20
CCD FATHER CANUEL FATHER MOREAU FATHER DESMARAIS Contract For Mission Bishop's Office Gives Clergy Transfers Transfer of two pastors, the appointment of an administrator and the transfer of an assistant are announced today from the Chancery Office by the Most Reverend Bishop. Rev. F. Anatole Desmarais, pastor of St. Church, Fall River, becomes pastor of St. Jacques Church, ,Taunton, succeeding the late Willi&m J. Smith who died on July 17. Rev. Aurelien L. St. Michael's Church, Ocean Father Desmarais ,Moreau, pastor of St., Hya- Grove" goes to St., Joseph's Father Desm.arais, a native of cinth Church, New Bedford Attleboro. His transfer Fall River, received his early d F th 'D .' IS effective Thursday;, Sept. 22. Turn to Page: Eighteen . succee s a er esmarms ' as pastor of St. Matthew's in Fall A" II P• A d ,',rles,ts 'to "tten Attleboro, becomes administra- C ' tor of St. Hyacinth Church, New,' onfe' r',en'ce on Bedford. These -transfers are effective Tuesday, Sept. 20. Rev. ' Bernard A. Lavoie, assistant at: "An all-day program ,dealing, ,,,,ith 'various aspects of ,the Confraternity of Christiall; Doctrine wiil ta.ke the place thi,s year,of the annual Fall Clergy Conference. To be held' from 9:30 to, 4 Monday, ,Sept. 19, at' Bishop' Stang High', $chool, North Dartmouth, h '. . ' , th ',. '11 b 't' t dd c aIrman. e' SeSSI?nS . WI ea. en e Lunch 'in the Bishop Stang Rev. Finbarr McAloon, by all prIests of,the DIOcese. cafeteria will be followed 'by an SS.CC., ,administrator 0 f 'program, under direc- opportunity to inspect exhibits Holy, Trinity Church in West tion of Rev. Joseph L. Powers of CCD publications and varioWil Harwich and of the Our Diocesan Director of the catechetical aids. Lady of the Annunciation Mis- 'fraternity of Christian Doctrine, Afternoon sessions will include . sion in Dennisport . has an-' will open with a discussion of an, address,"How the CCD nounced the awarding of the "The Church and the Lay Apos- Helps the, Parish," by Rev. Luiz . contract to enlarge the Dennis- tolate." Rev. Joseph B. (::ollins, , G. Mendonca, parish CCD direc_ port' church to the'firm of John Director, of the National Center tor at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel "·B. Lebel and Sons of Osterville. of the CCO, Washington, will Church, New Bedford.' ChaJr- 'ville. spe,ak and Msgr. Edward J. man will be Rev: Regis Kwiat-. Contract· price -for the work Fitzsimons, Diocesan CCD Direc- kowski, SS.CC., parish CCD,- ,which will see the present tor, BUrlington, Vt .. ,will be' St.. Francis Xavier , ture widened' on both sid'es with chairman., Church, Acushnet., two new side altars added 'and a Second session "w,iU consider ,Closing ,the 'day, His Excel- new exterior, spire . erected "The Need of a Parish Executive leney, the Most Reverend James _is' $43,490, Last week's issue of .-Board," with' Rev. Mederic J. L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of. The Anchor featured a front- Roberts, DiocesanCCD Direc-' Fall River, will speak on "The "page sketch of the enlarged mis-, tor, Worcester, as speaker 'and ',Diocesan CCD ,Program," He sion. ' , Rev. -David J. 'Coffey, Provi- will be introduced by Turn to Page Te,» . dence Diocesan Director, as Power, © 1960 The Anchor PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year Second Class Mall Privilege; Authorized at Fall River, Man. . Vol. 4, No. 37 Fan River, Mass., Thurs., Sept. 15, 1960 : DONNA EVA.CU.EES: Family of Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon . Roy of North Fairhaven was evacuated by' Fairhaven Police' at- 4 :00 A.M. Monday mornltlg and taken to St. Joseph's school, Fairhaven for refuge against. the hurricane. 'l'he eight children range in age from 5 mos. to'12 years. Officials Deplore Face of Red Threat WASHXNGTON (NC) - Officials charged with combat- ting subversion are frankly concerned over the' apparent apnthy of the American' public. None is m9re·.concerned' thim J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal, Bureau' of Investigation, who reported is expected to bring a stepped.,up to: Congress that the com- Red effort to stir up students in munist party in this country American colleges. There was , evidence of such a drive in the bas recently enjoyed some last academic semester,,, and of 'its most impressive successes while. this was, pointed out, it. is. in 'recent years, and that "it is felt here that the American impossible to stand idly by in, people generally did not seem face of the challenge this com-'to the gravity of:the tnu'nist success represents." // situation. ' The school'year just opening Turn to Page Eighteen An Anchor of the Soul. Sur6 and Pirm-ST. PAUL The ANCHOR New Rules Step in Restoring Liturgy r . C'hanges in, Rubrics , Emphasize' Christ" Another important step has that is, the Svndays of, the year been taken in