will beavailable during ·the '9:30 Mass.Twelve girls will'staff a nUl'seryat Jesus-Mary Academy audi­torium from 9:i5' to 10:15 eachSunday morning,A' nurse will·also be in attendance.· ,. "Pray While'They Play~' is the

nursery's slogan. The project isamong several initiated by theCCD since its ··.inStitution atNotre Dame in February..Mem­ben held a successful cake saleto secure operating funds andall CCD committees are func­tioning in the parish with a totalmembership of 70 in the organ­ization.

Mt. Carmel Plans,CCD Course

An advanced course ift Reli­lion for Confrat;e\,n,ity teacherswin be conducted on SaturdayIfternoons from 2:00 to 4:00 P.M.• Mount Carmel School, NewBedford, beginning on Saturday,AtKil 15. .

This course, which will be con­ducted by the Reverend Luiz G.Mendonca, is sponsored by the1lIIount Carmel Confraternity andiB intended primarily f01' theMount Carmel CCD teachers.

However, CCD teachers fromIlIl'Y parish in the diocese areeordially invited to attend. The_urse will :NIl for aOOm: eightweeb.

Games, movies, refreshmentsend an opportunity for reunionwith counselors and camp' friendswilt be featured at the openbouse program. Parents are in­Wted to attend and inspect campfacilities. Counselors' will be..-ailable to answer inquiriesand take advance registrationstor this Summer's camp session.

Deficiencies'iI,heir comment was sought

CIIl speeches during the conven­item which charged Catholiceducation with deficiencies inseience education and some oth~r

Gelds.

Father Theod01'e M. Hesburgh,~S.C., president of the Univer­sitY of Notre Dame, South Bend,Ind., had charged in an addressbefore the convention that there.. failure in several fields byCatholic education. He said thatCatholic interest in science "hadtaken a wrong turn at Galileo"IMld had been lagging ever since.

Impa.tienceMsgr. McManus said he thought

eriticims of Catholic educationII based more on impatienceChan real shortcomings. "Cath­Otie educators have a tendency to·_ very high goals £01' them­ielwes and when they are slowtill attaining them, there is atendency to become impatient.", In a session at the convention,Auxiliary Bishop James Maloneof Youngstown, Ohio, superin­tendent of Catholic schools there,If>>Pealed to Catholic secondary_001 educators to prepare stu­_ts to adjust to automation..

Automation'!'be prelate said automation

-.eans that as machines replace..-tain workers, these men will .IMwe to be pl'epared to again

Girls' Camp SetsOpen Hou.se

An open house for parents andIormer and prospective camperslit Our Lady of the Lake Dioc­esan day camp for girls will bebald at 2 this Sunday afternoon.- the camp, Middleboro Road,Bast Freetown, adjoining Cathe-

· .... Camp.

:Ask.EndBeating

. ATLANTIC CITY (NC) .:.... Some Catholic educatorsappealed here for a moratorium. 00 "ex~ggerated breast­beating" about alleged Catholic educational faults. Msgr.William E. McManus, superintendent of Chicago archdioc­4jIS3.n schools, said Catholiceducators "ought to be muchmore optimistic." "We aregoing through an epidemicof public breast-beating that isreally based more on impatience{han on measurable deficiences,"he said.

Msgr. McManus, who headsChe nation's largest private.school system, enrolling morethan 332,000 pupils, spoke in apress conference.

He was joined in his commcnts~ Msgr. John P. Haverty, su­perintendent of schools in theNew York archdiocese, andFather Mark Hurley, principalof Marin, Calif., Catholic HighSchool in the San Francisco3LlChdiocese.

The three were interviewedduring the 58th convention ofthe National Catholic Educa­tional Association.

Educators·To Breast

.1',-,'

JANff PARKER

APPLE" PIE'Lge 8-lnc-h, 1 Ib 8. OZ

A Qrand Dessert

~ 39G.S§C iiA

PriUI _In Wt-m1 9ulrllllteOd tIltu b., ~n 15a~"UYI It ALL A&I' SuPer Mlll'toll In ibis ccmm••1tJ & .fcldp

A&P Super Mar.kets Open·1 p.m~· fo 9· p.m~ Wed., April~ 19th

He@ds: SChO;OI~tD(: H«J)8'i)@[j' Societynamed vice-president. Bothp~tioris are for terms of two yeallS.

The honor society, which m.headquarters in Clayton, Mn;"fosters scholarly activities iiiCatholic colleges and universi­ties..

Founded in 1939, it. has chap..ters on 85 Catholic campuses illthe U.S.

RENSSELAER (NC) -FatherEdward A. Maziarz, C.PP.S.,dean of St: Joseph's College herein liIdiana~, has been namedpresident of Delta Epsilon Sigma,a scholastic' honoI: society with.over 6,000 members..

Williiun E:. Haz:tnett, assistantprofessor'of' mathematics' at HolyCross. College;. Worcester, was

NAMEDt Dft@R::: Wil.,.·lfum ML €aIIahan,. a staffmember' of' the Youngstown.(\0hfo) E~onent,. the dioc­esa:ru paper for' youngst0wn,.ha:g; been named editor of thePFoposed' Ca.tholic. weekly,.the, GreensbUrg: CPa.). Cath­olic" by' Bishop. William G.C.bnnare: 0 f Greensburg.~ME:: Photo;.

Gerrm,cinl Edit.OIl seeks~Endl to Su,ndoy' Work

MUNICH (NC);-A.. German<Catholic ne.wspaper.' editor.' hasproposed that all countries of theEuropeam Economic: Union' en­dorse the principle at rest: fromwollk on Sundays..

. Msgr. Lorenz.' Ereiberger" ed­itor:.in-chief of the Munich Cath­olic' Church newspapeJr;, noted inthe newspa'per that: "a\ coa·I-steelcommunity;· existsl ab:;ead$' andclose planning is; being, made inl1he agricultural' field. It' wouldbe llegrettable" if' the Christians,especi'ally' Catholics; were to failNt a' united' effort fOr Sunday'resti:."

German' Catholics have op-posed the. p'ractice, of keeping

. men at work on Sundays. The. practice SI;Jrang up: during; the

. war: and was continued duringthe: postwar reconstr.uction peri­o.d·. But the coal and' steel indus­ti-y'made a permanent: instituti'onof Sunday work. long after Ger­man industry had been rebuilt.The German:. Bishops.· spoke, outagainst Sunday work, in 1952, in10955. ad ill 1959. . ,-

I .

Refuses, to, Review,Oheen'tfy' Verdict

WASHIN.GT.ON (NC.); -, The:U. S. Supreme Court· full, refUsed'til. revieW! tiie conviction of Her­man. L... Womack of this; ci~ oncharges of violating the postalant'i--01:'lscenity- raws~

Womack contend'edl the- tri8l1Co.ur.t was. in"e.r.ror..by, refusing tolet: J:i..i'm show, materilrll intended

"00 estab'IiSl\o "ContemporarY'- com­munitw standar.ds1" regardingmatter lie sent· through themails. .

l1e was: fOund guiIty in l:J. S.District. CoUrt aD.d\ sentenced'. toone to' tln:ee years; iill prison. TheU. s.. Court· of. Appeals upheldtile. conViictiQn\ and held photo­graphs mailed by Womack were"filthy, self-evid~and! ilIcfiBI.putabQl....

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Th\lr.s.Ap.r.il. 1.1" 1.96.1.4

Cl}~@!~i~@~ fC'r~fru®.· ~E~~@ilmi~

M'ean~Ii1J;9r of P@i;n~ng A&fi. BYI Most! Re\l~, RObert .It EJ'Wi1'la~ D.Dt

Bishop. of Rem1JThe foUowiJIg; tmiefi esSlliY1 om pai'lJ:tlfug lmdl. its; meaning was;

written maDW" yea;rr5' ago' I)y; 0Ire' of tl-..e peat arliStsi all: our times"Charlton.. FoJ:tune-~ It. is- far ioOJ good! 1:01 wimfto~, and! w:imI li:eI:'bar.d'"won peJ:lllission,; we: print it. here~. IIt say;s; IJIlICfu iht. mtrel.

. Tl\e subj'ect-matter-of a work 0:fi.' a:J!fr" 1il1:e: ViIsuaill st:QJ1Y.1 iiti;purports· to' tenl

, i·s. lJy' no; means 1ili:e: mar l!easOD! vwl:L.w 1ili:e:picture' was' pamtedl

• Stiliiect~mat1teJr for tllre aJZ:tisif. is; 21.~

on Wihfcll he: nangg, Ji,fs nat" and: ft is! ti:he:bit1ili;at;ma1ilieJ!S'" net..the: peg.. l1i: is; bdai 0ljl.}jloJ!uuiIalitM paimjifug; far' SOl I.bn:g tliat: no.w:­to m a k e pi?aJ1!LSiful~ andi ada~s; we aJre tempted1 to; rntiim..­coh~ITent· a1It 1JF1e' UN(!H!lfsaa:rdl alizE;, lliilte Aesopis; fox;, andl'de­acci<iEmta:I' delrghts' wlliCh clarre: tlia;fi; we no) lOnger w:an~ i.t..overcome hiS deeper anxi'efies. So we a:f!Ilim1i; tm <fespise: tli:e~ ~eat;and> functron si'mul'faneousl~ to. art off. tlie~ ~s; arid! breaK: mID/·produce a. seri- raptiUl'es; o;v,eu: non:-abj:eca'v,e ex-·ous<worlt. pernnlrots; and! Eteudfuru n:fg,htt-·

TaKe' for' ex:.. mares;, fuel wliifu; bUJ.'Dfu:g; mcense:: ,. befoue: tlie vacant; sliri:ne: o:l!:.amp;le; Vermeer'

van Delft's .£a- PiCasJilill.milian canvas, yet" esaen±full$" to; pai'nt: well"The' .Antist. iru is t01 see weIr" as; 'V:'enmeeL:' smwr,lis Stu' d'i' 01': witm a1iD:aat di'voiiIe: p'ene1fratfom.The sUlqj,ect- His fuafuedl eye;, witfu alI itsdnno:-·matter is' insig-. cence;, saw;' witli. suc:lt j;ud'gpIent':nificant. Frere is and QreciSion" and reIated1 fomn:the' same: collec;. to sp.ace so; accurate!M;, tli:at. lie,tioR. OD p:r O,p s, actuall';w tfeacnes; us; nowl tm see~.

Vermeer us e.d This;, ratlieu' tIiam to! preach\ a.time after time; the. same room, sermon:or:tmpoiiIt:almora:l'"iS,the,the sam-e- stud\:ledJ cliair.s; . the' painter's; mst: m:ission~. M

f. ..)1, , ~11; . Il1f ~j I'il...IlIc .

same' t'abl~ the, same' piece· of lfustiD:cti wti.tfu lItestramt IllbOl!1!I(Ql$, UN.eW V. U~!.tapest'11y" e'J'ell\ ijOOl1' man; the\ Tnue;, tlie l:iig.li: emotionaL Q..ual"-· 1" ftsame bODed! modcil who. neven' m' . ity foundl m: ~ts; like Gfo.1iti.;, t lleGt)f· @!ft """'rug,s'the wod'd' w.oultlt liave' passed! III Rern:lJnandtr" Ell Greco;, is; Iiey,:o.ndl TJNJTEDlNA'l'I<DNS\(NC')-!I'he'Holliwwoodl SCl1een:-test; the range~ of 'V:'enneer's;. geniUs'.. l!n:iited; Nations~ convention on.

And' he ·is· plainly guiltY' oil' . I.ik~ .fane' ~usrent he' magnifies'. narcotic' drug~'i~"'''Rmeasurable·"COP.Mini: na·nure!'·" for.' he pafutech the commonI;!lace;. But. if. he fails. advance on, behalf' of the' moralexac~what; hel saw/ be:llol.'eo b.im'.. on tlie. lieiglits; how. fiII1Y, lie sat- and! social welfare of: mankind,Yet o.u1:.o:fitlia.ltcoHectiQruo:frQdi:l:~ iil£ies' i'n tlie cfari1iy/ of his stfate-· Auxiliary' Bishop James H: Grif:.men~; he: made: ollie' of. the SU'" ment; of beau~;: ,. fitlis~ of' New' York wId' the con-prem-e mastelllllieces; of the: E>utch\ Tlie: most· disclpline<It o:fi:paint~ fetence ·cQnv.ened: bY:' the- U. Ni,school. ers, his. work. is. instinct. ·w.itli~ to. consider. the subject.

Q SeW-Styl.edl Cr.mes: restraint. Yet' the whore' canvas" Sp'eaking~ at. the close Cill theFtu" long< decades. noW' tlie am' is radiant with a light 'of such nine-Week session, Bishop Grif:'

of paihtihg> has~ l)een' ill served1 quiet intensity as to be the. de.- fiths congratulated- the members;by. a' vasti' deaill of imtell'ec1luaUzedl spair. at: lessen- me~ Incl1.edible: of· tlie: confeFence;, its' chairman.,.and'i'ncompetenit cIri'tiCism\ moslt. that h~ pfgment ground' iill Carl' A. Schurmann ('of the Neth-

- of it!: se1t. fOr1ll\l oy· sel~tiyledl oil can be alchemized into) such" erlands;)" and the, U.N. staff oncritics who have no knowl'edge. grave and lambent', light!! ~eb.aU· of the delegation of theof and! thenefone-"nOl neslllect: fO!': The effect. is partly due, bis. Holy See,. which he. headed;the mediulllJ illl whiiam pictUIleS: brusl'l'~st'rolte' ('particularly no" Prevents, Danger:are:nainte.d. ticeable fu. tli:e'foreground1ta~ The new' 57:"article treaty

Thel arti: of!. plrintm:g; and the try). w.bicm ca:rties; an:. occasi:onalt. witich: it adopted''':''''w', be known'. use OR lPailit; itsel1i: are! no) lOngjRt liigl1eJ: value· than. the, bo~' as the Single, Conyentfon OD! Nar­

weill undenstoodt.llmstea~,a\ k:indJ color. He almost anticipates the cotic. Drugs of 1961-is intended,of game is played!. b~ obscunant- "bro.keru colo.zr!' of. the: French. to insure that. the: world. willists to. ti-~ to unearth hidden and Impl:essioms.1is. tho.ugh, not at, the: have an. acfequate supp~ of: nar-esotEric meanings. expense of: tex.tuJ:~. '.' "cotics' for relief of suffering;

And when they finally conde- , Beautii'lIll37 Integrated' . but· alSo to, pJ:eVient: the "social'"scend fronu (l)~lIlWlS.llmdiscourse Subtly. emphasiZing' li1's' cenfitall and economic; danlt~'" of: drug.

witl1! the cemmonJ fiend thew in- motit"he b.uilds; his; ClULVia$ with~ addiction. .ven1l slogans of pretentious non- .. out .neglecting,~·Rap;,. of: if" SQ. It replaces nine ex.isting;multi.. ·sense,. one OOI the sillIiEst D.efu.g . l1hat. ~e~~ s.q~e: inch. is, he.aJr lateral treaties; concluded. be-.thaI!; "no, an1liStt. shoullil eveD:' cO·PY tiifuIJw integ,t>ateili "into, a, COIBl- tweeD!. 1912 and 1953" and. will.nature;" \ I2lete, whole; "COme;, let. us, no.w,. .come inta· fOJ:cei when·. 40· nation&

Dexteri'ty ~of, Art' mraise blue", he seems to 1!aM';, have: ratified.Nnw' the Ilainter worth his' salt and .celebrates it in a thousand The eonventian..ccwel'S,. among

sees; with'3l SeIec1imte~and! tJ:afued v;aria:ti.oD&. ". . ·""other· thii:lgs" the.· cu:1ti~atiom o.f'ey.e,. If he sees without distinc- Tne picture!" Hri:alilyrresa:Lves. 'pllintr ftom. whii:&>. narcotics; aretioru he is: siin;pl~ noll, al gpod iitsellf mo a fugue' im blue' andI produc;:ed; manufactnJze: and: trade,painter and his work is without goldl, caugp.·t.here,. expanded! in drugs;, measures: toJ· meet: regal.mooit. Art cannoftl!le!l'1lwtograph- l1hene, w,itli' ihf'lirite resourc~l\. lreq¢Xements~ and sfeps:: to be·ie,. for the camera 'is without ne~ W~tiIal', the' most am:m:ng taken. to punish the\illegal pos~.intei!ligence;. a\ m.ecfumiaall de- qua~ty IS the sup.tem&. graVIty sessi'on sare ana purchase at:viCe! devoid of' feeling or power wit!! whfulilS/llvit'allandll'uminaus drugs." .of! selectlion\. 81. ~nvas is de:l.iveJ!edi for QUI' It. also prci:vides that.the parties.

Alnd actually, to copy nature in delIght. to the tr Nr sIi ll!' •• 'aJ.the strict sense is an impossible For the. fiT.sii functiOn< oC .~ tt t: :;a"t'" f aili:ties~ve "fSP~...

...........t ,-' to - "'~1~·..1l.'" H I.Jl a en lon, 0.. ac· " or. Llle.·assignmen~, aSI an\Yl aJlt; SUUIllCU ar ..... IS I WoW; U.~Ll~••. ~~ we medical treatment;, care: and re-sho.uld kno.w. afteI:. a w.eek.. inVe~e~ commum'(lat'edlliIs.~ owm liabilitatioIL of. drug addicts."school. d'ehghtt 1Dl fomn'. and! CQlo:e: lSI re.- .

Thirty students" all different v.eared' Un tlie deathless! futeEesftin tastes, habi,'ts; ti1adlitions; tem- of this plriiI1lihg.peramentJ; widlt plllildWl~~ thmtyr "Eet liS' praise- bluet'; he- sang;irroooncHlJb'le' versions' eff th'e> and' for' 300 years' tliat' is exactlYsame exasperated model posing what this canvas has. been. do.ing£01" tihern. Lel!;Ut;1:'le;'saidl tlha11ti1lene and' Did'ding us to dO; asr w.e re­is: at least at certfain l)llOadJmii!g . g;mdl it:. If we can onlY.' see allwhfuh comes' £rOIJll cop~ thiS- and! hear- the song; 'we arenatore denied to, those. \\Iho siJn,.·, 0111' o.wn best Cl'itic&'pl$ copy what otllellsl ba.vepainted, or reproduce what theythink is "contemporary", the.kind of thing so oiten. seen' iincurnent. exhibits.

BUt ClamlYT iin1tfa1iiom tbJ i:t:IE log­ieall extreme, and the hig)les.t. am.wotdd be. exact. 'duplication, like­

.painting' 1:'lanlt~nOfles- to' t'l'Ie'let1len;as w:as. We.d. s.ome. time hack.,This, is, dex.t.eci~" not. az:t,. and, it.is dangerous.

lFirst'; Mi8si~nl

We ha:ve· a'iJ'usedl the' art aD.. \

For Puerfi'o' IlrcansYO U N G $'I. O. W. N (I.NG:~)-·

Youngstown area' Pilerto. RicanswilR soon worshi~, in. the. finst;ChUlTCh of their' owm here--St.Rose of Lima. The diocese: 12W!'"chased' a 70 by 30-CG.ott bl'illk.structure from the HimrodChrJstianl churchl and the buill:ii­iDgt is. now being. recmodeled.

TME ANCHOR-Diocese of Fafl River-Thurs. April 13, 1961 :S

iVIT. ST. MARY ACADEMY WINNERS: Leftphoto: Receiving honorand monetary scholarsl1ips at the Fall River academy ate, seated, left tofight, Joyce Greenwood and Nancy Curr.an"and"standmg, Claudette A:qger,N'ancy Ferris and Anna BrowneTI. Center photo: Half tuition scholarships

were won ~"by, sootea" Rita Ku1,pa ,and, stanaiIlg, ,Marie Mongan ,and Katbleen'Bolger. R:j,ght Jlhoto: Partial tUition Bcnolarsliip winners ,an~, seated, MaryKristen Lima, 'Elaine Medeiros, and, standing, Janice D'Am"ico and JoAnaMurphy.

;FO,RD 0,0 • fAMERtCA'$ MOS'TPOPULAR Sf'ATrON :WA'GONS I'.O.A.Io

, I

'DEA1.ERFORD

take 'oW' FailcQll \W,~gQJlS. BeSidescOsting QP to '$508· less than somecoU\pa(lt,wJWonil,~:keej)lonsariqg

everyliay·in·many ways'! So why wait?~~ too ll'1.Jmd~r J1i1alcon ;station

wagon living at your rnearb-y~Dealer's todq!

LOCAL'¥ou£SEE

: On!J·fior:d 'faJlIOD 'offBrsiil:Choicestf;2~oor1Sfld -4-door ;wagons with over '11eet 'Of~dspace length •.•• iPIustthe..winninB~mbination(Qfl1ilhycw;wantiin'8compact wagon•

A:nd every fOrd "wagon is beautifullybujft to take care (of ~tse:ltf

Onl)!\

<Only For,d ~n iitslfield offel$ this lbodY5.!.Ylil1i. And .tliis~ar.tha ,CoumIiY~Squire !isllImilable:in 1bath lSix'1NUlsenger ,and. nine·passenger,mochtlst

Only'.Ford.in :its ;field1l1fers aU (thesemost..w.anted ,features \Oll!GUSix (Of itshusky 'W.8gOnS:: <118;% ':cu. it. (of <cargospace;:roll-downlNlar wiDdoW';'sealed­in lubri.ca't'ion,syStem1ilurttgOeS'30fC)'OO'milesbetwaen ~lube 'jObs'; 1md ;SE!lf­adjusting ·bralces-;'tc>'r18me 11 tfew! <01:,

;OnI,:Ford inJts field.buikb. oine.passeqger wagons with a forward·facing rear seat. A,pGwef·operated:rear witldowds stal'ldnr.dronrthe Country Sedan (abow) and Country'Squires.

Pontiff Receives'K of C Board

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJbbo received members of thet»oard of directors of the KnigI1l11'1GIl Columbus in '8udienee .here.

More than 1W board membersIIrom the U. S. and Canadawere nel'e with their' families :£01'.eir first meeting outside NorthAmElrica, They were accom­panied by Bishop CharlesP.~ of Alexandria, La., Su­preme Chaplain of the KnightsGI. Columbus. .

Board members arrlvedhere'... their regular quarterly meet­ing, which took place in theYati<:an Library. On .the evening01 their arrival, they were hosts.. a reception in Rome's GrandHotel attended by Church andItalian government dignitaries.

On Sunday, after attending,Blass 1n St. Peter's basilica, theyWsited the seven 'sports centers­..ncsports fields lor boys and a .1IIeereatioll center for girls­,.aintailled in Rome by 'theKtU.ghts of Columbus.