the over-all t:,es- and the feasts and seasons which toration of the liturgy initiated celebrate the chief mysteries of by Pope Pius XII in. 1948, along the Christian religion. *he: lines, laid down by St. Pius X Superficially, may' ap- IJO ,years ago. , .' pear to be' a kind of downgrading This'latest fruit of the 20th- of the feast days of the saints, In oe.jtufY liturgical movement is reality it is'a new reminder that' new c. of rules for the all days,including': the Ch.!Jrch calendar' and ,for, the feasts of the - saints must' be l\'II1SS and the divine Office." :centered upon 'Christ 'Himself .. Officially promulgated by ·His This reinforcement' of the Pope John XXIII on chief fcasts and seasons is evi- 25 .to be next Jan- ,dent, fo'r example; iri the new 1, Its detaIls have now been 'and higher ranking of Sundays published.. as· "first class" (Advent and In ,making the an'nouncement, Lent) and "secon<l class" (other Pope John explained the partial Sundays). Every ,Sunday of the imd preliminary nature of these ,year is intended to ,be· a celebra- ehanges:,"After long and mature tion of the resurrection of, Our corisideration; We reached the Lord from the dead' and a day, opinion that the more basic prin- of' baptismal renewal. These eiples affecting the generallitur- concepts, planned at one of the gical rcstora'tion should· be pre- results of the 1955 reform of sen ted to the fathers at the the Holy. Week and Easter lit-' , eoming 'ecu'11enical council, but urgy, should now be enhanced that the correction of the rubrics by the technical classification of the missal ancl breviary should of Sundays in the missal and be delayed any longer." breviary. The most significant feature A second good instance of the of the codification is the renewed same thing is the stress laid on emphasis placed on the temporal the quarterly ember days' by of the Church calendar. Turn to Ten Pontiff Asks Mass Simplifications Bet!er Pr.oyer Seen Meaningful Office AI m A whole series of ,small but the prayers at the foot of the , immediate consequence of meaningful changes affects the altar and the last Gospel-silently, the changed rubrics or regula- of Mass. Some are not' aloud,' For low Masses, tions is 'Ii great shortening of the' simplifications. On a few occa- .priests ,have been reminded, divine Office. The Office is thesiOl:'-S ip.the year the preparatory .. again-as,'was done by the Holy, public prayer of Christ and the 'prayers at the fpot: o.f the altar ,See in '1958-to recite the re-" Church recited at different wm be omitted. The Creed will .quired texts loudly, clearly, and times d'uring each day by clergy,' _not, be said. at so many . slowly. ,To increase the dignity- arid Religious ancI by. some lay Masses. The dismissal at'· .of the ordinary, parish high Mass, ,people. Mass will ordinarily' be "Ite, ,the incensings customary at , The shortening cif the' Office missa (Go,' the Mass., ia ' solemn Mass may ,now be added ,was accomplished by reducing ended), WIth· .the, at all sung the number'of lessons to be re- phrase, Of real significance for the , cite'- '(from the lives of the saints (Let us bless the Lord) re;;erved piety of-the faithful is the strong and from' 'the sermons of the for followed 1.>y a .. disapproval giyen to the abuse Fathers "of the' Church) on all The lalit" Gospel w111 be of Holy Communion' 'Sundays and on most weekdays.- at such Masses, and a.ls9 " at odd and improper .moments This, with :other omissions and' bec,ause of during Mass:, ·'.The proper time simplifications serves to lighten' the of absolutIon whIch fol- for distributing Holv Commun- the burden for priests lows. ,. . ion to the faithful i.s during Mass, who' are nowadays en'gaged in The prayers or col- after the Commulllon of the cel- Turn to Page Eighteen Mass will be more eJ;>rating. pries.t." Th"! cele.brant , ••• •• •••••••••• ly limIted from now on. Those hlmself,ls to gIve CommunIOn to ,The author of these articles, . sometimes required. by local. the people, although he may be Rev. Frederick R. McManus, bishops are severely restricted. assisted by other priests. Since of Boston, is on the Canon Law They:,maY,be ordered for "grave, there is an abuse involved, the Faculty, of the Catholic 'Uni- and public necessity or calam- Holy See added:· "It, is altogether versity, President' of the Na- ity," , but on a temporary basis unbecoming that Holy Commun_ tiomH· Liturgi'jf.l Conference, rather than pe,rmanently or ion be distributed by another and has been appointed a con- indefinitely. priest at the same altar wnere sultor 'to the Pontifical Com- To' emphasize more important . Mass is actually being celebrated, llllission on Sacred Liturgy foil' parts' of the Mass; the celebrant outside of the proper time for the Ecumenicall CounciL of sung Mass is directed to say , Turn to Page Tell