AteDd BeeeJJtioD~e fallowing day'they.held

-.en- meeting. '3t which .they ..ere welcomed by Eugene .car- .1JirulITisseran't, Dean of .the Col­lege {If Cardinals and Librarianad Archivist of the .Holy RomanChuN:h. Later in the morningdley wcre received by the Pope.III the afternoon 1heyattended• 'reception in Rome's City Ballwhere Uley were greeted j~Y

Mayor Urbano Cloccetti.. On the next day,1.beyvisited~ World War II battlefield atAl1zio, where they presented a.Inurel wreath in memory of the.A2nericall soldiers who werekilled there.

'The board members left RomeJ1esterday.

Hope to Send 100,000Rosaries Overseas

IMIAMI (NC)- A campaignto 'Pl'Ovide 100,000 'l'OSaries forthe· for.eign missions has been

'hunched ~yJtb.e Little Brothers .:rJI. the G<lod ,shepherd at their .aefuge fOT destitute men.

Beginning 'their project 'with:broken rosaries ana 'discarded~ of all 'Sizesallld 'COlors, "theBrothers, who 'operateCamUlusBouse in the downrown 'Miami.-ea, hope ro ship rosariestibroad witbina short 'time.

.aking ~saries is a cinCh,"'8ClCOrding to Brother DavidKeane, B.G.S., a retired Armycolonel who has .been making·Gte beads asa hobby for thepetit 25 years. In '3 workshop ,set1IP .in their refuge, the Brothers,who serve about 600 free mealsiIa1ly to needy men, are -givingJnIItructions to persons interested• the project. They are depend­Ing on {ionations of discardedeDd broken chains and beads.

er~OU.C1h thE. ''lAIE.£'Irt: <'lA.lith-,th~, ChWlckBy REV. 'ROBERT vi. HOADA,' Cath~lie Univ~8ity

I "

6 THE ANCH'OR-Di~ese of Fall River-Thurs. April 13, 1961

:A ~ibrary AwayDuring National Library Week, which begins Sunday,

Americans are iiwited to enter their community libraries,to inspect their contents and investigate their services, totake home some books and enjoy the pleasures these holdout.

To those who like to read, such an invitation is super­fluous and, indeed, ludicrous. They just cannot imagine lifewithout the library. To those who must use the library.forschool, such an enticement to go beyond just what must bed(me to pass can hold out the expectation of great value. Tothose who do little reading, the invitation of National

'Library Week falls on deaf ears.Bishop Wright of Pittsburgh said last year that he values

hisJibary card just behind his baptismal certificate. He haslearned through the years what treasures of the mind and,soul the library card has unearthed for him. '

Each community places great trust in its library staff,for these dedicated individuals' must use imagination andsubtle psychology to bring citizens to the riches the library ,has waiting to be claimed. Librarians and their staffs ­usually, underpaid, - are asked during Library Week torenew their sense of dedication to the great task that isentrusted into their hands-the educational and culturaland recreational betterment of the community: .'

Parents and teachers can search for hew ways to revealto those under their care the rewarding life that the libraryean unfold to them. Reading aloud - and well - to childrenis a worthwhile source of inducement for them to developthe happy habit., Allowing children to take turns readingto a family circle is another way of pointing up the joy ofbooks.

A mind, to be kept active and alert and interested,must be fed. Intelligent persons and conversation are justsuch sources. But these are not always easily available. Butthe well-springs of ideas coming from books are simply "alibrary away."

,Sadly TrueFrom time to time the peaceful atmosphere of churches

is invaded by som~thing that has no business being there ­the disturbing "chain letter" or similar missive that isusually surreptitiously introduced into the pew with acertain amount of good wi'n but with a superstitious view ofreligion.

,The letter holds out the certainty of "good luck" withina. specified number of days but the sword of Damacles hangsover the whole ~ffair and can be kept from falling only bythe tedious' writing and distributing of so many copies ofthis exaggerated,claim whioh has circled the world morethan Explorer I.

Such a "chain letter" is, of course, foolish. More thaDthat, it is downright wrong as going into the area forbiddenby both sound sense and the commandments of God.

No one can promise - under threat of reprisals ­"good luck" in the name of God. And the Almighty simply

, does not operate under such a shoddy guise and with suchpuerile tricks to extort homage. ' ,

But an even greater cause for concern over these "chaiRletters" is the religious attitude they betray.

Persons distributing them' or intimidated by themreveal in their spiritual attitudes a sort of Chri~tianmagic,a hankering after pious incantations, a baptized voodoo.Prayer to them is a series of meaningless chants to whichare attached wondrous powers if the ritual is performed

- in a certain way or for a specified length of time.' The'essential element is not a spiritual relationship between Godand the soul but a formalism, a legalism.

Such poor souls are to be pitied, for they have missedthe heart of religion - the goodnews that God has a planfor the salvation of His children and that "in these days hasspoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of allthings, by whom also he made the world; who, being thebrightness 'of his glory and the image of his substance, and'upholding all things by the word of his power, has effectedman's purgation from sin ... ,.

, For the "chain letter" devotee or one of that attitude,God never becomes more real than some sort of super­human IBM machine that must be placated by certain ritesto insure the petitioner's well being.

Sad and true, and sadly true.,

@rheANCHOROFFICIAL NEW$PAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River410 Highland Avenue

Fcill River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

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

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

MANAGING EDITORHugh J. Golden

TODAY - St. Hermenegild,>.Martyr.-Even though "God so

loved the world" and Christiansnot only may but must love theworld, the martyr as image ofthe Crucified is a perpetual wit­ness. in the Church to the factthat this world does not excludepainful renun~iations. Jesus says,it with frightening candor in the,Gospel. The existence of manis naturally friendly to paradox,including the paradox of simul­taneous love and hate: hatred ofthe thing or person loved be­cause in our fragmentary exist­enceit can set itself up as a rivalfor our worship.

TOMORROW-St. Justin, Mar­tyr.-It is in its unwillingness toaccept paradox, to accept thelimitations of human 'existence,.that the wisdom of the unbelieverfails. As far as it goes, it is cor­rect and good and desirable. But,today's less-ons insist that the­Christians must go further. Hemust include God, and a Godwho can conceivably upsethuman systems. Our public wor-

, ship, if it reminds'us only of this,is already a,great good. The mar­tyr isinexplic'able in terms ofmerely human wisdom. But withChristian faith, he becomes notonly understandable-he is anideal.

ST. MARY ON SATURDAy....:..,The Masses celebrated in honorof Our Lady provide' a recurringaccent on 'the humanism of theGospel, of God's dealings withmankind, This can be misunder­stood, as it is by those who ac­cuse Christians of making Godsmall like man, of "returning thecompliment.... The truth is quite,'different.

Our worship of Almighty Godis made possible, precisely be­cause' He speaks to us in ourlanguage' and:comes to us in ourflesh, yet in' the process losesnone of His perfection and suf­fers no diminishment of Hisbeing. His love, not our presump_tion, is the ground of our hope.The Blessed Virgin is' importantin Catholic worship and faithbecause she illustrates so per-

, fectly the gratuitousness of God'sgifts. '

SECOND SUNDAY AFTEREASTER.-;-Epistle and Gospelcontinue the Easter, thanksgivingwith the picture of Jesus asShepherd. Today's liturgy attacksthe cold, lifeless, legal notion ofthe Church-the notion of it asa huge organization that tells ushow to act and what to eat andwhen to worship God. It is as aflock, as a cOlpmunity, as a fam­ily that Christians accept sal­vation.

The Christian life is not amechanical or legal relationshipto God, but a personal one. Topress the sheep symbolism fur­ther than this would be to in-crease our 'problem. '

No one expects sheep to be the'light of the worldandtbe saltof the earth, yet this is what theliturgical act and'the experienceof the common celebration ofthe Christian mysteries mustmake of the Christians present.

MONDAY, 'wi&h Mass as .., Sunday. ---" The Good, Shepherdsays, "I know mine an'd mineknow me." He knows what weare. He knows what latent forcesare hidden beneath our slothfui 'countenances. He knows that thereal magnificence we possess isnot in the brillance, of some ofus; the power of some of us, butin the' humanity of all of Us.

His 'Church prizes ,man; a~d inprizing 'him brfngs out the beStin him. Every enactment of the~oly Sacrifice is' a reproach andchallenge to the lazy, and amoment of real happiness forthose who have not fled the re­sponsibility of manhood andwomanhood, for those who re­joice in being more than sheep.

TUESDAY, 'with Mass as onSunday.-One flock is the situ­ation, the milieu, of salvation.There is no opposition' for theChristian between the personalimd the communal. Without for­getting that he is unique, an in­dividual, a value and a good in,himself, he ,recognizes at oncethat he needs others. He needs aSaviour and he needs the com­munity of salvation.

"Mine know me." The Chris­tian's discovery of the flock is noblind allegiance but a consciousand responsible discipleship.What is faith on our side is cov-

,enant on God's, and every Massis a renewal of the covenantrelationship.

WEDNESDAY, with Mass lI!JS

on Sunday.-There is no passiv­ity, then, in Catholic publicworship, no audience, no part ofthe community -which "satisfiesits obligation" simply by beingpresent. If this worship is as itshould be, every person is 8 par­ticipant, an actor,a collaboratorin an action which teaches andinspires and unites and crystal­lizes. Perhaps some of the resist_a'nce to the liturgical revival canbe explained in terms of our fearof the responsibility impliedshould public worship again be­cOme a religious experience anda personal confrontation withthe' Saviour and His mem.bel's.

Se~ Salary RaiseWINDSOR (:NC) - Delegates

to the French Canadian Educa-,tion Association's annual meet':'"fng here adopted a, resolutionurging efforts to raise Catholic,school teachers' salaries to levelscomparable to those in publieschools. The resolution said sal­aries of Catholic school teachersaverage 25 per cent less thanthose of public school teacher-So

cot'hof.c,· 'LeaderTo . FOnn 'New,Belgian Regi~

BRUSSELS (NC) - 'l'heeLefevre, president of a.eCatholic-oriented Soc i ..Christian party, has ,beeanamed by King Baudouin "form a new Belgian governJDell6,

If he can win the approval ClfJParliament, he will succeed e.oPremier Gaston Eyskens, aJiloa Catholic and a Social ChristiaU.who resigned after his party su:Ioofered losses in the March •parliamentary elections.

The Social Christian party 108&eight of its 104 seats in the 2~seat House of Representati.and ,won about nine' per cedifewer popular votes than in 195&.But it remains the largest~in .Parliament,· '

To Reston UnityObservers here believe :a

Lefevre will try to form a coa&.!ion government with the Soelai­ist party, which increased' lit

, popular vote and held on to ill84 seats in the March electiola.Former Premier Eyskens' regimewas a 'Christian Social-Libel'1Iparty coalition. The Liberals 10Itone of their 21 seats in the eleo­tion," although ,they increase.their popular vote.

Mi. Lefevre said in a radltlu'oadcast that the main PUI1~of the new government must bethe restoration of national un.Everybody is aware, he saic\,that Belgium is divided by laa­guage, religious affiliation aDlIeconomic interests.

The, Premier-designate,- ...referring to the division betweeethe Flemish-speaking peoples 01

,northern' B'elgium and theFrench-'speaking Walloons in"South. The :Flemings are aIm_all Catholics and live in ari'a..­with a rising economy. 'lbeWalloons, although mainly Caa..,olie, have a strong anticleriell

,tradition and live in an ~nomically declining region.

Catholics in LeiotNumber 2'4,000

Laos, the southeast Asian ..derbox, that could make the CGIIwar hot, is one of the leMICatholic countries in Asia.

WhiLe Laos is adjacent ..Vietnam, which is second only"the Philippines in its percen~of Catholics in the Far East, theCatholics of Laos constitute~about one per' cent of the pop...lation of between two and weand one-half million.

Despite the gains in the pall10 years - resulting partiaitwfrom an-.influx of Vietnameslrefugees - Christianity has ...ways had rough sledding in LacaThe land - locked kingd~

roughly twice the size of Pen&­sylvania, is predominantly B~dhist in. culture and relig~

But many of the isolated tribesin the lofty mounta'ins wbiel'!cover much of the country RIllstill given to demon-worshiP.

Meets OppositionThe first attempt to preach file

Gospel in Laos-then an exten.­sive kingdom-was made in fbe17th century by a PortugueseJesuit missio.nary Joao MariaLeiria. Father Leiria preache4for five years in Vientiane; tileold cap'ital, and now the adminifJ­trative capital. But the violent

'opposition of the Buddhistbonzes forced him to leave the

, country in December, 1647. '

The first missionary efforts '.modern times began in 1881;_were in general hamstrung'"the civil authorities. It wag DOtuntil 1893, when the Frenelamade Laos a, protectorate, tINlitCatholic missioners had any HtIIfreedom to preach. But the~priests who came to Laos theecame mainly to minister to'...small Catholic community CIfAnnamites and Tonkinese r~ing in Laos. .

Aid Missions .BASEL (NC) - The 20_

members of the Swiss CatholllWorkers' movement have CCDotributed $187,000 to the missioDein the past five years, inchidiDa$70,000 for a social center in n.­es-Salaam, Tanganyiiul

CompanyTelephone aShome 5-7811

P,riest·

Ttff ANCHOR""".,·" "'>1 7Thurs:.A'pril 13. 1961

Predict,SQug~k RecoveryFor Be~gium '

CINCINNATI (NC)Belgium will recover quicklyfrom the Congo loss thesame way Holland recoveredfrom its loss of Indonesia, 11

Belgian priest-economist saidhere.

Father Peter Virenque, S.J..who is conducting courses ~,lis

semester at Xavier Univers:ty,estimated that the immediateloss to Belgians without figuringloss of capital holdings was 200million dollars.

"Holland experienced two orthree years of economic difficw..ties after Indonesia broke awayfrom its' rule but came backstrongly so that no permanentadverse effect was felt," the Je&-uit priest said.. '

Common MarketBelgium, he feels, .will con-

· tinue to make economic progress· because of its association, with

the European Common Market,which he calls "the greatestventure ill economics of the 20th

· century." The Common Marketis making such progress that itsoperations are being speeded upiIi such areas all tariff reduction,he said. '

Father Virenque said he wouldlike. to see the six Common Mar­ket nations of Europe (France,West Germany, Italy, Belgium,Holland and Luxemburg) allywith the so-called Outer Seven(Great Britain, Sweden, Norway.Denmark, Portugal, Austria andSwitzerland), but such an alli­ance faces two great obstacles.

, U. S. Interest Gratifying.The Common Market has set

a course toward complete eco­nomic integration and possiblepolitical federation whereas theOuter Seven restricts its activi­ties to trade agreements, he ex­plained. As the mainspring ~

the Outer Seven, Great Britainhas commitments to the BritishCommonwealth which stand inthe way of integration withinthe European economy, he said.

Belgians are gratified, he said,by the deep' interest of theUnited States in the CommonMarket. They find the increasingAmerican investment in WesternEurope encouraging, he added.

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ST• .1JI9MAS MORE, 'SOMERSET'

,155 North MaIn 51.Fall

·r·.···~.···,~·'·~··. ,~ .., '"

maculate Conception in North ... succ.eeqed .him. When, FatherEaston, and Father 'Downey, af:·. O'Neill was appointed ActingteI" remaining for 'a' short while SU'J;le"rin'tendent of D i 0 c e santo assist ·the new pastor, was .. SchOOls last' January, Fatherassigned to Falmouth; Downey was named to return to', Rev.' William H. "Harrington his former parish to assist in thearrived ·in December of 1949 to care of the now 3200 parish-

. take over,' the duties of first pas- ioners.tor. of'the' new church. The Dr. Of major concern to the threeBowler Clinic near' the church ,priests are. the. Christian Doc­was purchased and remodeled to": 't~ine claSses,. whichm!1st serveserve as a new' rectory, since .all the' 707 children of 'the largethe, priests had previously lived" 'parish; which has only 58 'at St. .Patrick's. Soon Rev. John youngsters attending CatholicH. Hackett was named Father schools in Fall River and Taun­Harrillgton's' assistant.' ton. For these claSses 12 bus

In 1955 Father Welch returned routes are run and seven layto serve as second pastor of the teachers, plus Sisters of theparish he had fostered, and Rev. Holy Union from Sacred HeartsJustin Quinn became his assist- Academy and Sacred Heartant.. Since then.Fa,ther Welch Parish School, both Fall Riverha.s built a spacious new rectory are: assisted by five secretarie~to h'ouse the priests,: and. the - who keep records and take careparish has ~ontinued .to 'increase of correspondence.in population and' activities. :, Active parish organizations in-

. Growing Pa~ish . ,elude the Holy Name Society.,Father Quinn left Somerset kt Sea Scouts, Men's Choir. High

1957, and· Rev. Patrick J: O'Neill School ''girls' choir, and .c.Y.o.

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Decency LeaderVisits Fi!mdom

HOLLYWOOD (NC) -Msgr.'l'homas F. Little, executive sec­retary of the National Legion ofDecency, has arrived here frombis New York City headquarterl\for a two-week series of confer,:"ences on motion pictures withPrOduction Code officials andproducers of major studios.

It has been Msgr. Little's·CU9-.tom to visit Hollywood at lea~ ...once every three years in con­nection with motion pictures.'. ,The legion is the organizationcf the Church in the U. S. which' .evaluates motion pictures frOD,l .'"tile moral viewpoint f»r' the .guidance of Catholics.

Sculpture Wins Prize .... ·,. HAMMOND (NC)-A three­foOt figure called "The WifeOf Lot," sculptured in terra cotta'by a priest-artist which won:first prize for sculpture in the'Northern Indiana Artists' re­ponal exhibition is now beingshown here. The prize-winnerte the work of Father AnthoD¥Lauck, C.S.C., head of the art de­partment and sculpture teacherat the University of NonDame.

Asserts,Religion St. Thorruu Mor~ Parish, Somerset, ,OUtgrows':'\;:115 Top Source) Church of'Which If Was Once Misswn

Of C=reedom' " 'By MarioG Urisworth. "DE'rROIT (NC) tho It is hot often that the daughter parish outgrows its mother, or that a mission

voice of religion should be chapel becomes larger than its original parish; but this is the case of St. Thomas Moreheard in any discussion of parish in Somerset. A short 23 years ago a mission of St..Patrick~s Parish, Some~set; afreedom, Detroit's Arch- briefer 13 years ago created a parish, St. Thomas More parIsh now cares for approxImatelybishop John F. Deard~nj saidhere. ,3200 souls; a small number

The Archbishop gave theJ)rin- of whom live in Swansea.· eipal address at a University of Re". Thomas P. Doherty,Detroit honors convocation pas tor' of St. Patrick'swhere Francis Cardinal Spell-man, Archbishop of New York, Church, Somerset, was. firstreceived an honorary doctorate pla'ced in charge of St. Thomasof laws from Father Laurence More in 1937 and plans VfereV. Britt, S.J., universitJ' presi- begUn for a chapel, located on

Luther Street. Before it coulddent. 'be completed, Rev. Felix. S.

Archbishop Dearden said that Childs was named to head St., eo voice has been raised as con- Patrick's aoo Us missioa. m

.istently, articulately and com- January of 1938.pellingly in defense of human'J\t" that time; there were 900freedom as that of religion: 'BadlS in the mission area and by .

· .,': "Of aU' the great institutions, ;June '. of that. year, the chapel '. :the Church has stood' in a uf\ique was' completed and dedicated:' .position in its defense of free- l3y 1941,' Somerset's popqlation'

: " ~m,» he declared. had 'increased to th~ point whereGuides Free Acts, I 'three Masses were necessary at

Directing attention to' the St. Thoma$ : More as weir, as'eource of the Church's coi'icern three at St;· 'Patrick's each Sun.,..

.': Qver 'freedom, the Archbishop dky. 'DurU;g this time, Rev., 'llI8id that· basically its n'ifssion James A. Dury sei'vedas Father

presupposes "the freedorIl of Childs' assistant.man, then elevates, guides and Father Welch

, aids his free acts toward' their Rev.' Joseph K. Welch suc-· highest goal". ceeded Father Childs in Somer-

. He said that "liberty i~ n~t set in October of 1941, thus be'"license", and that the choice be'" ginning another unique feature

·.tween good and evil is not the ..<>t:St.,Thomas.More. For Fathermost "evident sign' of our' ·free-· Welch, named in 1949 pastor ofcIom." . . St. Patrick's Church and its

· ' "The essence of true ,Jibertr,;; roi~sion, ~as .to be transferred, , . eonsists .in' the paradox of,. obe;t, . a.nd feturn SIX years later as

. dience to the good," th~'Arch;,; i .pastor of St. Thomas MQ~e. after., '·bishop said. "Clearly 'then the ,. Jt. p,ad been n\lmed a parish.

exercise of freedom rests ci!rectly: ...,.,F·~ther,.Father Welch's a!lsist­,upon knowledge. The greate.r,,:,~nt,.:,Rev.. Stephen J. Downey,

. . our knowledge and understand-· who had succeeded Father Durymg, ,the greater is our prospect'" In" i947, has. n~w returned toof acting as a free human' being" serve"' as 'liis c;:urate a secondahould." / .' ;, ··:time. '.,: '.

He said when there is ,recog."':" ~ 1949, the Catholic .~pula-.aition of the newer' higher': tion' in' Somerset had grown soknowledge that· the' Church ·tll.pidly that an additi0ll: wasbrings through faith, plus' the' . built to the' c~apel w.hich 'morehelp it gives through grace, "we . than . doubled Its seatmg, capac­can understand how she enriches • ity: Then, :in December, St.and perfects human freedom...... ·Thomas 'More Chapel became a

G' P to Lit " , parish in its own right.· Iron-IVes urpose e 'ically, this very .milestone in the

Archbishop De~rden a~r~d parish history became the,-U it is the functIOn of rel1glon • reason for the reassignment ofto introduce purpose into ou~. the two priests who' were to

· . Jives, to give us in the true~". return; for Father Welch was, . '!lense of the term a sound,com- 'named' to a larger parish; Im­

plete philosophy of life, then.inevitably it enriche~ and per- .. Seek Sundaytects human freedom. :. ,'" ,'.,. .

. Conceding that the theme of', Selling .Stop .,religion and freedom has more<: , " . '. . ,. . •· facets thaI\' "can be counted," the ST. PAUL (NC)-Tw.o bills

Archbishop said in the last" before the' State LeglSlature.' analysis religion has labored': 'would prohibit the sale oftenaciously to safeguard' the,·...specific ~tems on Sunday.freedom of man from undue en-:' ,. ·The .bills seek to repeal l~ws

eroachment because of love of ,. "prOviding a general ban 'agamst·. freedom and conviction of its "public sales on Sunday." Items'. Acred worth. .." listed' in the bills'include cl.oth­

"Freedom has suffered most in 'ing, furniture,. houseware, Jew:-. ,elry and grocenes. Small owner-

history when It has been strIpped. ted d . d delicatessenof its sacredness," Archbishop °tpera ladlr

by an pt

. • d "'s ores wou e exem .Dearden sa~d. I~ h~s been serve, Thomas H. Hodgson, executivebest when Its d1gmty, and man s vice president of the Minnesotaas well, have been elevated by R ta'l F d t' h'ch l'S 'back~r' » e 1 e era lOn, w 1ze Ig10n. ing ·the bills, said Sunday selling

is spreading. "Large departmentstores in suburban areas arecausing smaller stores to open onSunday in self-defense." hestated.

·:1

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: ,.

$3, Gift 8f-ings:$500 Return, , ELIZABETH (NC) - A n~three dollar gift 00 her almamater inspired the gift of $500'to the institution she now serves.

Sister MaI:y Carmelita of st.. Elizabeth's Hospital nursingschool here replied to the annualalumni appeal of New York Uni­

,versity with a three dollar corrtribution.

In an accompanying letter sheexplained: "Please rememberthat I am a Religious with a vowof poverty. Therefore, I can onlygive you a donation I mysel:1!receive. We too are building.,,-,

, , Her gift 'brought a thank"yoa- note from NYU alumni preside~- Myron G~eene, who said:

Large in Spirit

"Your gift is not a small one•.. In spirit, it is as large as anywhich a university can recei~

from a gra'teful graduate."If ' all alumni everywhel'8

were to give ,to their ~Lmamaters ' according to the i I'means, higher education would

. ;'bemuch eloser to solving i.tIfinancial problems." " .

Mr. Green said he had tomseveral. past, presidents of theNYU alumni group of Sister Car­melita!s gift, and they wanted.

:, to help' in ·the building of St.Elizabeth Hospital n u r s i DC

.. sc~ool." .Enclosed wer~ checks totalinc

. '$50(1 from Mr. Green, and five, : former NYU alumni presidenU.

"

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/ '

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CENTERPtaint ,and'Wciilpaper

Dupont Painll~;:~~ cor. Middle St.

• ~22 .A~ush. Ave. \, a;,~ZW 'New Bedford

PARKING''Rear 'of Store

WEARShoes That Fit

"THE FAMILY SHOE STORE"

John'sShoe' Store

95 PLEASANt' STREETFall River OS' i-5811

PAST PRESIDENTS' TEA: Mrs. Louis L. Dumont,president of the New Bedford Catholic Woman's Club,discusses the papal award given in .1953 to Mrs. Carolyn' B,',Manning, first president of the club in' 1918, by. BishopConnolly•. ' , '. ',' .' '. .... ,

North 'J,\ttleboro Dof IPlans 45th Anniversary'

Benedict Circle 61, North At­tleboro Daughters at Isabella, "will hold its 45th' anniversarybanquet at 6:30 this Suudayevening at the Rome Restaurant.!\frli. Gerard Woods, wife of theIrish COnsul in Boston, willspeak. .

Other. forthcoming activitieswil~Include participation in thedistrict, council corporate Com­munion Wednesday night, April26 at St. Joseph's Church, Taun­ton, followed by a supper atRoseland Ballroom, also Taunton,'

Miss Brenda Quinn is chair­man for the circle for the annualDaughters of Isabella dance 'Mbe held-this year Saturday night,May, 20. " ,

Mrs. Francis X; Reilly win beehairman for the a'nnual initia­tion banquet, to be held at adateto ~ ,announced.

'Foresters fOSkateOur Lady of, Fatima Court,

Fall River Foresters, will holda roller' skating party Fridaynight, April' 28. Members willleave from the Catholic Com-"munity Center on FranklinStreet at 6:30.

:Court ,',Takes Under Advisemenlt'Challenge to Ohio Smut LCfW

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tt,le ,and she was holding it for hfrit.Pap'!l Pa~chal Candleu. s. Supr.eme Court has taken She was sentenced from one'to SpeCial GIft to Nuns,under'.advlseme~ta challenge to seven y,.ilars in jail. Her eonvic- '. CINCINNATI (NC)-The Pae­a!1 OhIO law WhICh b~rs posses- tion 'Was upheld in March, '1960, chal candle burning in the chapel,Slon of ,obs~ene materIal regard- by the Ohio Supreme Court.' 'of Mount St. Joseph Convent ofless of motive. ' , ,., , 'the Sisters of Charity of Cincin-

The court took the case under In ~act, however, four, of t~ . ti· , -. I Oft fr P ,, "' , st te h' h ' t' . t" na 18 a specla gl om ~adVisement after hearing oral a , Ig ,cour s seven JUS Ices, , J h

arguments on the constitution- favored acquittal and felt, the 0 ft. ,

ality' of the Ohio law. state law to be unconstitutional. ' The ~ndle is one of 200 whlSThe case, involves a Cleve- But under the state constitution w,ere gIven to the ~ope on

land woman arrested' in May, tht; state Su!?reme ~ourt cannot Candlemas Day b~ l?nests and1957, when police searching her strlk~ d~wn a. law if more than laymen and . b.ears hIS coat-of-home for another person found one ,JUstIce dIsagrees. arms and rehglous symbols. Thea collection of obscene material Atto f the' , Pope sent three of the candles to

, , .. rneysor . woman 'the capitals throughout the worldthere. argued before the U. S. high

The woman s~i~ the material court that the Ohio law is unrea- for tht; Pas,chal .observance tobelonged to a former roomer bl b i . ' symbohze hiS deSIres for peace,

sona e ~cause. t does not take religious vocations and the sue-into conSIderation the reasons ' cess of the impending ecumeni­for which a person may have cal 'council~~ene material in ,his posses- In additi~n to the, three candles

sent to .Washington, D. C., theBenefit Whist u.S. capital, Pope John at the

,request of Domenico CardinalA public whist party will ben- 'Tardini, Vatican Secretary of

,efit the Sisters of Mercy of St. State, dispatched another candle;, Kilian's, Convent, New Bedford. , to Mother Mary Om~r, SuperiOl' ..

To be held at 8 this Saturday" General of the Sisters of Charity ., night inSt., Kilian's school hall, 'here. Cardinal Tardini is the, the' event is under chairmanship Cardinal Protector of the sistee-of Mrs. Gerald Bardteau. ',' hoo'c(: ' . ' '! ,i

Guest, NightNew Bedford Catholic Wom­

en's Club will hold its annualguest night at 8 tonight in theGold Room of the New BedfordHotel. Rev.' Daniel Linehan"S.J., will speak and show slidesof his Arctic explorations.Hostesses will be Mrs. ThomasP. Barry and Miss Dorothy AnnCurry.

College Gets loa~: 'WASHINGTON (NC)..,.,A mil­

lion-dollar loan has been madeto Regis College for Women. atWeston, Mass., to build a col­lege union building with din-ingfacilities for 700 students and82 faculty members, Commis­sioner Sidney H. Woolner of the,Community Facilities Adminis­,tration announced here.

Solon Proposes Grants'For Nursing Hof!ies'

WASHiNGTON (NC) - Sen.Hubert 'Humphrey of Minnesotahas proposed a' five-year pro­gram of construction grants, aidfor instruction and scholarshipsfor nursing colleges.

The Senator's bill (S. 13539recommends that the 193 degree­granting U. S. nursing colleges-­which include 42 under Catholleauspices-be eligible lor a max­in1,~' C()n~itruction . grant of~OO,O,OO each in five years.

He .alsO' proposes that ','aid forthe .cost of instruction" 'as'part'~

, expa~sion be ,up to' $25,000 toeach school for every year' of theprogram. In addition, new schoolswould be eligible fo:r: two-thirdsof the cost fOr the five years, hesaid.' " ,

TttE ANC~-DiOGeM of Fa" ~~,Ap1Ilt,,~:l''. • • . • .. •., ..... , •.•',.,' J '," •8

Grant to NunCEDAR RAPIDS (NC)-Sis­

ter Mary Roberts, assistant pro­fessor of history at Mount MercyCollege,' has been awarded aFulbright grant to attend a Sum­mer seminar for American teach­er$' at the University of Brazilin cRio de Janeiro.

Room' Dividers Offer~Ideas"Of Ways to Increase' Space

By Alice Bough CahillWhen space is at a premium, you c8ln achieve it with

, practical room dividers. Created to meet current needs, thisclever device replaces walls, uses little wall space, lookswell in most houses and offers an extra premium - mor-estorage space. Are you fa- wonderful server. You'll findmiliar with the designs' you such dividers hold anything fr{)mcan buy or create yourself , from plants to magazines.out of wood or metal'/, For As we said, dividers can ~

, instance, only one foot of wall place walls and in houses wherespace is required for a cabinet the front door opens directly intO(take your pick the living room, a divid,ed canof woods" cher- create a little vestibule' and af-

. ry, pine or wal- ford bookshleves, or a magazinenut). PIa c e d rack for the living room. Speak-

, against a side ing of a magazine rack, there's awall this cabi- divider on the market which isnet extends 54 about' four feet high and aboutinches into the the same length. It tapers grace-

, room to form a fully from a 17-inch wide baselow 30 inch high' to a 12-inch wide tOp.d i vis ion ' Clever Idea

.. between two Here's an ingenious divider, areas-your liv- which a do-it-yourself friending room and/or' produced. He took seven verticalstudy-dining area. , closet poles hld put them in an

You can have two closed.sab- ' ugly wide opening between liv~lnets 18 inches' wide at each end, ing room and hall, blocking offequipped with sliding panels to about' three feet of the opening.eonceal adjustable Shelves. The This created more "wall' space

, center 18 inches is left open and without blocking light from the'has adjustable shelves. The a9--' hall.: '

vantage of this type 'divider is A complete rearrangement of.. that if you wish to move at any furniture was possible; The new- time, it will probably fit into roomy corner was perfect for. a

any other space, as a divider Or sectional sofa' and table withas a wall cabinet. Of course, as ·;lamp. Woodwork and poles were

, a divider the back must be fin- "painted to match the walls, toishedas, well as the front. give the room ~ simplified back-

Slatted' Divider ground.Again, if you want a living Maybe you t~ink y?ur h~me

room _ dining' aces divider": is small or ordmary ,In deSIgn,.tliere's one that comes with" but;-right or' wrong-your roomsslatted doors on the dining room .. don't ,have to look it. You canside, plus shallow drawers, a ' giv~ them, distinctive ~ood looks,good substitute for a server. whether your budget IS large or'Looking further you can find small. You, too, can put thatBOrne "separate~," which llPe "individual" stamp. o? yourgood together, or used alone. ' rooms. fu.at .you admIre m h?me

, There is one on the market; magazmes, if you choose furmsh­especially suited to den:-study , Ings ~hat are full of characterand dining room divider. The .. and .,mterest,as we~ as har-.separate base is about 5 feet long, momous. and convement.

, 30 inches high and approxiinate- We suggest' you use colors that'ly a foot and' a half wide. In the are fresh and inviting, suited to. top center is a clever push- ' your particular tastes. In addi-through shelf, which makes a tion to the' use of room diyiders,

, desk or server. You can mount which we suggest as creatingon top of this the second shelf, - more space, if your room is a·as long and high as your bottom small one, give it a more spa­shelf, but perhaps not so wide. cious look with a closely related

On these open shelves you can ' color scheme.put ornaments and bric-a-brac Those of us ona budget (andwhich can be enjoyed in each who isn't these days), should~oom wherever you may be.. . shop for good design at low,

Fo; those' w-ho like wrought;..- cost. Use your own ingenuityiron; there' are ma'ny dividers to add striking but inexpensiveboth functional and inexpensive. touches.Many people want' and need just'this type ,divider which marksthe areas,' is less· heavy" andblocks nothing.

If you get a nice tall one, ttwill afford Several full-lengthand half shelves, which you canstagger. The long center shelf,topped with plastic, makes a

,Students Cook'up CuresFor Ailing Hearts

CONVENT STATION (NC)­Home economics students at theCollege of St. Elizabeth here arenot only putting their heart intotheir cooking but they are at­tempting ,to' help ailing heartswith their talents..

Under the direction of SisterJoseph, the girls are processingrecipes which have been devel­oped by the research staff of the,Anti-Coronary Club of, St. Vin­cent's Hospital,' Montclair. Thefoods are, frozen and flown tothe Massachusetts Institute at

, Technology where they arechemically analyzed for theirfatty acid content.

With this information, the hos­pital staff then prepares thesefoods for members of the Anti­Coronary Club-men"with a his­tory of heart .diseaSe. The r~

search results will be madeavailable to 'the National Insti­·tut-e-of Health.

Vincentian RummageSt. Vincent de Paul Exchange,

1799 Pleasant Street near East­ern Avenue, Fall River, will holda rummage sale from, 9 to 5today and 1 to 9 tomorrow. Theexchange is operated by St. Vin­cent de Paul members of theNotre Dame parish conference.

Alumnae FamilyDay on Sunday

The annual Family Day forAlumnae of the Sacred HeartsAcademy, Fall River, and theirchildren will be held Sundayafternoon starting at 3 o'clock.

The first part of the programwill be conducted in the conventchapel and will consist of a spe­cial blessing for the children andBenediction of the BlessedSacrament.

Following the religious portionof the program, a recreationaland social hour will be conductedin the sch~ol hall for the chil­dren and their parents. Games,prizes and refreshments for theyoungsters will, bring the day'•affair to a close.

Mrs. Philip Trevissano Frankand Mrs. Patricia MonahanWhalen are co-chairmen for theday.

Sucordium ClubSlates Party

The Sucordium Club of SacredHearts Academy, Fall River, willhold a calendar party and annualbusiness meeting at 8 Thursdaynight, April 20 in the schoolauditorium, Prospect Street.

Mrs. Stanley Bochenek andMrs. Louis Couto are co-chair­men with Mrs. Roger G. Petit incharge of the hospitality cam­mittee. Executive board mem­bers and room mothers will aidwith preparations,

A slate of new officers will bepresented by Mrs. Matthew Sul­livan, nominating committeechairman, who has been assistedby Mrs. James Owen and Mrs.James F~ Brady.

Mothers of students in both theelementary and high school di­visions of the academy are in­vited to atterid.

TtfE''ANCHOR- 9 "Thurs., April 13, 1961

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"released time" religion classesoutside the schools. But in theparish's sixth and seventh wardsCatholic students are taught inthe public school buildings afterclass, he said.

Sturtevant &HookEst. 1897

Builders Supplies2343 Purchase Street

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MR. FORMULA 7

New Orleans Group ChallengesReleased Time Classes in School

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CONVENTION BOUND: Students at St. Anne's Hos­pital School of Nursing en route t{) Cleveland convention ofNational Student Nurses' Association, say goodbye to MissMary O'Gara, R.N., guidance and health director. Left toright, Ann Savard, state and local treasurer for, student

nurse units; Dorothy Wajda, president of St. Anne's unit;Miss O'Gara; Priscilla Daprato, freshman class president.

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - AProtestant group has launched acampaign against Catholic after­school religious instruction inpublic schools of nearby St. Ber_nard parish.

The group has challenged thepractice on the grounds that itviolates separation of Churchand State.

The Rev. Ralph Blevins, pas­tor of the First Baptist churchin Arabi, La" and spokesmanfur the group, said the St. Ber­nard school board has inform­ally offered to allow after­hours Protestant instruction illthe public schools along with theCatholic instruction.

He said his group turned downthe offer. "We have no desire touse public schook fur anypurpose," he declared.

School board president J. R.Gherkin said Catholic pupils inmost of the parish's publicsehools are allowed to atteRd-

Hyannis 0 of IFather McSwiney Circle,

Hyannis Daughters of Isabella,will donate food for a snack .barat the anImal blind sale at­Hyannis Armory Thursday andFriday, April 20 and 21. Otherforthcoming activities includea rummage sale Friday, April 28at K of C Hall and a com­munion breakfast Sunday, May 7.

OverthrowBill Veto

The Governor told the law­makers that the overall issueinvolved in the question of le­galizing therapeutic abortionshoUld be decided by the courts,DO( the legislature or ~ gov­ernor. The chief exeeut.we, aProtestant, said if he were think­ing solely of his political futurehe would have signed the meas­ure or let it become law:withouthis signature.

'In a fast-minute move priorto the veto, leaders of fiveProtestant denominations of­ficially endorsed the legisla­ture's approval of the bill, whichhad also been strongly supportedby the New Hampshire MedicalSociety.

to the astonishment and annoy­ance of my father-in-law.

"But babies need to berocked," he said as he fruitlesslysearched furniture and depart­ment stores for an old-fashionedrocker. Finally, in an antiqueshop, he located our one-and­only.

Many a baby has been rockedto sleep in it; many a fretful andfeverish child has found comfortin the soothing back-and-forthwhich naturally -inspires a gentlehumming song. It's hard-prac­tically impossible, we have found-to be nervous in a rockingchair, and it is very easy to prayin one.

Many UsesSkipping a generation once

more the remembered feeling isas clear as though it were takingplace at this moment. On theother side of the coin, I can stillfeel the luxury of cradling a soft,warm little body against my own,the relaxation from tension asthe rhythm of gentle movementand song takes over.

Dr. Janet TraveIl, PresidentKennedy's physician, says thatthe exercise is good for thebody. We agree, and with theaddendum that it is also goodfor the human spirit.

That rocking chair of ours hashad to be mended many a time.During the years, toddlers haveridden its hind quarters astride,whipping "Old Paint" (the backof the rocker) to such speedsthat horse and rider would top­ple over. At other time, turnedupside down with a blanketdraped over the sloping top, ithas served as an Indian wigwam,an Eskimo igloo, a quonset hut,and a trailer.

Repaired, we hope, for the lasttime, the chair has long been inour bedroom. Recently webrought it into the living roomwhere we openly and unabash­edly rock as we sew or watchtelevision. It will serve, also, wehope, as a prop in which we canrock grandchildren.

Undoubtedly, there will nowbe two rocking chairs in theWhite House: one for the Pres­ident, the other for Mrs. Ken­nedy. Upstairs and away fromthe glare of publicity, little Car­oline and baby John, seems tome, are in for a lot of pleasant,homey living!

Suggest laymen HelpPrepare for Council

VIENNA (NC) - Austria'sBishops are suggesting to theHoly See .that laymen be givena greater part in preparing forthe Second Vatican Council.

"In a petition addressed tothose responsible for preparingthe Second Vatican Council, theAustrian Bishops will requestthat lay experts be called uponin larger measure to participatebI preparatory work fer thecouncil," their statement said.

According to an authoritativereport, the Bishops' petition asksthat laymen be put to work onthe Preparatory Commission forthe Lay Apostolate.

Fa'ils toAbortion

LegislatureGovernor/s

CONCORD .(NC) - A thera­peutic abortion bill, which hadbeeR approved by the NewBampsbire Legislature despite"'orous opposition by the Cath­eltc Chur~ was vetoed by -G()v...-..s1ey Poweli.

Supporters 01 the DieaSUrewere unable W muster enough~s to override the action of~ chief executive.

I'ollowing passage of the meas-.~, the most controversial o~.e present legislative session..file Governor made it plain thatIae would not sign it into law.

Gov. Powell took the unusualJll'ocedure of personally deliver­.... his veto message to a jointeonvention of the legislature~After his appearance, the House01. Representatives voted 202 toJI'O in favor of overriding the-'0. However, the result felltIS ,votes short of the necessarytwo-thirds majority.

Morts For R-etardedBring Recognition

MONTPELIER (NC) - Mrs.WUJiam V. Mc<Hnley, a pioneer.. organizing schools for re­tarded ehildren, has been namedYermont State Mother 1lor 1961.

.A. member of St. Mary's parish,8pringfield. -she is the mother of.....0. children. Gov. F. RayJEetrser, Jr., of Vermont was.-00« thOle -Pl"esent at a tun­eh8Ol1 here ia honor of Mr--..JIaQlnley.

NeW'1=folltier'ls 01d~Fashioned

In Rocking Chair DepartmentBy Mary Tinley Daly

Blinking sense of full-cycle oomes as we note the New~ntier is accepting wholeheartedly--of aH things--theold-fashioned rocking chair! Our dynamic young president,with an action-packed program, includes a sit-and-rockexercise in the White House.!'he sit-and-rock, of course,II only when he is talkingwith consultors, reading orlust relaxing ("With his shoes_d socks off," as daughter Car­oline reports totile press,)

Once again, itseems, rockingehairs are del'igueur. They!lave alwaysbeen considered_ at our house.Matter of fact,perhaps. theywill now be onthe market andwe won't haveto 'fight overtIae .only one we own.

A century ago, no respectable~QSe would be without one or.ore of those comfortable ad­juncts-to-living. Gradually, theydUappeared. '

All chairs, love seats, sofasad other sitables became static.

Sit down, and you stayed put,Jilt legs ache where they might.

Barking back to an older gen­en.tion, I 'can remember, as aobildi when- rockers were ,anlategral part of every hOQSehold.Call remember, too, the comfort0If my'mother's voice, "Come on.boney. Let's rock."

RockiDg DaysSOmehow, in those rocking

..,... frustrations and irritationsdisappeared. '],'he feeling ofaestling close to a soft, motherlybody, being held by loving arms.. as clear as though I were notaany decades removed fromfile experience. In the Winter, itwould be by the old-fashioned-register" since we didn't have a&replace in our mid-westernhome.

IlIl the Summer, ·Mom wouldlOck us on the front porch, or wewould sit in our own porch chairsaad rock with her, "catching abreeze." Nature was our onlyair-conditioner in those days. WewOlild watch people walk past intIM warm Summer twilight, now.-d then hail passing friendswitt! an invitation to join us inI'OClC-and-roll. This meant one ofMom's freshly baked sweet rollswith a glass of lemonade.

Furnishing our own home,.. Head of the House and Ifound that we had landed into... "static" period of furniture,

NameCaliahan EditorOf Greensburg Paper

GREENSBURG (NC)-WilliamM. Callahan, a staff member of1be Youngstown, Ohio, CatholicExponent, has been named firsteditor of the Greensburg Cath­olic.. The newspaper of the Greens­

burg diocese is tentatively sched­uled to begin publication in theSummer. Bishop William G.Connare of the Pennsylvaniatee announced Mr. Callahan'stlPpointment as editor.

A native of Orangeburg, N. Y":Mr. Callahan stUdied at RegisHigh School and City College inNew York. He began his careerin journalism as a staff memberof the Catholic Worker in the1930's.