09.15.60

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PRICE lOe $4.00per Year Second Class Mall Privilege; Authorized at Fall River, Man. . © 1960TheAnchor "An all-day program,dealing,,,,,ith'various aspects of ,theConfraternityofChristiall;Doctrinewiilta.ketheplace thi,syear,oftheannualFallClergyConference.Tobeheld' from 9:30 to, 4 Monday,,Sept. 19, at'Bishop'StangHigh', $chool, North Dartmouth, d F th . iontothefaithfuli.sduringMass, who' are nowadays en'gaged in The ad~ltIonal prayersorcol- aftertheCommulllonofthecel- Turn to Page:Eighteen. .

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Page 1: 09.15.60

CCD

FATHER CANUELFATHER MOREAUFATHER DESMARAIS

G,i~e ContractFor Mission

Bishop's Office GivesClergy Transfers

Transfer of two pastors, the appointment of an administrator and the transfer ofan assistant are announced today from the Chancery Office by the Most Reverend Bishop.Rev. F. Anatole Desmarais, pastor of St. Ma~thew's Church, Fall River, becomes pastorof St. Jacques Church, ,Taunton, succeeding the late ~ev. Willi&m J. Smith who died onJuly 17. Rev. Aurelien L. St. Michael's Church, Ocean Father Desmarais

,Moreau, pastor of St., Hya- Grove" goes to St., Joseph's Father Desm.arais, a native ofcinth Church, New Bedford ~hurch" Attleboro. His transfer Fall River, received his early

d F th 'D . ' IS effective Thursday;, Sept. 22. Turn to Page: Eighteen .succee s a er esmarms 'as pastor of St. Matthew's in Fall A"II P • A d~;~:~~n~:rSt~~~~~p~~ g~~~ce~: ,',rles,ts 'to "ttenAttleboro, becomes administra- C 'tor of St. Hyacinth Church, New,' onfe'r',en'ce onBedford. These -transfers areeffective Tuesday, Sept. 20. Rev. 'Bernard A. Lavoie, assistant at: "An all-day program ,dealing, ,,,,ith 'various aspects of

,the Confraternity of Christiall; Doctrine wiil ta.ke the placethi,s year,of the annual Fall Clergy Conference. To be held'from 9:30 to, 4 Monday, ,Sept. 19, at' Bishop' Stang High',$chool, North Dartmouth, h '. . ' ,th ',. '11 b 't't d d c aIrman.e' SeSSI?nS .WI ea.en e Lunch 'in the Bishop Stang

Rev. Finbarr McAloon, by all prIests of,the DIOcese. cafeteria will be followed 'by anSS.CC., ,administrator 0 f Th~ 'program, under direc- opportunity to inspect exhibitsHoly, Trinity Church in West tion of Rev. Joseph L. Powers of CCD publications and varioWilHarwich and of the Our Diocesan Director of the Con~ catechetical aids.Lady of the Annunciation Mis- 'fraternity of Christian Doctrine, Afternoon sessions will include