Distribute FireSafety GuideTo Schools. CHICAGO (NC) - A guidefor fire safety is being dis­tributed to schools through­out the U.S. following ameeting here of experts on fireprevention.

Architect Norman J. Schloss­man of Chicago was chairman ofthe 12-man committee that con­ducted the study. It was subsi­dized by a grant from the edu­eational facilitfes laboratory, anarm of the Ford Foundation.

The committee issued a 60­page report that included theseobservations:

-There is no such thing as afireproof building.

-A school-by-school surveyshould be conducted to deter­mine the schools' protection.against fires.

-Safety devices, such assPrinklers, are effective onlywhen integrated into an over-allplan.

-Schools should hold findrills frequently.

-'-The nature of fire should bediscussed in scierice classes, andfire safety inspections should be• project of student councils.

Mr. Schlossman said: "Safety-against fire eannot be absolute.We should, therefore, insist thatOur school boards assess eacb8Chool periodically, make theirfindings known and recommendwhatever corrections or im­provements they deem properfor safety."

Cathol ic CollegesPledge SupportTo Peace Corps·

ATLANTIC CITY (NC) ­U.S. Catholic college aJHIuniversity presiden1;& -gavetheir unqualified backing t.the ideals and aims of Presid~Kennedy' Peace Corps here.

Mter a special meeting on thecorps, the presidents pledgedtheir cooperation with the pro-Ogram of "man-to-man assistancef() needy people abroad."

"The presidents see in th.Peace Corps a means of turningf() fruitful use the generousaspirations of American men andwomen, of giving man-to-maaassistance to needy peopleabroad and thus of affirming t4tthe world the convictions andcommitments of American menand women respecting humaBdignity and freedom," a state­ment from the presidents saic:l.

Aid in TrainingThe leaders of Catholic higher

education recommended thatCatholic colleges and universi-.ties offer their services for therecruitment and training 01Peace Corps volunteers. ,

In a discussioQ. session at theeonvention, a Newman Clu~

chaplain appealed to Ca,tholiein.lltitutions of higher edu¢ati91for help in educating Catholi~

at secular colleges."The Newman Center must be..

come the extension of our Catb-.olic universities," said Fathel'John F. Bradley of the Unive~

sity of Michigan in Ann Arbor.Suggests Courses

Extending Catholic college fa­cilities and personnel this wa~

he said, would not hurt theseinstitutions, but "would makemany students cognizant for thefirst time of the value of a Cat~

olic education in a Catholic c~lege."

Courses would deal with the~

phases of Catholic intellectuallife that are not discussed 011offered at the secular universit~

Father Bradley suggested to asession of the Newman Clu.chaplain's division of the NCEA.

"Since the courses are of col­lege caliber with competentteachers," he said, "the seculafuniversity would be greatly im­pressed and in many instanc~

might be willing to incorporat.some classes in its curriculum.-

TtIf AI'fCHO'f(- 11Thurs., April 13, 1961

Pope's Home DioceseDoubles Vocations

BERGAMO (NC)-Bergamo,home diocese of His HolinessPope John XXIII which used tosuffer from the lack of semin­arians, now needs more roomin its seminary.

Bishop' Giuseppe Piazzi of Ber­gamo has reported that in 1957there were 472 students attend­ing the seminary. Today thereare 711, he said. As a result the .diocese is bUilding a new sem­inary' to handle the overflow.

The Bergamo diocese has629,000 Catholics in 414 parishes.The Pope was born at Sotto itMonte, about five miles fromBergamo, and attended theBergamo seminary.

PRESIDENTS DINNER: Honor guests at annual Presidents' Dinner of StonehiUCollege are Richard Cardinal Cushing, Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C.S.O., presentcollege head, and Bishop Connolly. At dinner, Oardinal CUShing announced constructionplans for a Cashing-M'artill lib~ary at the oollege, to house papers of Congressman JosephW. Marti., Jr.

Automation Threat to Spiritual Side of NursingCOLUMBUS (NC)-The nurse room, observe the patient, and This plan, suggested Sister

of the future may take a distant talk with him. She can, without Eugene Marie, "can relieve thepatient's temperature by push- leaving her station, by pressing professional nurse to apply her­ing a button, but electronic gadg- one of many buttons, obtain the self more effectively to the pro­ets could mark the end of "the patient's blood pressure, respir- fessional responsibilities forspiritual aspect of nursing." ation, pulse, and temperature. which she is trained. We would

This prediction was made by "There may even be an elee- hope that this would result inSister Eugene Marie, adminis- tronic brain into which she can imprOVed patient care."trator of Good Samaritan Hos- 'feed' patients' symptoms andpital, Cincinnati, in a talk at the come up with a diagnosis, whichOhio Hospital Association's an- up to now has been considerednual meeting. the practice of medicine."

Convention delegates elected Lose Warmthher to the position of pr~sident- Sister Eugene Marie warned,el~ct, as a result .of whlCh she however, that this pattern ofWill bec?m~ pr.esldent f~r the nursing will "tend to dehuman­year begIn?Ing In. the SprIng ~ ize" the nurse, and she "will1962. Sh~ IS ~he fl~s~ nun to lose those qualities of warmthelected In thiS POSition. and understanding which are so

Surrounded by Gadget. necessary and meaningful to aOf automation in hospitals, sick person. The spiritual aspect

Sister Eugene Marie said: "I see of nursing will evaporate."the .nurse ~itting in the nurses' A possible solution to thestation, which has come to re- problem of combining the nurse­semble the cockpit of a plane. supervisor with "the nurse of theShe is surrounded by electronic Florence Nightingale tradition"gadgets. is the "floor manager plan." The

"Before her ill a television floor manager would relieve thescreen by means of which she nurse of duties not requiringCaB tune in to any patient's professional training,

Govemment BriefOne SidedBy Nature

NEW YORK (NC) - TheKennedy administration'.legal. brief against across-'the-board Federal aid f.1Ochurch-related schools can bea,nswered best only· byaitotherbrief, a laWy'ersaid.. Father Charles M. Whelan, aeonstitutional law authority ad­mitted to practice before t~U. S. Supreme Court, also saidadministration lawyers were un­able to examine basic issuesfreely.

Writing in America maga­zine, the Jesuit said the lawyerswer given the job of backing upPresident Kennedy's previouslyannounced opinions.

CraftmanshipTheir arguments, he said, are

the result of "first-class legalcraftsmanship," and he added:

"They can be answered as theydeserve only in a full-scale pro­fessional brief.

"What the public must under­stand and remember is: thatthese arguments are not theproducts of independent mindsfreely seeking the truth. .

"Unless the· mental straitjacket in which the governmentlawyers worked is kept clear17ia mitid, the· public may inter­pnt tile bri~ as fresh endorse­ment 'Of the President's lX>sition.Tbereare 00- new troops In Mr.·Kennedy's camp, but there isplenty of new artillery." ,

In another comment, the Tab..let, newspaper of the Brooklyn.diocese, also emphasized that thepresentation of the argumentsdocument is a brief-a one-sidedpresentation of the argumentsalready advanced by a client.

"As might be expected," saidthe Tablet in an editoria~, "thedocument supported the admin­istration's expressed opinions,even though it carried no con­viction and was in no way asubstitute for a Supreme Courtdecision."

Hit Immoral MoviesSAN JUAN (NC)-A Catholic

weekly newspaper here urged.public officials to crack downon immoral movies. De Reino aReino (From Kindom to King­dom), publication of the Confra­ternity of Christian Doctrine,also criticized local newspapersfor carrying what it said wereindecent advertisements fGf suchfilms.

HartfordCfH'amieReady to Leave­Rome Studio

ROME (NC) - What :iebelieved to be too largestwork in ceramics in the his..~of the art hasbeeilcompleted in Rome and is des­tined for the new Cathedral oi.St. Joseph in Hartford, Conn. .

The ceramic screen, which willstand in the apse of the newcathedral, depicts a triumphantChrist with the ·background of~e Apocalypse. It is the work ofthe Italian artist, Enso Assenza..It is 82 feet high and 40 feetwide.

MajestyChrist is shown standing in

majesty with figures of theApocalypse, including angelsand other biblical symbols de­dieted in brilliant colors sur­rounding Him. The work wascompleted under the supervisionof the International Institute (}fLiturgical Art in Rome, whichwas responsible for the interior·decorations of the rebuilt Cathe­dral of Manila.

Mr. Assenza said that he in­terpreted the ~eSllJlge of theApocalypse as one of "victoryand of joy, the definite triumphof good over evil, of eternityover time, of Christ over Satan,". Average depth of the massive:

worlt _is nil),e inches. Weighingalmost 40,000 'pounds, it WallClIlst in 1,152 Small molds.

Bronze panels· of the HartfordCathedrar are also ·by. the sameartist. These depict St. Josephin three panels with bronzefriezes employing various sym­bols of the Old and New Testa­ment.

Expect 3000 StudentsAt Vocations Exhibit

OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) ­Bishop Victor J. Reed of Okla­homa City and Tulsa will offera Mass tomorrow formally open­ing the first religious vocationsinstitute here in the McGuinnessHigh School gymnasium forsome 3,000 studenta and thei!'parents.

They were enrolled fromschools within a 50-mile radiusof this city for the two-dayinstitute.

The main attraction is ~me 35exhibits which tell the stories ofthe diocesan priesthood and ofcommunities of religious orderpriests, Brothers .and nuns. Theinstitute is being.sponsored bythe local Serra Club.

His opponent, Sister MaryTeresa, said that even if theschool day is not as concentratedon basic subjects as it might be,this can be corrected by tight­ening, rather than lengthening,the present schedule.

U!'ges Curriculum Changes

There is no scientific evidence,she argued, on how long theideal class or school day shouldbe. Nor is there, sh·e noted, evi­dence on how long a day ateacher can tolerate.

She urged changes in the cur­riculum, more time for prepara­tion by teachers and greaterutilization of teaching staffs.

"Five and one half hours dailyunder the guidance of a profes­sional staff operating at topcapacity is sufficient fOl" chil"dren," she said.

Vote Against Longer School DaySister Mary Teresa Francis, If the day were extended by

general educational directress of one hour, he proposed, home­the Sisters of the Blessed Virgin work could be eliminated Ol' atMary of Dubuque,Iowa, argued least cut down.for the present school day.

Msgr. Teacle admitted hefaced a major challenge to talkteachers into a longer workingday. However, he was not finallydefeated because it was an­nounced voting on the proposi­tion will be extended to allmembers of the NCEA depart­ment in its official publication.

The superintendent,· who isalso chancellor in his diocese,argued that the school day shouldbe extended because Catholicschools have a "larger purpose"than their public and independ­ent counterparts.

eM Dow. Rom.ework

This means, be maintained,time ill given to art, music, litur.gical life and other subjectswhich cut into the time for basicsubjects, such as arithmetic andEnglish.

PRIZEWINNING GIRLS: Campfire Girls and Bluebirds from Sacred Heart andSt. Mary's Cathedral parishes, Fall River, who won prizes in joint art contest are, leftto right, front, Elaine Reis, Laurian Cavanagh, Mary Colleen Farrissey; rear, CathyWilcox, Nancy Duffy, Ann Maynard.

Msgr. H. Clinton Teacle, supell'­intendent of schools, Diocese ofAlexandria, La., fought a losingbattle for approval of extendingthe day.

The 376 to 245 vote was an ex­pression of opinion rather thana setting of policy, however. Theballoting came at the end of adebate by a school snuperintend­ent and a Sister on this topic:

School TeachersATLANTIC CITY (N C) ~

Catholic elementary s e h 0 0 1·teachers meeting here voteddown a proposal to lengthen theschool day beyond five and one­half hours.

"Be It Resolved that the SchoolDay, Exclusive of Lunch PeriOd,be not Less than Five and One­Half Hours Long."

The debate took place duringthe closing session of the Ele­mentary School Department'smeeting at the 58th annual con­v~""r~ c,r +,,~ l',T~L'~--~1 CatholicEducational AssociatioR.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., April 13, 1961

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The .-esentment of the Soviets againstthe death of Lumumba reveals their dis­appointment in not taking over the Congo.(The Soviets could astonish the world bytelling their pari in his death. Remember,L1imumba failed them.) But the Sovietshave a substitute for Lumumba in Gizenga,the Communist dictator in Stanleyville who was educateCI inMoscow and Prague. Others are Kashauka who visited Pekiucand Dayal who works under Communist orden.

The Communists have planted two advisen in Washlndou.both of whom were thrown out of Lovamum University in theCongo for their Communist activities. '

Seventy per cent of Leopoldville's population are unemployed.Communists have introduced moral degeneration to the youth 01the cit,.. Some 90 per cent of th.e boys smoke hemp; imJDoralit,.is encouraged; attendance at Mass has declined to io per centof the men, 7 per cent of the womeR.

Missionaries have been persecuted beyond descriptioll--priestamntilated, n1UUl tortured and ravished. Next week we wilt I'i"tlyou. the full story of this relldous persecution: .. .

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Facts of 1M Congo' Stoty

God'Love YouBy MoI!It Rev. FlIKoK J. SheeR. D.D.

Behind the minor political struggles ill the CongiO "theimplacable war of the Communi&ts against the Church. Here ar.the inside facts of the Congo story:

Russia plans to "Sovietize" Central Afdca.For two years the Soviets gave Lumumba $400,000 a month •

bur followers and provide them with cars.Lumumba set up a Communist organization among his fellow

tribesmen, the Batelca, making them believe he was the incarnatioa01. his ancestors.

During the elections, Lumumba's troops destroyed most of theballot boxes of the other candidates. But orily 2S per cent of thepopulation voted because of their oppositionto him; in other regions 85 per cent voted.

The plans for the Communist revolutionin the Congo were prepared in Prague and inthe first three months Lumumba carried outthe first three points: 1. organize mutiny inthe army; 2. put the blame on the Belgians;3. organize a terrorist regime.

Cut out this column. pin your sacrifice to it and mall it to theMolt Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Soeietytorthe Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York l, NY..or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDlNB,3ti8 North Main Street, Fall River. Mus.

Priests! Offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass for the Churchin the missions. Sisters! Teach your children to pray for themartryed Church throughout the' world. Laity Go to Communiondaily in reparation for the sins Of the world. Catholics all Live outthe Sacrifice of the Mass. Your attitude must not be: "Well, it's onlyin the Congo." Is that not what Poland, Hungary, Cuba and Chinasaid when the revolution was in Russia? Assure us of your prayersand Communions; send us your alms and sacrifices. Our address:The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue,New York I, New York.

Now what lW"e you going flo do? Turn the page and read themovie or theatrical rev,iews? Can you not see that Communism i.gradually taking over the world? Do not say, "It can·t happenhere," because it is already happening to you who have tile Faith.Is not the Church in the COIlgO part IJf your Body-the MysticalBody of Christ? If your toe hurts does not your head feel the painTIf we have the Christ-sense this is our crisis, our hunger, our pain.

FATHER GRIFFITH

Baltimore PriestWins Holy NameNation·al Award

NEW YORK (NC) - The1 9 6 1 Father McKennaAward of the National HolyName Society will be pre­sented to Father John C. Griffith,Baltimore archdiocesan directOl'of the society, at a dinner inBaltimore next Sunday.

The presentation will be madeby Father Dennis B. McCarthy,O.P.,- HNS national director. inrecognition of more than 20 yearsof work by Father Griffith onbehalf of the society. The dinnerwill conclude the annual con­vention of the Baltimore arch­diocesan union of the HNS, oneof the events founded by FatherGriffith.

Reserved to!' Clergy

The award, instituted in 1950by the HNS national office, isnamed for Father Charles Mc­Kenna, O.P., a pioneer of the so­ciety's movement in the UnitedStates. It is reserved for mem­bers of the clergy who have dis­tinguished themselves in HNS.work and is awarded annually.

Shortly after his ordinationon May 25, 1938, Father Griffithbegan work in behalf of the HNSas the society's spiritual directorof St. Bernard's parish. In 1952,he was appointed archdiocesanspiritual director,

Under his directorship a num­ber of projects were institutedto stimulate greater interest inthe HNS. These includeti a"block system" to establish per­sonal contact with members ineach parish society; building ofthe Junior HNS; establishmentof a Holy Name bowling leacue,which now has 36 teams and stillis growing, and founding IJf theHoly Name Scholarship Fun"which thu far has financed theCatholic education of some 5'rneedy yoUng men at a cost ofmore than $40,000.

Fath~ Griffith also founded"Operation Decency" which PutthellNS in t~ forefront of astatewide campaign against in­decent literature and motion PIC;"

tures. He also built up the mem­bership af the HNS in the policeand fire departments.

An annual event founded byFather Griffith that has attractedstatewide attention is the annualHoly Narne Society baseballnight, staged in cooperation withthe management of the BaltimoreOrioles baseball team which an­nually attracts from 25,000 to30,000 HNS members to a gamefor the benefit of the society'sscholarship fund.

FOUR WAYS TO SERVE CHRISTAS A HOLY CROSS FA11fEI

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HOLY CROSS FATHERSNorth Iastoe, Mossachusetb

Catholic Party LegalJAKARTA (NC) - Indonesia's

Catholic party has delivered alist containing the names of166,161 members to the Ministryof Internal Affairs, proving thatit has more than the minimumof 150,000 members legallyneeded for government recog­nition.

religious guides or leaders, withthe result that parental author­ity lacks necessary moral sanc­tion particularly among teen­agers.

SUggests Short VisitsFrom the whole tone and con­

text of your letter, Barbara, Igather that your children willreceive adequate religious train­ing at home. Your oldest is alittle over two years old. Shouldyou take her to Mass? I think itwould be better to start withshort visits to the church.

If possible, choose a time whenyou can take her around thechurch, showing her the taber­nacle, -main altar, statues of theBlessed Mother, St. Joseph, andso forth.

On such occasions, and also atprayer, remember that a youngchild's span of attention is brief.Don't be surprised if she is easilydistracted or becomes restlessafter a short time.

Learn by lJuitati_A child learns by. imitation. If

you explain things to her in awhisper and move quietly, shewill learn what kind of behavioris expected of her in church.With a little preparation evenvery small tots quickly sense that"church" is a place that is dif­ferent.

I once watched an elderlylittle Mexican woman, probablya grandmother, take eight ornine wide-eyed youngsters on achurch tour. Pausing briefly be­fore tabernacle, statue, andshrine, she would whisper ashort explanation, recite a littleprayer, and then move on.

Filled with awe, her littleflock followed without a sound,yet they were typical youngsters,for a few minutes later I heardthem laughing and chatteringout in the street.

Positive ApproachA short, colorful ceremony

like Benediction provides an ex­cellent service for starting actualparticipation. Tell your daughtera little about the service, sitwhere she can see the altar,don't give her a rosary orprayerbook to bang around, andact as if you take for grantedthat she will imitate you andbehave properly.

In general it is poor psychol­ogy to give any indication thatyou fear she will misbehave. Bepositive in your approach. Ex­plain what you're going to doand how you're going to act, butdon't suggest things not to do.

Make no threats or promisesto encourage good behavior, forthis would imply that you reallyexpected her not to imitate you.

After she is four, she shouldbe .able to sit through a low Mass.Children differ greatly, of course,but most four-year-olds can betaught to remain reasonablyquiet for 30 minutes. At leastthey should be given a chance.

THE ANCHOR.:L.D~oceseof Fall,RiYec,Thyrs. AprilJ3;' 196112

Catholics Ask ParleyWith Other Groups

BANGALORE (NC) - 'l1le-.athoIic Union of India hu..ned for a meeUng of leader.01. all Indian minority groups.Including Christians, Mosletaaand Anglo-Indians, to l:r7 torjoint action ili respect to theirllights and interests.

The Catholic Union said in aIieBolution that the Congresaparty, which has ruled India ever_ce independence, i. doingaothing effective despite itsa¥owals of full justice for min­el'ities.

Effee&e of Negl_Studies show tJlat maD7 par­

_ts sadly underestimate tileyoung child's ability to graspand appreciate religious truthsand practic~s. Perhaps becauselIeligion does not constitute aYital element in their own"'world," they ignore the reli­gjous needs of the young childand hand over almost the entirereligious training of their chil­dren to the school.

The deleterious effects of thisparental neglect are obvious.ehildren come to identify reli­gion wi th the school rather thanwith the whole of life; and theyWI to regard their parents as

Preparing Child for MassAttendance Begins at Home

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

"At what age should children be brought to Mass onSunday? I'm the mother of two small children and am_peeting my third very shortly. My oldest is a girl 21months of age, and although she repeats her prayers afterme, I've never had her inehurch. Some of my friendsMY I'm wrong, still othersllaY I'm doing right. Our• urch does not have a 'cryingIIOOm,' and I doubt whether mybaby could keep~iet during thewho Ie Mass.What do you8link?"

Well, Barbara,[ don't knowwhether youriii ttl e darling~uld sit stillduring a wholeMass, but Iknow a goodIIl8ny who can't!Whe question ofwhen children are old enough.. be taken to MaSs receives..ny different answers todayas in the past. At what age.ould a child know how to be­"ve in church? Obviously, theensWer will depend in large.easure on the child's training-.d'the kind of behavior judgedproper in church.

Some national groups are verytolerant of young children. Theydon't expect them to act uadults---even in church. otherstrain their children so carefully.at they are never a problemwhen in the presence of elders.

Modern Americans present.-nething of a paradox in thisllegard-they advocate "perous­.ve" training iIi the home yettend to be quite intolerant ofthe resulting behavior in public.Any parent who has had the ex­perience of taking an obstrep­erous youngster down the aisleduring church service knowswhat I mean.

Part of Child's WorldSome parents wait until their

.ildren attend school or arepreparing for First Holy Com­.union before they bring them.. Mass. They insist that children8I'e too young to get anything out01. church before this time and,.-ill only be a source of disturb­ace to their parents and otherworshippers.

Such parents really sidestep~ basic issue. Besides placingthe entire burden of "church­breaking" their youngsters an• e teachers, they ignore the sig­aificance for the child of sharing.. group prayer and worship.

Parents have no rig.bt to p@st­pone this experience until theobild is old enough for schGOl.It should become a vital part oftile rapidly developing child's.....orld" much earlier.

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'ftfE ANCI'IOA-Thurs., Aprfl 13,' 196'1

Will Give InvocationAt Minuteman Flight· .

Chaplain (Col.) St. John,. S.J.. . 'newly appointed staff chaplaim ..at Otis Air Force Base, will givethe opening prayer at the "Min­utema~ Flight," enlistment cere­mony for 100 youths from south­east New England who will joiathe Air Pollee of the Air Forceon· Patriots' Day, Wednesd~

· April 19. .The ceremony will be held a't

11:30 in the ·morning in the Hal!· 01. Flags at State House, BoStoi\o

The public is invited.