. sion in Dennisport . has an-' will open with a discussion of an, address,"How the CCDnounced the awarding of the "The Church and the Lay Apos- Helps the, Parish," by Rev. Luiz

. contract to enlarge the Dennis- tolate." Rev. Joseph B. (::ollins, , G. Mendonca, parish CCD direc_port' church to the'firm of John Director, of the National Center tor at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel

"·B. Lebel and Sons of Osterville. of the CCO, Washington, will Church, New Bedford.' ChaJr-'ville. spe,ak and Msgr. Edward J. man will be Rev: Regis Kwiat-.

Contract· price -for the work Fitzsimons, Diocesan CCD Direc- kowski, SS.CC., parish CCD,-,which will see the present ~truc~ tor, BUrlington, Vt.. ,will be' dir~tor, St.. Francis Xavier

, ture widened' on both sid'es with chairman., Church, Acushnet.,two new side altars added 'and a Second session "w,iU consider ,Closing ,the 'day, His Excel-new exterior, spire . erected "The Need of a Parish Executive leney, the Most Reverend James

_is' $43,490, Last week's issue of .-Board," with' Rev. Mederic J. L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of.The Anchor featured a front- Roberts, DiocesanCCD Direc-' Fall River, will speak on "The

"page sketch of the enlarged mis-, tor, Worcester, as speaker 'and ',Diocesan CCD ,Program," Hesion. ' , Rev. -David J. 'Coffey, Provi- will be introduced by ~'ather

Turn to Page Te,» . dence Diocesan Director, as Power,

© 1960 The Anchor PRICE lOe$4.00 per Year

Second Class Mall Privilege; Authorized at Fall River, Man. .

Vol. 4, No. 37

Fan River, Mass., Thurs., Sept. 15, 1960

: DONNA EVA.CU.EES: Family of Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon .Roy of North Fairhaven was evacuated by' Fairhaven Police'at- 4 :00 A.M. Monday mornltlg and taken to St. Joseph'sschool, Fairhaven for refuge against. the hurricane. 'l'heeight children range in age from 5 mos. to'12 years. •

Officials Deplore ~pathy:

I~' Face of Red ThreatWASHXNGTON (NC) - Officials charged with combat­

ting subversion are frankly concerned over the' apparentapnthy of the American' public. None is m9re·.concerned'thim J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal, Bureau' ofInvestigation, who reported is expected to bring a stepped.,upto: Congress that the com- Red effort to stir up students inmunist party in this country American colleges. There was

, evidence of such a drive in thebas recently enjoyed some last academic semester,,, andof 'its most impressive successes while. this was, pointed out, it. is.in 'recent years, and that "it is felt here that the Americanimpossible to stand idly by in, ~he people generally did not seemface of the challenge this com-'to apprec~ate the gravity of:thetnu'nist success represents." // situation. '

The school'year just opening Turn to Page Eighteen

An Anchor of the Soul. Sur6 and Pirm-ST. PAUL

TheANCHOR

New Rules Step in Restoring Liturgy

r

.

C'hanges in, Rubrics, Emphasize' Christ"Another important step has that is, the Svndays of, the year

been taken in the over-all t:,es- and the feasts and seasons whichtoration of the liturgy initiated celebrate the chief mysteries ofby Pope Pius XII in. 1948, along the Christian religion.*he: lines, laid down by St. Pius X Superficially, thi~ may' ap-IJO ,years ago. , . ' pear to be' a kind of downgrading

This'latest fruit of the 20th- of the feast days of the saints, Inoe.jtufY liturgical movement is reality it is'a new reminder that'• new c. ~ of rules for the all fe~st days,including': theCh.!Jrch calendar' and ,for, the feasts of the - saints must' bel\'II1SS and the divine Office." :centered upon 'Christ 'Himself..Officially promulgated by ·His This reinforcement' of thelIoJin~ss Pope John XXIII on chief fcasts and seasons is evi­~u~y 25 .to be e~fective next Jan- ,dent, fo'r example; iri the new~Qry 1, Its detaIls have now been 'and higher ranking of Sundayspublished.. as· "first class" (Advent and