NEW HAVEN (NC) -An m..dustrialist and a state labor 01Jc,ficial, have been chosen for the1961 McAuliffe Medal Awardsof the Hartford ArchdiocesanLabor Institute.

They are James A. Walsh,chairman of the board of theArmstrong Rubber Co., anellJoseph M. Tone, Connecticut'lJlabor relations director. Theil'selection was announced here ~Msgr. Joseph F. Donnelly, direOotor of the institute.

The awards are given annuallyby the institute for notable workin promoting good will and co­operation between labor antllmanagement in Connecticut. .

Msgr. Donnelly said that Mi:l.Walsh was chosen for the awardbecause of his '·'constructive and!untiring efforts" in establishing"the sound structure of indus­trial relations which today pre-.

· vails between his company anellits employes." The institute dis­rector praised Mr. Walsh fa!'"recognizing the role of humaDvalues in industrial relations.":

Mr. Tone· was praised for "awhole lifetime given to the bet-

· terment of workers." Msgr. DO·Dcnelly said the state ~labor rela­tions director had "fought themost· vicious types of industrialexploitation and worked to puasome of our fundamental laborlegislation ·on· the statute booaof Connecticut."

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the school meetings, Robert fadeep in Senior prom plans. Heis a trumpet player and form­erly played the bugle in theAmerican Legion drum andbugle corps. His pet hobby isbasketball ~nd he likes to par­ticipa~e in all outdoor sports inWinter and swimming at the

· family's home in Mattapoisett in· the Summer.

For years Robert has helpedhis father, owner of three mar­kets, evenings, afternoons andweekends. He plans to go intobusiness with his dad and willstudy market distribution at the·University of Massachusettswhere he has been acceptedstarting next September.

On Sundays and holydaysRobert is an usher at Our Lady'sChapel in downtown New Bed-

· ford.ROBERT DUMAS

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These Poor Give·ToPoorer

ST; .GALL (NC) - "Poor. people can help till poorer peo­ple," said a poster in a tinyAlpine village where the peoplescratch out a bare living from

· the mountainside. .In that village, diocesall. offi­

cials here. reported, the· peoplegave an average of $23 a familyto the national Lenten collectionfor the missions. .

First figures indicate that t1tecollection netted $2.3 million i,D.Ge·rman - speaking Switzerland

. alone. The figure' could doublewhen returns are in from otherparts of Switzerland, wheteFrench, Italian or Romansh al'espoken.

Folger Shakespeare., Library., . ing forays was the section wherearound the corner from the the librarians has stored an im­superb resources of the Congres- p·ressively. large collection Olfsional Library in Washington: . copies of the Imitation· of Christ

The student in foreign coun- by Thomas a Kempis.tries will remember the British - .. Kempis CollectionMuseum, the Bibliotheque Na- The Kempis collection was the

.. tionale, the Vatican Library. and . product of someone's 'lifelongthe Bodleian Library at Oxford. ,hobby. Whoever the hObbyist

· Not to be overlooked as· the was, he collected hundreds andwondrous collection .within the hundreds of editions of The Imi-

· walls of Philip 'II's gray and . tation: books of all sizes, in every· gloomy Palace of the Escorial, a sort of binding and in a dozen· .library rich in illuminated man- . different states of preservation.

uscripts and boasting the diaries Some. were in Latin, some in· and letters 01.. St. Teresa of Greek,hundreds of others iEl

Avila. . . various modern languages.Harvard Library In some of the books I used to

Fifteen. years ago, it was my find smudgy penciled marginalcombined business and pleasure notes, so old as to be almost illeg­to spend the best· part of three . ible. 111 others one still comesyears-every day except Sunday" across ancient holy cards that

· when the building was closed- had been used, decades or evenin the stacks ·of the big Widener centuries ago, as book ·marks.Library at Harvard. In its count- Peculiar Treasuresless avenues of shelves a personwith a bent for browsing can Every library has its peculiarfind endless attractions for any treasures and anyone who comesodd moments of relaxation he to know it library well invariablymay have from the work at hand. finds treasures of his own. It

seems to me that that life isOne of my favorite stopping stunted which has not been lived,

places on such occasional brows~ part of it at least, within thewalls of. a library,. :

Of themselves books or libra­ries will never save the world.But· it· is equally true that, inGod's ·providential plan' for His

. 'sons and daughters, ·salvationoften comes through what our

. libraries have to offer us.

Libraries Can .Contribut6 Signif.icantlyTo Salvation 'of Individuals'

Government CoursesIn Catholic Colleges

WASHINGTON (NC) - EightCatholic colleges and univer­sities will be offering scienceand mathematics training fortalented high school studentsthis Summer under a govern­ment program.

They will be among 158 edu­cational institutions sharing intwo million dollars to carry outtuition-free courses sponsoredby the National Science Found­ation, o government agency toencourage science and mathe=>1J1atics trainiI)g. ..

The followlnA' article waswritten by Father Davis as apart of the Catbollc partici­pation In the observance ofNational Library Week, April16 to 22. Tbe nationally knowneditor, writer and speakertalks about libraries great andsmall, and the place th~y canhave in the lives of men.

ByFather Thurston N. Davis, 8..1.

Editor of Americaand Catholic Mind

Everybody who loves booksbas a special corner of his. heartreserved for ,the memory of hili"first" library. My first love wasa little branch library in Atlanta,almost 40 years ago. Its mostattractive feature to me in thosedays was the fact that it housedevery single volume in a seriesof stories about six boys in NorthAdams, Mass. I couldn't get thosebooks anywhere else. And at thetime it seemed terribly impor­tant to find them.

Next in memory comes the bigpublic library iri Louisville, Ky.After that, a homey and hos-

. pitable book sanctuary, nextdoor to the Community Center inBloomfield, N. J. There, I recall,a kindly librarian helped me doa high-school term paper onMohammed!

Evetylibrary· has its special:treasures, its unique apeal. Ishall never get over being im­pressed by the ·big double read­ing room in the Public Libraryon the corner of New York City'sFifth Avenue· and 42nd Street.Or consider the· splendid litUe

·Robert Dumas; St. 4n.thony"· President, Plan,·Market Management Career With Father·

By Avis C. RobertsThe ~resident of the student body and also of the Senior Class at St. Anthony High

School, New Bedford, is an old pro when it comes to presiding at meetings. Robert Dumas,18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland R. Dumas of 110 Cottage Street, New Bedford, has beenpresident of the student body since he was first elected by the pupHs in his sophomolleyear. A communicant of St.Hyacinthe Church, NewBedford, and a graduate oft hat church's grammarschool, Robert is the first of eightDumas children who expect tobc graduated from St. Anthony's.Their parents want all to beproficient in the French lan-.guage and chose St. Anthony'S'with this in· mind.

Robert's brother, Jean Paul,who will be 15 in October, is afreshman at St. Anthony's andhis sister, Rolande, 14, will enterthe high school in September. _Five more are matriculatinglater.

Nuns at St. Anthony· reportthat Robert "is a good studentand his deportment is about per­fect."

Deep in PlansIn addition to presiding at an

Convention' to Discuss·' L~ymen'sPrograms i~ ·20 Problem 'A~eas .

WASHINGTON (NC) - Dele- control of obscen~ty; the mater,ialgates to the biennial convention and spiritual care:of the aging;of the National Council of Cath- Catholic concerns in urban re­olie Men will offer recommenda- development; and Catholic atU­tions for programs by laymen'lI tudes to the population problem.groups in 20 fields. . . AlsO: Catholic pa~ticipation ia

The recommendations wlll. be community activities; contribu­drafted by work groups studymg tions to the Church in Latinopportunities and challenges in America' future trends· in Latinsubjects as diverse as spiritual America' and their relevance forcare of the aging and the ob- U. S. apostolic groups; challengesscenity problem.. in the emergent nations; moral

The NCCM convenbon will be implications of traffic safety'held May 4 to 7 in Pittsburgh. and the Home and School Asso~Its theme will be "The Apostlic ciation.Layman: New Responsibilities inChristian Unity."

The subjects of the 20 workgroups will be: spiritual forma­tion of leaders; participations inthe· liturgy; the layman andChristian unity; needs of themodern parish; use of the Cath­olic . press to promote applica­tions of the Church's principlesto contemporary problems; reli­gious education of children; andthe promo.tion of family-orientedprograms to use expanding leis­ure time.

iQ>t1~1l' SubjectsAlso: role of· the father in ·t1J.0

xamily; Christian solutions toracial problems; Federal aid 1;t)

privnte ,e~uctltioo. the v.ubllil

Conference HostTo Vincentian~

The Attleboro Particular COUll­of St. Vincent de Paul Societywill attend the 8 o'clock MassSunday, at St. Mary's Church,North Attleboro and receiveHoly Communion in a body. Rev.Edward B. Booth, chaplain ofSt. Mary's Conference will becelebrant.

St. Mary's Conference will behost to the Area at the annualbreakfast which will be servedin the· School hall. Every Con­ference in the area will be repre­sented at this annual event. .Atthe head table will be FatherBooth and Rev. Edmond I:..Dickinson, Council Chaplain.

Major Gordon Feid, a native ofNorth Attleboro and a memberof the U. S. Marine Corps willbe guest speaker. A veteran ofmore than 18 years of service, beis presently assigned as officer­in-charge of Marine· recruitingfor Northern New England. Heis a Marine aviator' and holderof the Distinguished Flying.Cross. He has commanded aninfantry battalion and in 1956served as an advisor to the gov­ernment of Korea. He now livesin Canton.

News",.. Honor·Msg·r. Higgins

WASHINGTON (NC) -lVIsgz.George G. Higgins was salutedfor liis "creative contribution toimproved labor-management re­lations throughout the nation"·by Secretary of Labor Arthur J.Goldberg here.

The director of the Social Ac­tion Department, National Cath­olic Welfare Conference, andcolumnist for The Anchor, waspresented with the Arthur D.Riordan Memorial Award of theWashington Newspaper Guild atits annual Front Page ball in theWillard Hotel. Secretary Gold­berg made the presentation. Theaward is named for a deceasedGuild member.

Mr. Goldberg lauded Msgr.Higgins for his efforts on behalfof the migrant farm workers. Hesaid: "Where brutal poverty,eroded family life, illiteracy andcontinuous insults to human dig­nity exist a voice like Mon­signor Higgins' ts·both necessaryand welcome."

Outstanding Character

Mr. Goldberg said PresidentKennedy recognized the "out­standing character" of Msgr.Higgins by naming him a mem­ber of the President's Committeeon Equal Employment Oppor­tun. The cabinet officer saidMsgr. Higgins is "a man whoselife has been dedicated to themaking of a better society, forthose who benefit from it as wellas f~r those without equal priv­ilege.Of his devotion to the causeof social progress, we are all thebeneficiaries."

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SEMINARIANS TELL AL'L: Providing an inside viewof se'minary life by means of slides,' tape recordings 'andeO,nimentary are a' group ~f Diocesan ~eminarians at St.John's, BrightOn. Two· of them are George Coleman (left)and'Michael McPartland. .

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. bert st. Pierre, S.V.D., of Brook­lyn, N., y:., is' the d~rector of a'Catholic information c e n tel'eenter opened here in Quebecby the Diocese of St. Hyacinthe.'

... ~,I. -.

f1i,•I!

~:_'4 TKE mCHoR-D:~';i i~~f;;":~~~?~~7~;t}!;;~,rS9~~~~~~~ from Dwcese P1fif!'?ifbig!1~P~Says: G®@lrget':J;de..s:·!;~~$$'@Y?',·.'_· , ~: {)f:~DitJili ~ife ~it~~~,lide~.9' }Ri$ccqrdi''l,gs'" ~Eru~~[f~~5inEn tm8;'~Ofte1m' 8lfi~ ~i@}nl1l t For many' people,: mystery surrounos' the . life of a' semhiariaJi. Many who pasSl

" I' 8J seminary grounds must: wonder about the groups of cassocked young men' they See. At,'; .. , 'By Rt. Rev:' Msgr.- Joim S. ·Kennedy· ......,. ' times they walk in' groups of two or three; at· other times they walk alone,' in silence.,

George Ade's' fahies and 'essays, pheno~enallypopular In the' afternoon they are seen on tennis courts or baseball diamonds, but for large parts·):i . 50 years ago, are little r~ad~ in, America today~. !,hey are of each day· the' semfnary

humorous writings, and nothing' ages so. quickly"and goes grounds are.deserted. while.-:.,. out of fashion so finally as work' in this categorY.' There the seminarians are in class." are exceptions of course. accustomed to, R=Uden~ss, fr~m What kind of life dQ these

Genuine comic genius defies Menials." young men lead? What do they'time and changes intaste~ The episode ends .with the . do? How long is the seminaryBut it has been generally· policeman's apologizing' to the course of studies and what sub-

.~ assumed that Ade's gifts did not young . men, and .A<ie appends 'jects are included? Why do boys· amoun.t to genius. Perhaps a the, moral: "A.lways select the enter the seminary? What, is• revision of this ~ ,Right Sort of, Parents' before . their daily routine?: estimate is in :. you start in to be'Rough.~ . Eight seminarians from the,or d e r. Some- .' The style,. of cOUrse,.is differ- Fall River Diocese at· St. John's

' 'ent, but the spirit herelS relate'dthing of the , to,that of. Evelyn Waugh, and the Seminar'y, Brighton, decidedsort, at any rate, . ' they would do their part to an-

,actio.I'! could ,be, WI,'th a few al-'. '. is suggested by .. t t' . h t· W ' h h t .swer these questions. To dispel- ". a perusal,of The. era. IOns, w -~ aug ~ a~t.seg' '. 'the,"cIo.u,d.of mystery" surrounding

f . out' more tharr' once in Wrl m· Am e ric a 0 .: Of OXford;' , ".':'" ,." , ;their:life,' they acquired, If col-George Ade, ed- lec~on of c~lored slides depic~

. ited and intro~ ., InIlue'nceciLangqe inti ,their' day to day activities.· ,"""'duced by··Jean ,Ade's\owil s'tOry,i:as'suinmar- l'" Main'E'vents':". 'Shepherd (Put- ,; .ized by Mr; Shepherii; is' one of ' .,~, ' .: Dam. $4')., sudden recognition, and fabulous , ., . Ali. the ma~n:..events in ~,.':", : In a 'perspica- .'succkss followed by eclipse. For '. ~eminarian's career, a~~ shown"':-{r" cious and amusing introdu'ction man-y ~ears . little l was .heard '''of 'frt>lli' his entra~ce' to the day of,'" .. to this gathering of short',pieces him. ,When he died in·:1944; at the his ordination. A ,commentary on

by Ade, Mr. Shepherd traces age of 74, his name me~nt,noth- " the sli~es an~ ~ :!~pe recordi~g.~ . Ade's career 'and attempts to es-, to most people' and many who of muslcalactlvltles at the sem1~

.tablish a· close connection be- had once read 'hun with delight" ' nary have also been prepared..", ~', . tween his humor and his mid- 'undoubtedly said.,·'''George Ade? The tape recording consists of

.. western background. He· also· Wh)r' I thought be waS dead fot selections of ri1Usic heard in a- - points 'out that Ade was princi-, ' 20 years." , ',", IK"minary'::"':'ran'gingf,rom .Gre­..:c,.,.. pally concerned with the "trivial Perhaps 'Mr>Shepiu~rd Claims' goriilit. 'chant. ~ " barb~rship~: ,.. emotion's' : and continual" tiny too much when he says that Ada .quartets.' .c,,'" frustrations" which characterize had permanently,'; shaped' the, ',..... . . ..-", - the run' of'human-~ind,rich and American language, But he did. .'.' ' ,:The enterprlsmg seminar~an~'.".' poor alike. .' have a strong inflllence, on it:' ~.1l1 be ,~ap~y to show! the slIdes'" ,- But Ade's principal' concern"Ari'd' he can be" reaef today with' .,.toge~her. w1th~ommentary and

Is with people who are "totally' . 'considerable 'and SalUtary pleas- ' ?,ut

slcatl bdac~grod';lnd to ~ny ~ohUPt~,!., itt" and of these he" ',', ,,;1'. . ,,1n eres e 1n Iscovermg w a

un mpor an , ure. ... ", ....." '.. :, goes into th making of a i t.'." ·writes in 'a manner at once sar"'· ForPi-iesf:s ' e, pr es"" donic and;'. compassionate. ' " '. "'... ,;, '. -,'." '. ... The young ~e~ .a,~~,..avalla?le at

, '. .. . '" Priests w111 heartil7,welcome no cost durmg any of their va-Peculi,~,rdie8 Stlll~e~~~1 ",F~therFred~ri~.,1i. l\{~r-'Ian';ls' cations, il)cludirig " 'J u n e' 1~,

Alt~ough other humorl~ts of ;',~il.n4boo~ fQr;.~e"N;e~ R!1brl~.. ,.,th~ughSept. 24· this, Summet:"bis' time' are. now, pr~ctIcally ,,, ,(M~licon Pr,~~; ",$!4.:5p)~ ,J~, is a." ..,nd periods, ,of about a .week at,unreadable, or at least; m' lar~e commentary on the .changes in.. :1'hanksgiving,'-, Christmas,next~easure unin~elligible and cer- the Mass and the Divine Office February and next .Easter. '

'. tainly b.!1t weakly funny"Ad~ is which went into, effect Ilt the 'R Ii i .th' t th i f' t t" th ht kmg '" " , ea z ng a e r ree per-,. en er ammg, oug -provo " beginning of this year. .., i d .. , 'd" 'th 't' . h' and often.. brilliant. The new code 'of' Rubrics is a 0 s comCI e WI. , l~es w. en

, , There are details in ~pi~. ,formidable document, and' the many groups are not meetmg;.ssemb~ed here which ar~.date4: buSy parochial clergy.. are dis- .~ey~~ot~ugge~t.th~t~eY'~O~I~ ,The' seminarians and their ton and Harold Wilson, Sacred.

'. But the foibles which Ade dis- couraged if· not dismayed· when e g oma e elr rna erIa· par'1.·shes incl,ude George C.ole": . He'~"" Fall River; Raymond.' . ; '. . " , , . , " available . to qualifiedpeo Ie ~ ..-: 8ected still. characteriZe our kin4~ . confronted. with it. When a~ 'h' '. i' stS' t~man St. Patrick's, :Somerset· Robillard. Our Lady' of Grace,

· . More. than. that, Ade seems to they. to get· the .time to master . ~c as pr e . .01' voca lOll. .'. " '~ve disce,rned long since certaiq. , it? dIrectors fo~ sJ:10~ing at ~ . ~ich,ael Mc~artl~nd, .St. Wil- Westport.Peculiarities of American life and,. F th .M M d ·,th . 'b', own convemence: liam s, Fall River, Wilham N~ Also Thomas LopeS, st. Augug..."'.' , . . , '... a er c anus oes e JO

,..... philosopqy.. which continue ~. "'- for ,them. His book:iB· practical' CO" h' Ie S d ". A' k' C .' R'"• 'tine, Vineyard Haven; David:.:',.;,,:pr,ev.ail,a.nd to have de~lkwith and pastoral. It sifts the'code for~:'(lt 'OI,C,tU ents.· s osta' Ica Mendes; St. Petei' the Apostle.,;:;"""them mpr~, i~cisively ~han dO~anges, aJ.1d,.""pres~mts; them .To Br'e'ak O,'f Rel'a'·t'l·on·s' Wle'th C"uba ,Provincetown; William Blot~

more sophistIcated w.rlters of . ,cl~ar:ly .and.,.s~c¢iJ:lcUy. , ... , man, St. .John the Evangelist,~ present age. " I Here, for r,ea,dy refer~<:e; is a SAN JO~E (NC)--;-:,More than' 'iri6uted' leaflets claiming' that AttlebOro." Success Cult Absurd i ,.1ls~· ,of th~ .. ~ewly: -,,,required 1,000 Catholic stu~~nts h~r~ have' the Catholic demonstrators ~e~, Inquiri~ about the slide pro-

Thus, much is being said todaY·U.sag!,!s. The li~~,is ,~ot; <:J,uttered threatened a strikeuiiless Presi- 'directed by "Batistas" .(followers gram may be address to Fallof the American cult of.success, . tip with p.oi~tIl··9f.;.1;lO ,cpncrete., ,~dent·,·'Mario 'Echartdi' Jimenez of former Cuban President Ful-

'(as"if it were a developmer)t of, imp<:>rt~nce ina.p~ri,sh.,(~.g" the breaks diplomatic h;lations with· gencio Batfsta, whose" regime .,River. Seminarians. st., Clem-· the mid-century period and due ".ru!~s for ~reIlaf!n~,~n.,cir;.do). '~Ahe;.pro"'commuilist·Cuban gov- 'was overthrown by' the Castro '. ent's Hall, 197 Foster Street,

tG -the in~nSe urbanization! a.nd", , . ,impressiV~•.Iilfo~tiy~ ....ernment of Premier Fidel Castr? 'Revolution).' Brighton 35, Masa.mechanization of an era of:blg- In addition there is an ex-' ..The' students'-from Cathohcness. But Ade W8ll aware of its planation of 'the reason 'for the and g0v.e~n1l}ent'h~ghschools andexistence, exactions, and fu~ility. changes. They are designed to' univ~rsltl~s-paraded before themore than 50 years ago, and, as facilitate worship and ,'eSpecial- Pre~ldentlal H.ouse and werethis volume proves, showed it up .Ii p'opular participation, in order pra1sed by P~esldent E~handi for

• l!IB absurd. ,to promote· an increase in holi- their: orderly conduct .m .face ofIn pursuit of success presently, ness. ~arassment py Castro1St groups.

Americans take pep or tranquil- The. contents comprise three Presiden~ Echandi p~o~ised tolZing pills different from those divisions: one' dealing with the cons';'lt With. the MlDlStry ofused by their 'forebears, but the liturgical year, t!,le second with Fo~e~gn Affairs o~ the students'latter had their own version of .the Divine Office; the third with petition. Meanwhile,. he urgedthese magic devices. the Sacrifice of the Mass. The them to return to theIr classes.

And so it is with' much el~; first includes a calendar for the Seek 'Supportrea.ding Ade, ~e do not merely entire year, with I the title and Earlier a' pro-Castro group.smile at AmerIcans of a suppos- rank 'of each day plainly stated. "Friends of the Cuban. Revoltt­e~ly si~pler age, b~t rec?gnize, The others cover their subjects tion," had sought to gather sup.With dismay, that hiS strictures concisely and precisely. porters in front of the Cubaaapply very neatly to ourselves. This useful book is authorita- Embassy "to defend it from the

Kinship With Waugh tive and easy to consult. While aggressors.". Again, there is a kinship be- it puts before t~e priest the facts Another group, the Socialist _.tween Ade and comic masters of that he seeks, it also constant17 University C01l}mittee, had die-the present. One of his fables, impresses on him the character • . ------oifor example;' begins: ·"One -Night . and aim· of· t~ Liturgy. He canthree Well-Bred Young Men, hardly consult it about any smallwho were entertained at the Best point without being impressedHouses wherever they went, as_ well as ·infonned.

· started out to Wreck a Collegetown." _ . Seminary in Denvet"

As they went about their me~ Gets Ac:clI'edotationry business, they wer~ ob$erved . 'DENVER"(NC)-St. Thomas'by a policeman. ,

i., . "He c6'uld not see them Dis- Seminary here has been accreQ-\ tinctly, and he made the Mistake .ited by the North 'Centr~l AssO-" of assuming that they were ciation of CQlleges and ,second-) Drunken 'Ruffians from the Iron ary Schools. ,

Foundry.' So he spoke harshly,. 'Father Jolin,J.:'i:?anagher, C.M..and told .. them to leave off. re'ctor of the s~miriary, said the

, breaking 'the Man's Fence.. His accreditation recognizes the ade­Tone and Manner irritated the 'quecy of the college" coursesUniversity Men, who were not" given at the seminary;,

St. Thomas' :was founded herein 1906 and is staffed by the Vin- .centians. The seminary, which

.educates students for the priest­hood in the ArchCliocese' 'of Den­ver; has 240 students enrolled.It awards the bachelo.r of arwdegree to gradua~

r~,!

-

•1.

FAll RIVER

SALES

MONAGHANACCEPTANCE

CORP.

142 SIECOND STREET

OSb@l1'O'lE! 5-7856

Thomas F. Monaghan Jr.Treasurer

ST. PATRICK'S,WAREHAM

Bishop Gerrard will admi..ister confirmation to 225 candioodates this Sunday night at 7:3&.

The Rev. Joseph P. LyoOllscholarship fund' will benefl'lJfrom a smorgasbord sponsoret!by St. Patrick Circle. The scholl­arship enables a girl from ,thtlparish to attel)d a Catholic co.....lege. Applications are beingaccepted by Rev. John A.Chippendale, pastor.

ST. PETER'·S,DIGHTON

The Women's Guild will hold nwhist party with .the theme ;"AShower of Prizes" at 8 Wedneg;..day night, April 19 at DightorJElementary School. Member~ ofthe guild executive committeewill be general chairmen..

llHf ANCHOR-Thurs., April 13, 1961

OUR LADY OF FATIMA,,SWANSEA

A Spring dance open io thepublic and co-sponsored by theHoly Name .Society apd ~ ~

Women's Guild will be held from8to 12 t!tis Saturday nighf atKC Hall, Swansea. Refreshl)'le~will be available and parkiBIJand checking will be free. V.uable prizes will be award~

according to chairmen Leonarc1O'Neill and Hugh Maguire, r~resenting the Holy Name Socie~

and Miss Ruth Mercer and M!!&Robert Tickle, for the WomeotlJGuild. '

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SS. PETER AND PAUL,FALL RIVER

The Women's Club will meetat 8:45 in the church hall this·Sunday morning in" order ' to,march in a body to 9 o'clock.Mass, which will be followed bya Communion breakfast in thelower hall. Rev. John P. Driscoll,.curate at SS. Peter and Paul~ will­speak.

,Honored guests will be Msgr.John J. Kelly, pastor, and Rev.'William F. O'Connell and HenryMacomber. Members not able toattend the breakfast are urgedto join the club at Mass.

The Women's Club will holdinstallation of new officers at abanquet Wednesday, May 17.

ST. HYACINTH,NEW BEDFORD

Seventh and eighth gradew:eof the parish school wi! sporisora 'Spring bazaar at 7 tonight.tomorrow and Saturday ip t~

parish hall at the corner of Rivelland County Streets. A pen,.sale at 8 Saturday night will~ bea highlight of the affair. All pro-­ceeds will benefit the church.

Students assisting with pre~ y

arations 'include Raymond HottQ,president; aided by Robert Cle...mont, Andre and Roland Bras-­sard and Marcel Dumas. PenDf'sale chairman is Gerard Hottq

. prizes, Raymond Monty; refresh­ments, Mrs.' Evelyn Chartieq

The Women's Guild will hold tickets, Romeo AUbut; decor..its annual Communion break- tions, Donald Lafleur.

. fast Sunday, April 16 at the' Penny sale' secretaries· ~Catholic Community Center: It ~ Lucille Benjamin and Germainewill follow 9 o'clock Mass at the Lapointe. Door prizes wijI beCathedral. awarded nightly and the PUD8e

Mrs. James W. Coyne heads a is invited to attend.. committee which will presen't aslate for election at next month'smeeting.

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ST. ANN'S,RAYNHAM

First president of the newly­formed Women's Guild is Mrs.·Almon Turner. She will be aidedby Mrs. Theodore Januse, vice'president; Mrs. John Welch,treasurer; Mrs. Richard White,secretary. Next regular meetingwill be Wednesday, May 3.

ST. ANT~ONY OF, DESERT,FALL RIVER

Edward Kennedy, brother 01.'the President, will speak at agolden. jubilee banquet to beheld by the parish, Sunday, May28 at Venus de Milo restaurant.A new pl;\rish center will be ded- .icated on the same day.

STAR PUPIL: In a class by himself when acting onTV, ll-year-old Jon Provost is just one of the boys in hisfifth grade class at Beverly Hills Catholic School. SisterHonora chats with the young actor; who is attending a realschool for only the second time in his. life. NC Pho.to.

ST. JOSEPH, BLESSED SACRAMENT, 'TAUNTON FALL RIVER

The Holy Name Society will The Women's Guild will holdpresent a Spring musicale at 2:30 a rummage sale from 9 to 5 todaythis Sunday afternoon for chi!- 'at 308 East Main Street. Mrs.'dren and on Monday and Tues-· Constance Hamel and Mrs. Ireneday nights, April 17 and 18, for, St. Amand are chairmen.adults. Parish grammar schoolstudents will be featured. ST..MARY'S,

Charles Leonard will produce FALL RIVERand direct, with Ann Gothamat the piano,' assisted by IreneFrazier. Rene Cormier and or­chestra will complete the musicalensemble.

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will haveMrs. Thomas F. Burke as presi­dent for the coming year, as­sisted by Mrs. Raymond Conboy,vice president; Mrs. RichardWordell, secretary; Mrs. FrankKingsley, treasurer. All will beinstalled at a banquet to be heldat 6:30 Tuesday night, May 2 inthe parish hall.

ST. ROCH,FALL RIVER

The Council of Ca thoIic Womenwill hold a membership tea Sun­day afternoon, April 23, precededat 1:45 by Benediction.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RllVlE1R.

The PTA and Alumni Associ­ation will hold a mystery rideSaturday, May 20 and a lawnparty Saturday, June 24. JosephAmaral heads an arrangementscommittee for the ride and Mrs.Alice Gromada for the lawnparty. She will meet with hergroup at 7:30 tonight in theschool hall.

Fourth grade mothers will bein charge of the unit's next reg­ular meeting, Wednesday, May3.

ST. JAMES,NEW BEDFORD

Msgr. Noon Circle will hold arummage sale today and tomor­row at 1028 South Water Street,with Mrs. Walter McCormack aschairman.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER

The Women's' Guild will 'holda' silv~r tea in the parish hall thisSunday. Mrs. Octavia Hilario ischairman, aided by a large com­mittee.

Other activities will include astrawberry festival at 7:30 Wed­nesday night, May 3, also in the'parish hall and a Communionbreakfast Sunday, May 14 to fol­low 7:30 Mass: Senator Mary L.Fonseca will be breakfastspeaker.

ST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will holda cake sale from 1 to 4 this Sa't­urday afternoon at the schoolhall. Contributions may be leftat the hall at 11 Saturday morn­ing.

The Men's Club will have aspresident for the coming seasonBernard Tomlinson, assisted byJohn T. Smith, vice president;John Fitzgerald, secretary andJoseph Souza, treasurer. A Com­munion . breakfast and installa­tion of officers are planned forFather's Day, Sunday, June 18.Raymond Martin and JosephKennedy are co-chairmen.

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,NEW BEDFORD

The Women's Club will hold. a Communion breakfast on

Mother's Day and a day of recol­lection is planned at the conventof the Sisters of St. Dorothy inBristol in June.· '

SACRED HEART,NORTH ATTLEBORO

The CYO will hold. a dancefrom 7:30 to 11 Monday night,April 17 in the parish hall. Otherparish CYO's and all teen-agersare invited to attend. Contests,prizes and a radio station discjockey will be featured. Ticketswill be available at the door.Adult advisors to the CYO willbe chaperon6.

ST. LOUIS,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild, will haveas new officers Mrs. RaymondMorin, president; Mi~ Al(nesMurphy, vice president; Mr~.

Evelyn Rowe, secretary; Mrs.Fred O'Neil, treasurer.

The unit will hold a Commun­ion breakfast Sunday, May 21,with Mrs. Louise Shorrock andMiss Mayre Clark as co-chmair­men.

ST. JOHN'S,ATTLEBORO

The Mothers' Club and theChristian Family Movement willco-sponsor a buffet and dancefrom 9-12 this Saturday nightin the Hodges Street auditorium.Lucille Greenan's all-girl or­chestra will play and the buffetwill be served starting at 10.Donations for prizes may bemade at the rectory. Mrs. Har­old Thompson is general chair­man of the· event.

ST. PIUS X,SOUTH Y;ARMOUTH

The Women's Guild will holdits annual pas~ presidents' 'din­ner Wednesday, April 26 atRiverway Lobster House.

IMMACULATE CONQEPTION'GUILD, BREWSTER

The guild will hold, a Com­munion breakfast Sunday, April23 and a rummage sale at a dateto be announced.

GUILD OF THE VISITATIONy

EASTHAMMembers will hold a business

meeting Tuesday, April 18 at the,home of Mr. Fred LaPiana Jr.,president. Social activities willbe held Thursday, April 20 atthe home of Mrs. Edward Banzand Friday, May 5 at the homeof Mrs. Leonard V. Worth.

HOLY ROSARY,FALL RIVER

Mrs. Ernest D'Ambrosio willbe president of the Women'sGuild for the coming season,aided by Mrs. Raymond' Pari,se,vice president; Miss Elva Ber­toncini, secretary; Mrs. JohnSarti, treasurer.

The unit's annual Communionbreakfast will be held Sunday,May 21 and a ham and beansupper is scheduled for June.

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION',FALL RIVER '

The Women's Guild will holda lawn party and "Mother Goose OUR LADY OF GRACE, HOLYNAl'IE,Bazaar" Friday and Saturday, NORTH WESTP~RT NEW BEDFORDJune 23 and 24. Also in June The Women's Guild will hold

. The Women's Guild will holdwill be the annual banquet, its annual Communion breakfast

'. a Spring dance at 8 this Saturdayslated for the 7th at White's Res- S.unday, May 7 at White's res-

M night in the parish hall. Prizestaurant.' " taurant, following 8:15 ass. and refreshments will be fea-

Other forthcoming activities Mrs. Phyllis Brown' and Mrs. tured. Mrs. Edward F. Molleoinclude a .cake sale this Sunday, Martha Ratcliffe, co-chairmen, and Mrs. Stephen Ledwell areand a day of recollection Sunday, announce that· Fred, Sullivan, co-chairmen.May 7. M.D., of Fall Rilver, witl be·

gl\est speaker. .First communicants will be­

guild guests at a breakfast Sun­day, May 14. Mrs: Beatrice Ber­ube will be in charge of arrange­ments.

Unanimously elected for thecoming year were Mrs. LouisePerron, president; Mrs. RoseBorden, vice president; Mrs.Yvette Ciarlone, secretary; Mrs.Phyllis Brown, treasurer. Theywill be installed at June cere­IJ:lonies., Other forthcoming guild activ­ities will include a public Maybasket whist Wednesday, May 3,with Mrs. Edna' Clement aschairman and a regular meetingTuesday, May 2, at which Mrs.Elsie Laurendeau will head therefreshment committee.

SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER

Miss Madeline McDermoit willhead the Women's Guild for thecoming year, aided by Mrs. JohnPatota, vice president; Mrs. Ken­neth Leger, treasurer; Mrs.Robert Nedderman, secretary.The guild will hold a banquetSunday, June 4.

ST. MICHAEL'S,FALL RIVER ,

Mrs. Olive Rego heads a largecommittee which will serve

_ malacadas at a penny sale andbazaar to be held tomorrow andnext Friday at St. Michael'sSchool.

ST. MARY"S,SEEKONK

The pal'ish will present abridge and fashion snow at 8tomorrow night in the churchhall. Mrs. Noela Vaslet will.bechairman.

_ 1,6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese Of Fan River~'ft"ms..Aprit 13, 1961

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WHAT EVERYBODY, ,SHOULD KNOW·

. Nominate Fivefor .CatholicPres! Honor

NEW YORK (NO)Five Catholic writers andeditors have been nominatedfor the 1960 Catholic PressAssociation award.

The third annual honor wiltbe presented on May 18 at thetraditional banquet .of the 51stannual Catholic Press Associa­tion convention in Vancouver,B. C. The convention will runfrom May 16 to 19.

Nominated for the.award were:Floyd Anderson, managing ed­itor of the Advocate, newspaperof the Newark, N. J., archdioceseand Paterson, N. J., diocese;Father Thurston N. Davis, S.J..editor;. in - chief of America,weekly magazine; Robert C.Hoyt, edit9r of the Catholic Re­porter, newspaper of the KansasCity-St. Joseph, Mo., diocese;Father John Courtney Murray,S.J., of Woodstock (Md.) College,author of the book "We HoldThese Truths;" and Father AlbertJ. Nevins, M.M., editor of theMaryknoll magazine and CPApresident.

In view of his nomination, Mr.Anderson withdrew as chairmanof the special award committeeand asked Father Hugh Morley,O.F.M. Cap., editor and businessmanager of View magazine, toserve as.temporary chairman.Father Morley is also chairman.of .the CPA .Journalism AwardsCommittee for the convention.

Mr. 'Anderson announced thatJames A. Doyle, CPA executivesecretary, also ,has been nom­.inatedforthe award..Mr. ,Doyle'!strongly 'urged that his name .be eliminated" on the principle"'that no ,employee of 'the asso­'ciationshould compete for ;anassociation award." Mr. Ander­son said it was decided to agreeto Mr: Doyle's request and hisname was withdrawn.

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MISSIONER RETURNS: Returning to the island ·ofOkinawa after four years of study in the U.S., Sister MaryCeleste takes ,up where she left off.in 1957, taking care ofmany of the island's children.' She is 'a member of .theDaughters of 'Mary, Health of theSj6k. NCPhoto.

So Far. Castro ,Keeps !HandsOff:But Catholic Schools 'Worry .

-MIAMI (NC>-,Fidel Castro's olic Church 'inCuba and theRed-tinged Cuban regime, ac- U. S. monopolizes all radio andcording to, recent arrivals here TV programs. Aid 'givenrefu­from the island, has not yet in- gees ,by Catholic and other or­tervened directly 'in operations. ganizations in the Miami areaof Catholic and other private. ,is characterized as ;assistance toschools, but- counter-revolutionary ,activities.

Taxes imposed on .schools now Disturbances .staffed by Cuban Sisters, who. .replaced U. S. missioners,' have . Ch~lst~rbanc~SdUrmgCathollcbeen multiplied four times. rcservlces now have be-

. '. come' commonplaceA team of government inspec- . .

tors under Castro direction re-. .Co~unist ,p.ublications by. cently visited each Catholic' Karl Marx 'and Nikolai Lenin

school in the Havana area, ques-, ,ate available at 10 cents pertioning everY faculty member' 'copy from government printingand' employe about salaries,. offices: And ·Red..,inspired ;groupsworking bO!1rs, abseDteeism,en- in the Province of ·Pina del ;Rio'Mllrnents and ,other matters. .gather .nightlyoutside rectorIes

When Havana Schools cloSe' and ,'convents ,chanting "SendApril 15 fOr the summer, stu- them to the firing sQuad."

, dents 12 years ,and ,older wiUbe .required to ,aSSist governmentteachers in an indoctrinationprogram for "uneducated peo-,pies" inthein'terior.

Boys are employed as "inform­ers" by the regime throughout I

.'Havana, it is charged. : e.Propaganda, 'against the Cath-

Name Bishop Dwyer'To Association Board

NEW JORK (NC) - BishopRobert J. Dwyer of Reno, Nev.,whose column tis a weekly feat- .ure of The Anchor, has beenelected to the board·of directorsoithe Foreign Policy Association-World Affain .Center it wasannounced here by John .W.·Nason, association president.

The board recently was ,en-,Jarged to assure widergeograph~ical and professional representa­tion, Mr. Nason .said. Other ad­ditions to the board have been'.Henry Cabot 'Lodge,former U.S.,Senator 'and Ambassador to .theUnited Nations; Michael V.Forrestal,.lawyer and' son' of thelate Secretary of Defense James·V. Forrestel, and Morris B.Abram, Atlanta~· Ga.,. lawyernow with tbePeaeeCorps.

The .association made public astatement by Bishop Dwyerwhich said:

"One of tbeparamount needsof the American public is foraccurate anddetailed'mforma­tion on the whole area of foreignaffairs. Only on the basis ,ofI.suchknowledge can we make soundjudgments and affer intelligentcriticisms. The .Foreign PolicyAssociation is making,a·conscien-.!ious and highly successful ef­fort to make such information:available without bias.or preju-dice." .

of Government agencies take theinitiative in developing a systemof labor relations under wHichunions of Government-employeeswould not only be permitted, ,butwould be encouraged to speakfor and to represent their con­stituents more effectively.

But what about the right ofGovernment employees to strike'?The theoretical answer to thisquestion is relatively easy, butthe practical answer is anothermatter altogether.

Government employee unionsought to surrender the right tostrike voluntarily. On the other

'. hand, if they do vountarily adopta no-strike pledge, it then be­comes the duty of their publicemployers to provide ,an ade­quate alternative or substitutefor the weaPon of the strike.

Methods' will have to be de­veloped. by which Governmentworkers can effectively appeal.their economic grievances with­out ,the necessity of resorting . to·the strike. In other: words, if thepu;blk .has some rights; it alsobas some duties.

And if Government workersbave some. duties tallie· public"they alsobave some rights. It isto be hoped that President Ken-,nedy's proposed executive orderwjU en~blethem to implementthese rights . more effectivelythan they have been able to do.in the past. . .

Vienna OrganizationSaves Unhorn 'Babies'

VIENNA (NC) - Vienna'sCommunity tot' the Protectionof the :tJnbornreports that dur­ing 1960 it was able to save ;theIivesoi 23!hmborn babies whosemothers had ,planned abortions.

This brings to almost 1,500 ,theLaity' GroupS' Double total of abortions Preven:ted~

5the community ,since its fOWlda-'

up}ort of Missions tion.Thatdoes not indude ,casesLOS ANGELES (NC)-Mem- w~re the ,community~s propa­

be!:soItbe laity iil the: Los ganda ef!ortmayhave,been In- .4ngel'esarchdioces~ increasingly strumental in persuading womenare aCC'e'P'tfng Ureirrespon'S"ibHity not to destroy :thecbildren theytor year-round support of over- were carry'iD,g.I8a& mrssionS( . , One·-th.i.rd of the women wbo,

Theevideneeis in the Mission 'bavecome to the organIzafionforCkcles CYf. thesrch:diocese. These help were unmarried. The Com­ere groups of 1IJ' to Z(J! persons munit.y for the Protection' of ,thewho adopt· 3 s~ific' mission Unborn finds jobs for snch*oad.. ,. women, and godparents or £Ds-

In tbe'past, three years ,the terparents far their babies. ThetUmlber of Mission Circles here community is often able to helphas doubled.,Th~y now number married women settle differ­1;50. Their financial aid has more ences wfth fheirhusbands and~n d'oubIed. :Qmilies.

By Msgr. George G. Ifliggfus ,;Director, NCWC SociaJ A\etioD Department

The Washington Star reported recently, under the_ by-line of Joseph Young, a competent staff writer who

oovers the Civil Service beat full time, that Pres~dent· Kenpedy is preparing to issue an executive order givingFederal and Postal employeeunions official bargaining

~ rights with Government de­partments and agencies.Such an order is not expected tobe issued imniediately, but, ac­(/lording to Mr.Young, Admin­istration insld'­~s say the~h a n c e s aregood that it willbe Issued beforetoomanymonthselapse.

\

During t¥alectioncampaign Pres­ident Kennedy<il-'a m e out in

--:;". favor of legislation which wouldzequire departments and agen­ees of the Federal Goverlllllent60 deal officially with, employeeP9ups 'on peJ:sonnel policy,grievam:es, and other' matters.A-t the present .. time, however,there seems to be a feelingwithin the AcImimstratiol1 thatsuch a goal cam best be achieved,tar means of an executive order.

Order WWI 'Teeth'Leaders of Federal and Postal

emplO'Yee uniOllS have advocatedlegislation 01'1 thissubfeet formany years., Mr. Young reports,.bowever, that if' a strong execu,.&We order is issued by thePres­ldent and if there' is reason tobelieve that such an order willlaave enough "teeth" in it to'as­lUre complIance, employee lead--.s win welcome it. .

Such a diI:ective from the Ex­eeuti've Department of' the' Gov­..nment is long overdue. Ap­proximately 50 years ago the ~

· Congre'Ss' ,CJf the United Statesenacted a law (the Lloyd-LaFol­lette .Aet)l .permitting .Govern'-,m.ent emp~oyees to join ani~riS

tJI. their own choosing.Since tha ttime a number of

~ions ha.ve been formed ,in thegovernment service. But wbile,lIl~ny agencies deal with theseunioTl's: unofficially, they haveBever been formally recognized.blV'the Executive Department. .

NamnJ IUP*The Government has a duty

to recognrze tile tight ·of its ownemployees to- organize, not emly.. theory but in practice. The,eight to- ol'ganize is 81 naturalaght of every human being,..Itdoes not depend. upon the natureof the work in which a person isengaged.

Clearl'y aside from the ques­tion of. rights, however, ;theveri<mS' agendesof the Federal$-overnment have a responsibil­Ity to set an example for privatef'tdU,strr, in the field of labor:relations. I

I It wOl~dd probably be fiJir to'~ thatop 'to the preS'enttime:they have failed to carry out

· ibis responsibilIty. Private in­~ustry, in many respects. hasbeen more inteIIigent and moreenlighten:edin its personnelpolicies.

The very least that the. Fed­eral Gove:ntmenfcan do to makeup for lost time Is to encourageits employees to exer¢ise theirright to organize, and to insistthat responsible admmtstrators

..

17

New Bedford

A DeJicious'Treat

'Calling AlleyO's

Made lUte cC'hipaASk forll1tem toclay

JImmJ'(}li"tIl.nt~iilOl t~e !Future

May 28, 1961 ,- DiocesanCYO Convention.

First week of June-Open­ingof baseball season.Mid~July - Diocesan cro

Golf Tournament.

Area .News'l'hil'lcolumn will be resen--e6

in the future fm news 'from eecbArea CYO Office.

There will also appear t'lmonthly article on a CYO peP­

sonality. The Diocesan Officewwill be presented" and then tooindividual Area Officers in toocoming months.

'll'a=~on N<awsIn tbe CYO Basketball Leagu<:1p

Immaculate Conception w onboth halves. 'In the ParochiltJ.School division, Sacred Headtook the honors. Both teams lastto the Fall River Champions. &Anthony of Padua beat ImmaCQalate COnception, and Sac~

Heart lost to St. Louis, DiocemroJunior champions.

The weekly dance, suspende4during Lent, was resumed 00Friday, April '7th.

On Monday, April 10th, !:beElias TrophY. donated by theCYO to the winner of the Taun­ton-Coyle series,' was presentedto Taunton High at their annulll'bapquet. Three legsarereQuireil-,to 'retire the trophy. This w3Ilthe first for'l'annton High; Co)"lahad won the previous' two selPsons.

On'iruesday., ,April 25th, _Connors will present the ~'phies to the winhers of 't1II8 i

annual bowling tOUl"Damentat .. 'banquet to be held I1tRoselandBallroom. Winners of the tr0­phies areas f'Ollows: Senior m­vision, Robert Texeira a rHIFraneis 'Carreiro; lunior Divi­sion, Manuel lWgers ,and ~mond Rogers'; Bantam DivisiORpRobert Menard 'and M ~ r4tEpstein.

Rev. James Greene is the newCYO Direc1tl:r :l1tSt.Joseph~Robert Rodier was NOently ..stalled :illS President, with Linda~9pes ~ Vic~ President.

Immaculate Conception held Ql'

debate on the 'topic of "Going'Steady." They~are also plannliliJ'an outing at Cathedral Camp. ','

During ,the month ,of Mal'C1l:"Communion Breakfasts weN'heid at Immacalate ,Conceptios8JlQ. ,at, St. Jos~1s.

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St. Dominic's SetsSecond Social

St. Dominic's CYO in Swanseawm hold, its second dance of theseason at the K of C liaUon Mil­ford Road, Swansea, on Satur­day, Maya, from 8 until 11:30P.1\(.

A Communion Breakfast wi-Ilbe held for CYO members Oft

Sunday, May 28. 'The membet'8will receive Communion ill 8body at the '9 o'c.1Dck Mass andthen have breakfast at Dunrov·iftFarm RestaUl'8Dt. An Alumni 3I'einvited. '

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Diocese

those tltings that the averageboy and girl is expected to do.They are learning how to expressthemselves, they aile speakiFlgout, they are grow'j.ng up. TheCYO is trying to encourage them,guide them, and appreciate them.

Now the CYO Director wouldask this question. What are Youdoing for them?

~@~I R.iver Arr~aeyO Caddy Celll'Se

Mr. James Lenaghan, Directorof the Fall River Area CYOCaddy Course, has annowlcedthat a course will be concludednext Thursday with a Parents'Night at the Amlwan StreetCYO. All caddies who haveparticipated in the instructionalcourse are now ready to put intopractice the theory which theyhave learned by actual caddyingat Crestwood Country Club inRehoboth.

A parent of each caddy is re-'quested to attend this meetingin order to be advised about theprinciples under which theCYO has conducted this school;, The purpose, nature, and re­

sponsibility of the caddy, theparent, and the CYO will bediscussed by Mr. Lenaghan, bythe Caddy Master at Crestwood,by the CYO Director, Fr.Sulli­van, and by the GoM Professionalat Crestwood.

'This meeting will take placeat seven o'clock p.m.,Thursdayevening, .April 13th, at C.Y.O.Hall, Anawan Street.

Cultural Fhsifar CYOMiss Rochelle Massou4, the

CulturalChainnan ,of the FallRiver Area CYO has arranged 11

, CYO Day for the CYO'ers of thearea at the Fall River HistoricalSociety, with the cooperation' ofthe Curator of the Society.

The date for the .specia! eul­turalprogram will be Sunday,May 7, 1961. ibetweenthe hoursof two and five. All CYO'ers andother interested people are m­vited toatteud.

The

FATHER. SULLIVAN

AROUND TIiECORNER

Throughout

Baseball and Softball

With the sound of a bounciflgbasketball soon to give way tothe umpire's command of "Playball", athletic directors of CYOsports programs tum the i rthoughts to the great Americanpastime ....; baseball - and itscoWlterpart, softball.

As this, article is being written,the CYO Easter Tournament forparish basketball die-hards isstill going on, so we can't con­gratulate the winners of thattournament, but we can and doextend our congratulations tothe champions of the diocese for .the' Intermediate and JuniorDivisions. Once again the excel­lence of Our Lady of Assumptionshowed on the basketbaU courtas they took on all comers andran through league and champ­io~ip games undefeated. The,Httl~ mites from Fall River's St.Louis' junior team took' a well-'balanced team to Taunton andNew Bedford to take the meas-,ure of these city champions andcollie' out with the junior divi­sion crown. However, we do ex-'tend to all the champs and near­champs of 1961 our m;artiest con­gratulations for outstanding vie­tortes for their display of sports­manship, .and for their dedica­tion to their team and their par­ieIL

grams.What are they .doing? - All

must be submitted -to the CYOOffice on Anawan Street by'May1st. Prizes will be: First prize..w.$25; Second prize - $15; andThird priz~10. Essays will bejudged on originality, thought,content, neatness, spelling, andcomposition. The judge's deci­sion will be final.

Trophy to Be Award~

The new diocesan CYO Bask­etball Trophy, the "Bishop Cas­sidy Memorial Trophy," will bepresented to the diocesan CYOchampions at the annualCYOConvention to be held on May2eth in Fall River.

Diocesan TeamSullivan in Girls'Extemporan­eous SPf'!aking,' Maureen Hayes

. in Oratorical Interpretation and .Susan Sweeney in Prose Reading.

Perras, Healy, Finnel, Kruger-and .Sullivan were recipients ofmedals in the same categories inHoly Family garnered 12 medals.laSt years tournament whendent of the Science Club.

CYO ACTIVITIES

YOUR CYO DIRECTOR SPEAKSREV. WALTER A. SULLIVAN

Dominate

DIOCESAN eyO NEWS

while, Thomas Azar and MarilynMulcairns won three without awss. ,

Holy Family also' placed twoentries in Original Oratory whenThomas Walker,. and AnneMorrissey finished, one-two in',a 'field of eight. Robert, Pecciniwas the other member of theHoly Family team to qualifywhen he placed second in Boys'Extemporaneous Speaking. .

Two other' members of thesquad come from MQnsignorCoyle High School, Taunton, andthe Academy of the SacredHearts; Fall River. George Sim­mons of Coyle placed first in theBoys' Extemporaneous Speakingand Richard Hamel, also ofCoyle, placed first in OratoricalDeclamation.

Miss WaIda Lee. LYons ofSacred Hearts qualified ff)r Ora­torical Declamation by :finishingsecond.

state ~n~Holy Family High also scored

heavily in the Fourth Massachu­setts Secondary School SpeechLeague Debate Tournament andSpeech Festival, held last Satur­day at Watertown High School.

Holy Family students produced15 medal winners, six of whomreceived the state's highestaward, the gold medal. Thosewinning gold medals includedSusan Aguiar and Richard Perrasin Student Congress. Brian Healyin Boys' Extemporaneous Speak­ing, Margo Finnell in Girls' Ex­temporaneous Speaking, AnneMorrissey in Oratoril;al Inter­pretation and Jane Humphrey inHumorous Prose. '

,Silver medals were awarded toEdward Parr and Patricia Kru.:ger in Group Discussion, ThomasAzar and Marilyn Mulcairns inthe Student Congress. RobertPeccini in Boys' Extemporan­eous Speaking, David Sheehanin Radio Broadcasting, Martha

Essay ContestAt a formal meeting of the

Diocesan CYO officers anddirectors an essay contest wasproposed as another means ofcoordinating and understandingthe function of parish, area, anddiocesan CYO units in the Co~n­

ell- program. The title for theessay is "The CYO in My Par­ish." The essay is to be of fhTehundred words or less. The con­test is open to, CYO'ers through­out, the Diocese. Since the win­ners of the contest are to be an­nounced, at the Diocesan CYOConvention, the deadline for en­tries will be ~y 1, 1961. Entries

What is happening to our boysand girls? Where are they going?What are they doing? Thesequestions are' asked daily byscores of people. Who can an­swer them? The' Catholic YouthOrganization is willing to an­swer these questions. The CYO isour boys and girls. They speakfor themselves.

What is happening to theYouth?-They are growing ingrace and wisdom before Godand man. They are being en­couraged to participate in awholesome and and rewardingprogram of social, cultural, rec­reational and spiritual activity,both in the parish and in thelocal CYO areas, which unitesthem in an apostolate of youthfor youth. They are developinga trust in one ,another and faithin themselves.

'Where are they going?-Theyare going to those places thatattract their attention and imag­ination, and that challenge theirindependence and individ'iJality.The CYO program tries to dothis through its recreational,social, cultural and. spiritual pro-

Holy Family Debc:itersHoly Family High School, New

Bedford, dominates the FallRiver Diocese all-star speechteam that will enter the GrandTournament 01. the NationalCatholic Forensic League atBaltimore May 11 through May13.

The tournament is conductedfor Catholic schools throughoutthe country and teams are en­tered on a Diocesan level. Morethan 600 students are expected toparticipate in this year's event.

The Diocese of Fall River willenter two two-man debate teamsand two contestants in each offour speech categories: Boys'Extemporaneous Speaking, Girls'Extemporaneous Speaking, Ori­ginal Oratory and OratoricalDeclamation.

Debaters must alternately de­bate the affirmative and nega­tive sides of the proposition,"Resolved: That the UnitedNations should be significantl)rstrengthened."

Besides the usual eight minuteconstructive speech and the fourminute rebuttal for each speak­er, the tournament will featurea three minute cross-examina­tion for each speaker.

Preliminary TestEntries from the Diocese were

determined Sunday by a pre­liminary tournament held atMount Saint Mary Academy, FallRiver. Thirty-one students in allwere in competition in all cate­gories except Girls' Extemporan­eous Speaking. A special quali­fying round will be held thisweek in that category amongMargo Finnell and Martha Sulli­van of Holy Family and AnnTurner of the Academy of theSacred Hearts, Fall River.

Both debate entries were takenby the two Holy Family debateteams, both of which were unde­feated in the tournament. SusanAguiar and Richard Perrasposted l\ £our win-no loss record,

Officers CommunionThe officers and parish chair­

men of each CYO Parish Unitare invited to attend the FirstAnnual Communion Mass andBreakfast on April thirtieth.They will attend the eighto'clock Mass at St. Mary's· Cath­edral, and breakfast will followat White's Restaurant at 9:45 a.m.

Area Bowling.Fall River

Five CYO Bowling Leagueswill compete in. the First Bowl­ing Tournament for CYO'ers.Holy Rosary, Immaculate Con­ception, St. Mary, St. Jean theBaptist, St. Patrick will partici­pate in this Tournament, to beheld at Walko Alleys on April23rd.

Team W LImmaculate Conception 15 0St. Roch 10 4Holy Rosary 8 7St. Jean the Baptist 7 7Our Lady of Health 5 10Our Lady of Grace 0 15

City ChampionshipTeam W I..·St. Anthony of Padua 5 0St. Mary' 4 1St. Louis 0 2Holy Cross 0 2

•Division Champs in Play-off ofone game.

Intelmed'iateHoop Finals •Fall River

Division A

Team W L$St. Mary 10 2St. Anthony of Padua ro 2Santo Christo 7 5Sacred Heart 6 8SS. Peter and Paul 4 8St. Michael 4 8St. Joseph 1 N.

Division BTeam W L·St. Louis 13 0Holy Cross 10 3St. Dominic 8 5St. Anthony of Desert 7 aEspirito Santo a 6Our Lady of Angels 5 8St. Elizabeth 4 9St. Patrick 4 9Holy Name 3 9

Blessed Sacrament 3 10Divlsion'C

, ,

:Cathor~' C~nsu's"

Going High,erh~ CanQda

OTTAWA (NC)....,. Some25;000 census. takers. nextSummer will .ask i an esti­mated 18,250,000 Canadians:"What is your religion?"

While official figures mustawait completion of the census,it is estimated that some 8,212,­500 or about 45 per cent ofCanada's total population willreply: "Roman Catholic."

This figure does not includeUkrainian Catholics, who arelisted separately. They are ex­pected to total more than 250,000or approximately 1.4 per cent ofthe whole population.

The Roman Catholic popula­tion recorded in the 1951 censuswas 6,069,496-43.25 per cent ofthe total population of 14,009,429.Ukrainian Catholics totaled 190,­831 or 1.4 per cent.

The religion question in the1961 census was first phrasedto. fead: '''What religious denomi­nation do (you) belong to, orfavor?"

Critics said that phrasing left-""the possibility that one might

"belong" to one church whilefavoring another.

'l2ear·&stalissioris~·FRANCIS CAIDINAL SPILLMAN. P,.slck...

..•• Jo.... T. Ii.. "Nat, lee"s-IoI_~toI

CAfHoue NIAR lAST WEIJIARI ASSOCIAliON ,.f~ Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New lOft 17"..... Y.

. t (jI.<;1>S•. , ,i)I'~

.c... '" •. 't:' ;Q./. 0

"~ ~+ +

If you saw 'he parish church and rectory in KOM GHARIB in· EGYPT. Three months ago the walls were tottering; on the

verge of collapse.' The city fathersstepped in and said that unless itwere repaired immediately the churchwould have to be closed. The poorparishioners have done their best tomake repairs.,..-but now· HIS EXCEL­LENCY MSGR. GHATTAS, the CopticBISHOP OF THEBES, reports to theHoly Father that the'money is goneand the Job only half done. Ii's· im­portant. to finish the work immediate-

Tht 1M R '/xr' M' .' Airily, before the building permit expires.ory at J ISS/on Once the permit expires it may be

fir Iht Orimla/ Chu",? hpossible to get it renewed. The Holy- Father al:iS If Wi) co. .. send $2,500 now to KOM GHARIB­

roughly the cost of an automobile In the low-priced field. WiD- you help us? If you and 99' others send WI your check for $25, this week the repairs in KOMGHARIB c,an be finished prompt,.

Iy. Your gift, large 01' small, win help provide a fiUing home· for. the Blessed Sacrament In pagan Egypt and a decent plaCfl'

of worship for the Catholles of KOM GHARIB. Please sendS1mething now•.

SENIOR dTIZ.ENS..'Efforts to provide :securitj" and comfort for older people in

; tbiacountry remind' Us there are thousands, of senior citizensliving in' squalor .in' the Holy Land. To help them we have the

· PALACE "OF GOLD ,Mission' Club.. Your dues as a :niember ~., prayer a day and $1-.00 iI month) enables our priests and Sisters· to provide food, clothing and' .medicine 'for these poor people.: Like to joinT Clip this item and mall it with your contribution.,- The people you help" wiD never forget. .

"DID 1: OU KNOW?If'you are it member of ill. CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WEL­

FARE ASSOQIATION YOU/share in the Masses offered by ~i8 'Holiness, Pope John; in the· Masses 'offered by Cardi~al ~pell­

'man; our President; imd in the Masses of all the .Bishops and.. priests who .are engaged in this work. 'More than 13,000 Masses.." are. qff!!red;for living and deceased, members every year. .

· ' . Moreover, '~veI'Y n:lOrnin~. ~ii ·priest, offers Mass in St. Petel'". Basilica: in Rome -for 'decease'd" members.

~ , . " . - ..... :, . t' ;

, You I,jay receive .a ,Plenary Indulgence on the day you are-enrolled in our Asso~illtion, 'and on, 53 other. days during ".theyear" fI' Plenal7 Indulgence is'granfed ,also at the' moment of

.. ueath. ' . ' .:' '.. '" ."

, Your members'hip.llI~Y be ~nn4al 9~: p~fPetiial,.:AnI!Usj me.~"~", bership dues, are; indiyidual; $1.00; f~mi1y, $5:00. p.erl?etual

membership d~es are: individ~a~~ $~O;. family, $l~. ." . What better way io help, yo.urself, and your, fam~y, .whU.

, ;' helping the work of the Church i~the Near EastT Your donation'. :_.!~.~ _Inv~stment"" that ,pa~s' dividen~s forever."

, TRJi: ;.,;ISTERS \/HO 'J'AUGHT U.S In ;rammar school •••maybe we can't re~~~be~ their names, but we. remember what·the;' taua-ht. SISTER ROMANA and SISTER

- STELLA' are" iD India, preparing to becomeSISTERS OF THE SACRED HEART inCHANGANACHERRY: As a "Thank' You,

: Sister" for what the Sisters' who taught' you- .did, perhaps you'll be able to help WI train

. Sisters for pagan India, The cost of two". year's training for :eilcli of them is $300.. U!~U'l~iI!!!aJ• ,The good, they:will do.1s Incalculabill. Plea~' help them. Sisters

. ,never .forget.: their. benefactors.' . .

1 .

M."~•ILL

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··· .. BOSTON·.OCEANPOI'r,PAWTUCKET,

SERRA SPEAKER: Most Rev. Nicholas T. Elk.o, D.D.,left, Bishop Qf the Byzantine Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh,speaks with Bishop Connolly at the combined meeting ofthe Serra Clubs of New Bedford, Fall River, the Attleboros'and Providence in New Bedford Monday night. '

, .Golden Jubilee

ConHnued from Page Oneagain celebrate Sister St. Oliva'sjubilee,' and again in July at thecongregation's Canadian mother­house, when some 20 jubilarianswill be fe'ted at a joint observ­ance.

Sister, a native of Canada, hasno relatives in ·the Diocese.. Onebrother still lives in Canada.Her work at St. Anthony's in­cludes the setting up of programsfor the 18 Sisters and one layperson on the· grammar school"faculty and the constant over:"seeing of the total school cur­riculum. As a teacher, Sister St.,Oliva's field of special interestlies iIi French instruction.

Her fellow religious join inpraise of the years of service. shehas given St: An.thony's. School.Despite advancing years, she is

,"still very active and devoted,"they declare. '

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Father Nolin,

Sculpture S<OlcietySalutes .ChlLu'~hes

l'olEW YORK (NC)-The Na­tiollal Sculpture Society salutedtwo Catholic churches for out-

o standing collaboration betweenarchitect, owner and scupltor..

The society presented HenryHering Memorial Medal Awardsto the National Shrine of theImmaculate Conception, Wash­ington, D. C., and the Cathedralof Mary Our Queen, ·Baltimore.

The medal awarded for theNational Shrine was presented toFrancis' Cardinal Spellman,Archbishop of New York, whoacc'epted it in the name of theU. S. Bishops.

The two edifices were ,de­signed by Eugene F. Kennedy,Jr., of the Boston firm of Magin­nis; Walsh and Kennedy. Mr.Kennedy received the society'saward for architecture.

Eighteen sculptors were givencitations for their work on thetwo churches.

Continued from Page Onewithin the "limits" 'of th'e Towns'of 'Dennis,East"Dennis,"'West' Catechetics. DnstihiteBrewster, So. ':Brewster,' East . To Open i.n MayBrewster together' with' Nicker':'son Park. : This area f6fmerly SANTIAGO (N C) - Thewas served by St: Joan of Arc" -Church's effort to rejuvenateParish, Orleans, and St. Pius X 'Christian life in Latin AmericaParish, South Yarmouth~" takes another giant stride in May

Father Nolin,:who wiilreside ." with the opening of an instituteat the' LaSalette Seminary in to train religion.teachers for theEast ."Brewster,was . born' -on 'whole region.sept". 6, 1922, in. St~ Johnsbury; The Latin American Catecheti-'­Vt., .the son of ,Marie Dutil Nolin ical Institute will be. under theand the late Alphonse Nolin. : ."direction' of .Father James Mc~,

He attended the novitiate at Niff, M.M., American representa':'the'LaSalette Seminary, Enfield; " tive at the Latin AniericanN. H'.; and;the LaSalette Semiri- ,'Bisl!:0ps' CQuncil (CELAM) .. Theary in Attleboro.-He. was or~' I.institute is part of the Faculty of,dained by Bishop. Connolly, ori'.~:rhe~.logY.Qf the Catholic Urii­June 11, 1949," in St."M~~y',(~'v:ersity,of Chile. "Cathedral, Fall River." . .

Following ordirlation the' new.head of, the Immaculate Concep­tion Parish w3sa"ssigned as deanof discipline and' professor in'the minor seminary, Enfield.::"Following·his 'seminary assign­ment, Father' Nolin· was. ap­,pointed procurator for the' La­"Salette foreign missions, a post'.he has held"' for the past 'nin~years.

"- • " 1

Vocations Holy HourPATERSON (NC) - Bishop

James A. McNulty of Patersonpr~sided here Sunday at, a spe­cial Holy Hour ·for vocationssPonsOred" by the Serra Club' ofPaterson. Parents of ·priests,Brothers and Duns from thePatersOn diocese were honored ­at t~"'service- in . St; John's'Cathedral. "

THE ANCHOR~Dioce~e~f Fall 'River:";'Thurs. April 13, 1961,.. ' ".

Bish@gl [E~k.o 'Tells Ser~ml~~.Red$ PU$h Anticleric@~i~M

-,Most Rev. Nicholas" T. Elko, Bishop of the 'Byzantine~atholic Diocese" of Pittsburg, emphasized the communistmethod of using anti-clericalism as the initial step 'in con­trolling a country. Bishop Elko, in the presence of. BishopConnolly and Bishop Ger- He stressed th~ necessity of

... rard, told more than 200 Catholic education to keep a newlSerrans from New Bedford generation from 'ever approach­Jl.i! II R' r Attleboro are~ ing~he.communis~ inspired an~i-

a lve , . .. clel'lcalism that IS so essentIaland Providence. at thell' 'Jomt for the establishment of a com­me"eting in the ~ew Bedford munist controlled government.HO,tel Monday eve~mg that e~en Bishop Connolly, a formerbefore t?e .BolshevIk RevolutIon. chaplain of, the Minneapolisfn ,,~ussla I.n 1917, T:otsky and Serra Club, spoke briefly on the]i,eJlI~ realized ~he Importance work of Serra and Bishop Ger­of .,fIrst d~velopmg a .cleavage rard, honorary chaplain of thebe~~een BIShops and pnests.and New Bedford Serra Club, intro-eausmg a break between pnests duced Bishop Elko. "and people.. President Daniel Dwyer wel-

Iron .Curtam comed the guests and Rev. John .'The Byzantme lea~er the.n F. "Hogan delivered the weekly

enumera~ed.so~e of hIS expen- Serra "quickie".eD:~es whIle behm~ ti}e Iron C~r- Mr. Philip F. Tripp was toast-

.. 'fIa1n and the expenen.ces of re u- master for the evening.gees who have receIved succorfrom him. He recalled how Masswas said in a wheat field whilettu:eshing wa~'going on and anordination was held while the

, young seminarian wC!s chopping." wood in order to avoid detection. b:v .the local commissar.

. Catholic Education'He called upon all Serrans to

R~,lize their. obligation of re-,maining close to an episcopcythat goe's out to its people and

, the. .priests who are alwaysJleady to serve their parishioners.

Transfetrs.Continued from Page One

Ilather Bessette, was born in,)lew Bedford on June 28; 1911;iIle'son of Noe and Ida CoderreBessette. He attended St. Mi­.ael's College, Winooski Park,v.t.;' and St. Mary's Seminary,Baltimore. He was ordained bythe late Bishop Cassidy in St.Mary'S Cathedral on June 11,-as: '

Eather Bessette served as as­sistant at St. Stephen's Church,IDopgeville, St. Anne's Church,'NeW',Bedford, 'and, since Augustof 1960, at Notre Dame; FallRiver. '

, Father Bernier:rather Bernier, who has been

transferred 'as assistant from St.­"atthew's CQurchj Fall River, to'llJotre Dame.Church in that city,.iieturns to a parish where he'.

, leryed thr~e,yea,-:s. '. ., Born in Fall River on June 26,

i919, the son 9f the late Osciu"end Eva Boucher Bernier" heattended the College of St.

. Alexandre in Canada, College St.,Pascal in Montreal, St. Philip'Dre'ri School in Bosfon and St.iof).n's Seminary ilJ Brighton.

He, was. ordained' by ":aishop. Connolly .in St.'Mary,s Cathedral.~;~eb. 2,'1957..A,fter ordin~t~on.he served as assistant at st.

~ .i:M,icha!,!l's Church; 9cean Grove,_d then for the~ext three years~ ,Notre Dame Church in Fall"ver. He, was transferred' as.iissistant to St. Ma'tthew's Church'~ Fall River in August oi lut;i'e~. '.

'-

0,

"

',,'

' ..' . FATHER BE&NIB& .

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StU~&Uilts BL!laldSANTIAGO (NC)-Three huR'>

dred students of the CatholkiUniversity of Chile have buil'llmore than 100 one-family hoUseBduring their just-ended Surnmeivacation in areas of southernChile devastated last year byearthquakes. Students at the um...versity have pledged to bulla1;000 homes.

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'sionaries in South Americaface even greater difficultiesthan those .in Africa, .­French-Canadian who has servedas a lay apostle in Peru sa:tahere in Oregon.

Claude Palmire, 26, who spen:&the past three and one-halfyears in Peruvian jungle mis-­sions, said there are few priestito serve a large, scattered pop~

lation in areas with no roadl\poor communications and trans-­portation only by river boat.

Besides the physical difficul­ties, he explained, people in thejungles have been exploited somuch in years past that they"don't trust anybody."

Little Group RichMr. Palmire said that "at lea~

70' per cent of the people 81'C'very poor, while a little groupis very rich." 0

."Through the work of someardent communists, many of thopeople have come to identify therich with democracy and withAmericans. So the poor don~"like the rich, the democratic idetlor Americans,", he said.

A feeling is" prevalent, he ~ported, that the United State!!lis willing to help South Amep.,ica now, "not because [email protected] want to but becaU5(ithey're afraid of Castro."

In spite of difficulties and Iiltlattitude of the people, missio~

aries from the United States amllCanada are doing outstanding.work among the primitive peO'opIe, Mr. Palmire said.

., Ttff ANCHOR- ,.Thurs., April 13, 1961

Whil~,Th~y Last!

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At Manhattan College allNorbert Haley, public relationsdirector, would say was. "Ofcourse we don't know anythingabout it or condone it but Iguess ·the evidence does pointour way." Mr., Haley admittedthe Manhattan colors are Kellygreen and white.

Appropriate Color

The ram-:napers couldn't havepicked a more appropriate colorto dye Rameses' coat. In theSpring of 1959, the little woodenkennel which housed the Ford..;ham mascot burned. Fordhamstudents started a' collection tobuild the ram a' sturdier 'hom,e,but money fell short of the goal.

·The late John B. Kelly of Phil­adelphia, who prided himself onbeing a bricklayer before he be­came an Olympic games scullingchampion, . head of a wealthyconstructi!)n firm and the father.of Princess Grace of Mpnaco,heard, about..Rllmeses' plight and.had the .llwank brick Ram. H~Ab~ilt., , . . ' . '

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Parish on Base"Site 'SANTA ANA (NC)-':'~ Cath-'

olic parish plant has been builton the site where World War' nfliers traIned as aviation cadet.llat Santa Ana Army Air Base.

DISCUSS MUSIC: Brother Bernard Gresh, F.S.C.,center, discusses modern and classical records with hisfather, Charles, right, leader of a popular Philadelphiasociety orchestra, while a member of the band looks on.NC Photo.

lfol1dham MO!)cot, Rameses XIX,Back Af~er Suspected Kidnaping

NEW YORK (NC) - They're Rameses was turned over tomulling over the idea of install- Joseph Hogan, Fordham senioring a burglar alarm in Ram Hall, and "head keeper of the Ram."swank little brick construction With two assistants, Mr. Hoganon Rose Hill which is the offi- had little trouble 'getting the 100­cial residence of Rameses XIX, pound animal, back home.Fordham University's mascot. Rameses likes oats and the stu-

After a week's unexplained d~nts had their pockets stuffed. WIth them.absence, Rameses noW' IS back

home. It's suspected he was thevictim of a kidnaping. and it'scertain he was subjected to in-dignities. .

Rameses was given a Frenchpoodle clip, his· coat was dyeda Kelly green, his curled hornswere whitewashed. And to addto the humiliation, Rameses al­most became part of a circus act.

Rameses disappeared fro mRose Hill on March 29. A circuspress agent on April 5 found anote at his office which read:"~ere's the Fordham poodle.Maybe you can use it in youract."

The note was addressed to theStephenson family, who have adog and horse act in the circus.Rameses was found tethered bya chain in a nearby parking· lotand turned over to police.

Suspect RivalSince the ram's coat was dyed

Kelly green, it was· suspectedthat the kidnaping was engin­eered by students of· ManhattanCollege, iong-time rival of Ford­ham in spo~ts. There .were other·suspicions,l.too, but they couldn'tbe 'confirmed because the em­barrassed Ra~eses "ain't talk:',ing....

,What About' You?

•..• a ;fra~ds~anSisterl

Bus Rides' BillPasses Test

AUGUSTA (NC) -A measureauthorizing public - paid bustransportation for private andparochial school students inMaine passed its first test whenit was approved, 9-1, by theMaine Legislature's judiciarycommittee.

Tuesday was a big day forGene Conley. The Sox launchedtheir '61 pennant quest; the Cel­tics hoped to conclude theirs.The big fellow worked out inSt. Louis last Saturday prior tothe Celts-Hawks game but bestestimates don't· have Conley onthe firing line for the Sox foranother month. Break out thatraecoon coat. Play ball!

set the prepsters down with but .one hit, drove in the Blue's firsttwo runs and, in general, hadhimself a day. Coach Dick Nor­man's nine was scheduled to hostSomerset on Monday. However,the weatherman declined to goalong lind the squads tried againon Tuesday.

, We don't envy the Red Soxone bit in their attempt to launchthe 162 game season a· weekearlier than usual. In fact, hav­ing experienced our New Eng­land Spring weather on the base­ball tundra of Somerset, we ex­tend our sympathy to the majorleaguers who have been usedto the balmy weather in whichbaseball was meant to be played.Temperatures thus far have been4 degrees below the seasonalnorm.

Eight members signed an"ought to pass" report, one sup­ported the bill with an amend­ment and one opposed it. Themeasure now comes up beforethe state Senate.

The measure would authorizesuch. transportation In Maine

.communities which approved ofit on a local option' basis. Theschool bus bill has been a subjectof statewide controversy for sev­'eral years., ,In 1959 the ,Maine SupremeCourt ruled·that while there wasno state ·constitutional "bar totransporation', of 'private 'schoolstudents~ there was no enablingact for such a practi'ee understate law. , ..

. WantS ''Mlddle Ground':The jUdiciary committee rec­

ommended the bill sponsored byRep. Sylvio' J. Gilbert. The

. amendment suggested by Rep.Myron D. Rust would require atwo-thirds vote of a communityfor the transportation,' insteadof a majority vote.

The opposition vote was castby Rep.' Norman 'Minsky, whosaid he desired a "middle groundth!lt wo~ld be acceptable to allparties concerned." .

College' AI'laStors V,s. Barons'In Fund Exh~bition Tilt

B1 JJQclI TI[ineavyA fitting wind-up tn the basketball seaSon - wen,

almost, the CYO Easter Tourney Finals are coming up ­will be the spectacular s·taged tonight in Fall River's BankStreet Armory for the Rev. Charles 'A. Donovan MemorialScholarship Fund. In the fea­ture game of the evening, asquad of collegians headedby P.Co's' John Egan andcoached by Dino Martin, S.C.'svarsity hoop mentor, will meetthe Barons ofFall River.

Joining Eganon the stars'roster will beP.C. teammatesTim Moynahanand RichieHolzheim­er, GeorgeBlaney, TimShea and John iConnors of Holy fCross, B.C.'s Frank Quinn andBarry Muelter of Rhode Island.Opposing them for the Baronswho for, years have been one ofthe strongest independent unitsin the area will be a trio ofcoaches, Tom Karam, Durfee,Phil Wetterland, Durfee Techand Jack McCann, Durfee.

Coach Ernie Baroody hasstrengthened his club consider­ably for tonight's game. Addedto the squad have been Al Attar,former Holy 'Cross star andCharley Frascatore, D u l' feeTech's leading scorer. Regular

.Andy Farrissey, Willie McDon­ald and Charley Connell willalso be on hand to contest thecollegians whom they defedtedin last year's exhibition whenLen Wilkens, now of the St.Louis Hawks of the N.B.A.,headed the touring cast.

The College Stars will present11 strong lineup and in Egananother potential' star of theNBA. John has been drafted bythe Detroit Pistons. Blaney andShea-smacks of the old vaude­villian days-but anyone whohas seen the pair in action mustconcede they are as good a back­court pair as may be found incollege ball. Frank Quinn, anative Newporter has been tre­mendous for B.C. for three yearsand Barry Muelter was' one ofthe main reasons for Rhody'schampionship season.

Scholarship FundThe cause is the best. The pro­

gram is being sponsored by theB'o s ton College ScholarshipCommittee of Fall River,Dr.John E. Manning, Chairman'andAttorney 'Charles' J.; Hague;Treasurer. The proceeds' will goto the Rev. Charles A. DonovanScholarship Fund to provide full·tuition scholarships to, BostonCollege for needy but deserv:­lng men of the area. The awardwhich will be made annuallycommencing this year is' in honorof the late and revered FatherCharles A. Donovan whose in­terest.in education of the youthof Fall River inspired the estab-lishment of the fund., '" .

The CYO Easter Tourney willconclude next Monday nigbtafter almost a ·.month of. compe­tition. Holy N;ime and $t. Pat­rick lend an All FQll River aspeCtin the J,tinior chamPionship. tilt,but, at this" writing, it's any­body's guess as far as the Seniorfinalists are concerned. Goinginto Monday's quarterfinals, NewBedford boasted three survivors,including defending championHoly Name; Fall River had twoand Attleboro, North Attleboroand Taunton one apiece.

The coaches' turntable has al­ready begun to spin. Jack Mc­Cann has resigned the basketballpost at Bishop Stang to devotefull tim,e to his teaching-coachingpost at· Durfee' where he is foot­ball assistant and freshman base­ball SKipper. Anti 'at' New' Bed,;,ford, the resignation of athleticdirector Tom Eck, who is mov­ing on to Chelmsford, leavesvacant both the A.D.'s spot andthe varsity grid job from which

'he had stepped down a month orso ago.

Baseball Scene .Fairhaven High launched the

scholastic baseball seasOn. in fine,fashion last Friday with a 4-0victory over Country Day. BobBowman, veteran rfghthander,

~eligiGus SocietyDrops DistinctionIn Semie'ilftiwies, MILWAUKEE (NC) ­I'he Salvatorians will drop~eir traditional minor atiqmajor seminary' distinction~ make 'greater use of college~achers in preparing futurepriests. ,~ Father Jerome Jacobs, S.D.S.,provincial of the U. S. provinceof the Society of the DivineSavior, outlined, the program at(l meeting of school principalsat provincial headquarters here.

He said the change, effective~is September,. will separate~igh school, college and graduate~epartments into units of four&rears each. '" The Salvatorian society's col­!lege'students as well as diocesan

, <Dnes will attend' a central col­iege' preparatory to' their tlieo­

'logical training. This will includeUte first two years of college or

'what was formerly' the last twowears of minor seminary.

More than 800 students arei10w enrolled in Salvatorian sem­inaries in this country. Father

• lerome said the new programwill enable nearly 1,000 to beaccommodated because of better

, utilization of plant facilities and~acher personnel.," He also saiQ that the program~ill permit more diocesan stu­dents to make use of SalvatorianSeminaries for their preparatoryWaining.

Duc(tes~!ru Curia~Ie(:ts AJ~@n

Thomas Allen, St. Jamesparish, New Bedford, will be new~easurer of the Diocesan Curia4Jf the Legion of Mary. At theE:uria meeting new officers forlocal praesidia were also re­ported., They include James Collins,president and Marilyn Ruggles,~ce president for St. Jamespraesidium, New Bedford; Vir­ginia DeFarias,. president for$to John of God, praesidium;Somerset; and Barbara Dupont,liecretary for one of the priui­"dia of Our Lady of Lourde9,ll~lUnton. ,

Curia, representatives' w n IlJlake offiCial visits to' units' inOur Lady of Lourdes parish,Taunton and St. Mary's parish;ilairhaven. ', Reports of Legion activities

It\clude 828 'visits made by sevenlIlembers in St.' Joseph's prae­lIidium, New Bedford, and, 429wisitsmade by 14 members of~. Anne's, praesidium, FallRiver. The St. Anne's group alsodistributed 316 religious articles.

Next Curia meeting is set forSunday, May 7 at St. Vincent'sBome" Fall River. .

.. ~'Ianning Restaurant~n First Chapel Site

QUEBEC (NC)- The site ofQuebec's first chapel which datesback to about 1625 and is linkedwith the early days of this citymay be swallowed up in theplans of a merchant for arestau­rant addition, but members ofthe Quebec Historical Sites andMonuments Commissions arestudying steps to preserve thebistorical site., The ruins of the, chapel of laR~couvrance are located behindia building on Baude street here,The chapel was built about 17)rears after Quebec was foundedby Samuel de 'Champlain,{emous French explorer. "

The merchant who purchased'the property has announced heis planning to raze tlie chapelruins to make way for an exteii­sion of a restaurant. There longbas been a question of whetherthe tomb of Champlain is locatedin the area.

Grr<Dl<d]l1!J@!hes Dli\) <C1hJ~r;tyLOS ANGELES (NC)-Oza-,

Dam School of Charity, con­ducted by the St. Vincent de,Paul Society, awarded certifi-

. cates to 102 men, its first gradu­".., ating Class. The nine-week study

course trains men in the spiritand practice of charity. A sec­ond nine-week school opensApril 24.

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Philbrick to SpeakAt Alu'mni Meeting

MILWAUKEE (NC) - Mem.bers of Catholic Alumni Clubsfrom the midwest will gatherhere next weekend for social andreligious events.

Herbert A. Philbrick, whospent nine years in the AmericanCommunist party as a counter­l!PY for the FBI, will address thealumni at one session during theweekend.

A~pea'I, .,AgainIf @ r Rosa riesFor Vi,t N~m

A renewed,· appeal forbroken or extra rosaries andmedals to be sent to BishopChi of South Viet Nam has~e~n made to New England,areaCatholics by. MiS9 Dorothy V.Schultz, 118 Ohio Avenue, Pro~~ence 5, R. I. , .

'She says "Over' a y'ear' agoAnchor readers responded withoverwhelming generosity to asimilar request. Since' that timethe need has becQme even great­er as more than 3000 Vietnamesea month are seeking entry intothe Catholic Church. ' .

"This is a tremendously im~portant thing in, view of thestrategic position which SouthViet Nam occupies geographi-:cally. It will be a bulwarkagainst the Communism at itsvery door. ,

, Destitute Converts"Most of these converts are

poor to. the point of destitutionand the only means they have ofobtaining rosaries and medalsis through the kindness of peo·pIe whose hearts are touched bytheir 'plight." '

.. Miss Schultz" requests that"everyone who has even oneextra broken rosary or medal"forward it to her for sending toBishop ChI: She notes that allbroken rosaries are repairedbefore shipping. .' .

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Senate Group BacksFight on Delil1l\tllMency

The Senate Labor Committeehas recommended a bill estab­lishing a $20 million program tofight juvenile delinquency.

The measure (S:279) wouldauthorize Federal grants of $5million yearly over th~ next four,years for study and demonstra­tion projects in dealing withdelinquency and for trainingpersomi.el to work in this field.

Private, nonprofit agencies aswell as private colleges anduniversities would be' eligible

,to share in the Federal funds.The bill also would establish aNational Advisory Coun,cil onJuvenile Delinquency, op,eratingwithin, the Department of Health;Education, and Welfare.

PREPARES lLAY MISSIONERS: Taking part in, the opening of the Inter-AmericanCenter in New York are members 'of the Grail, a movement that prepares young Catholicwomen for the lay apostolate.' Left to righ tare: Ruth Jimenez, Colombia; ThereseMartin, director of the Grail International, exchange work in New York and ElenaDuverges of Argentina,' NC Photo.

Trappist Abbot, Says Americans Possess'Qu~Uties Suit~d to Monastic ,Life '

LIMA (NC) - American men nuns. Many Trappists believe sense that they are guileless andmake good Trappist monks, a~- that World War II contributed open by nature. They are honestcording to the abbot who heads accidentally, but substantially, to with themselves and straight-the Trappist Order. the growth. forward with others and that

Abbot M. Gabriel Sortais, Abbot Gabriel says that Am-I provides a natural basis for sim-O.C.S., Abbot General of the ericans never give themselves plicity in their approach to God.4,337-member Order of Cister- time to think. They are busy' In the second place, Ameri­cians of the' Strict Observl;\nce, about many things and seldom 'cans are generous. They givesaid that the Trappists of the ponder where they are going, or without counting the cost. TheyU.S. are equal to their European how. But lonely hours on a do not measure when they give,counterparts. He gave three Pacific isle, or lonely days on a but pour out their goods until itreasons: They are basically troop'ship, crossing the Pacific overflows the outstretched handssimple; they are generous, and gave many Americans a leisure of others.

,they are practical in their direct and a chance to think that they, Gives Com letelapproach to God. never had beforl;l. These long . .' .p y..

I encountered the six-foot- hours of meditation led to many ThIS quahty IS' a primarythree, athletic-looking abbot sit- a Trappist vocation. requisite f?r the monastic .life,ting calmly in the midst of the th~ ~apPlst Ab,?<>t explamed.ordered pandemonium ofthe de- Temptations ~Ith It. the American .can.over-parture of an internationa~flight, He said that American voca-, come hiS .natural inchnabon tofrom the airport at Santiago, tions to the monastic Jife suffer seek bodl.1y c~mforts, becauseChile. Abbot Gabriel had gone to from two great temptations. whe'! he g~ves hlmseJl to a cause,Chile to visit the new foundation First, 'every American has "a lit- he gives himself completely. Theby American Trappists there. He tie of the businessman in hip', ~dea of "divine abandonment" iswas on bis' way north to com- and this prop¢nsity, sometimes instin~tive in' the A~erican a~d

'plete hi~ visitatiop. of, Trappist comes to the fore even after he explams much.of h~s success Inmonasterie9 in the western part has been wearing the monastic the contemplative hfe.

S garb for years.'" ,of the United tates. , Second, Americans ar,e, 'greatly' Thirdly; the American is intui-

'Th~ee QueStions tive rather than ,logical in lii9attracted by physical comforts, .Aboard, the plane -:- I was and their 'idea of the minimum intellectu~l process~s. He is not

headed ,for Lima-I took advan- comforts necessary for, sustaining as much mterest~d m ,the mech~tage of our' meeting to as,k the human 'life are appreciably high. '~nics, of a!rivi!"g 'at :the truth ,_Abbot :General some questions: er than those of Europeans. ' 10 ~he arrival Itself. .1;) How could he explain ,the But the fact ~s, the A~bQt Gen,- "He ;has both' l{ mania' and asudden vigorous growth of the eral said, "that American monks facili.ty for piercing the heart-'ofTrappists - who neither speak are on a par with their European a problem'. This accounts in partnor eat meat, and who work and counterparts." He said the rea- forhi9 reputation as a' '~prac­pray strenuously throughout the 90n is threefold. ,An analysis Of ,tical man.'" But on the spiritual'day, only to rise for prayers in the American monastic spirit is level it enables.'him to go, di--,the middle of the night - in the evidently a favorite theme with rectly to God, the Abbot said.United States? 2.) Are Ameri- Abbot Gabriel, bee au s e hecans capable of making good warmed to the subject and dis;,,'Trappist monks? cussed it at great length:

Abbot Gabriel said he has Si~ple Peoplebeen asking the same questions Americans are basically simpleof members of his order, and has 1 Th .received a great' variety ofre- peop e. ey are Simple in theplies. ,The only real explanationfor 'the 'recent Trappist expan,.sion, he' said, is the grace of God;

, Twelve MonasterieS: Eighteen years ago there were

three Trappist monasteries inthe U.S.A. with 150 monks, theAbbot recalled. Today there aretwelve with 1,200 monkS-:-Overone-quarter of the whole order-plus one monastery of Trappist

THe ANCHOR:"" ',Thurs., April ] 3, ] 961

20