In ,making the an'nouncement, Lent) and "secon<l class" (otherPope John explained the partial Sundays). Every ,Sunday of theimd preliminary nature of these ,year is intended to ,be· a celebra­ehanges:,"After long and mature tion of the resurrection of, Ourcorisideration; We reached the Lord from the dead' and a day,opinion that the more basic prin- of' baptismal renewal. Theseeiples affecting the generallitur- concepts, planned at one of thegical rcstora'tion should· be pre- results of the 1955 reform ofsented to the fathers at the forth~ the Holy. Week and Easter lit-' ,eoming 'ecu'11enical council, but urgy, should now be enhancedthat the correction of the rubrics by the technical classificationof the missal ancl breviary should of Sundays in the missal and~ot be delayed any longer." breviary.

The most significant feature A second good instance of theof the codification is the renewed same thing is the stress laid onemphasis placed on the temporal the quarterly ember days' by~de of the Church calendar. • Turn to P~ge Ten

Pontiff Asks Mass SimplificationsBet!er Pr.oyer Seen MeaningfulOffice AIm A whole series of ,small but the prayers at the foot of the, ~n immediate consequence of meaningful changes affects the altar and the last Gospel-silently,the changed rubrics or regula- cel~bration of Mass. Some are not' aloud,' For low Masses,tions is 'Ii great shortening of the' simplifications. On a few occa- .priests ,have been reminded,divine Office. The Office is thesiOl:'-S ip.the year the preparatory .. again-as,'was done by the Holy,public prayer of Christ and the 'prayers at the fpot: o.f the altar ,See in '1958-to recite the re-"Church recited at different wm be omitted. The Creed will .quired texts loudly, clearly, andtimes d'uring each day by clergy,' _not, be said. o~ S,u~g at so many .slowly. ,To increase the dignity­arid Religious ancI by. some lay Masses. The sol~mn dismissal at'· .of the ordinary, parish high Mass,

,people. Mass will ordinarily' be "Ite, ,the incensings customary at, The shortening cif the' Office missa .est'~. (Go,' the Mass., ia ' solemn Mass may ,now be added,was accomplished by reducing ended), WIth· .the, a~terna,~lve at all sung Ma~ses.

the number'of lessons to be re- phrase, "Benedlca~us D~I~ll~O" Of real significance for the, cite'- '(from the lives of the saints (Let us bless the Lord) re;;erved piety of-the faithful is the strongand from' 'the sermons of the for ,~a,slles followed 1.>y a ..pr~- disapproval giyen to the abuseFathers "of the' Church) on all ces~lOn. The lalit" Gospel w111 be of distr~buting Holy Communion''Sundays and on most weekdays.- oml~ted at such Masses, and a.ls9 " at odd and improper .momentsThis, with :other omissions and' atth~ funera~_Mas.sesbec,ause of during Mass:, ·'.The proper timesimplifications serves to lighten' the ~lte of absolutIon whIch fol- for distributing Holv Commun­the burden es~ecial1y for priests lows. • ,. . ion to the faithful i.s during Mass,who' are nowadays en'gaged in The ad~ltIonal prayers or col- after the Commulllon of the cel-

Turn to Page Eighteen lec~ a~ Mass will be more stric~- eJ;>rating. pries.t." Th"! cele.brant, ••• • • •••••••••• ly limIted from now on. Those hlmself,ls to gIve CommunIOn to

,The author of these articles, .sometimes required. by local. the people, although he may beRev. Frederick R. McManus, bishops are severely restricted. assisted by other priests. Sinceof Boston, is on the Canon Law They:,maY,be ordered for "grave, there is an abuse involved, theFaculty, of the Catholic 'Uni- and public necessity or calam- Holy See added:· "It, is altogetherversity, President' of the Na- ity," , but on a temporary basis unbecoming that Holy Commun_tiomH· Liturgi'jf.l Conference, rather than pe,rmanently or ion be distributed by anotherand has been appointed a con- indefinitely. priest at the same altar wneresultor 'to the Pontifical Com- To' emphasize more important .Mass is actually being celebrated,llllission on Sacred Liturgy foil' parts' of the Mass; the celebrant outside of the proper time forthe Ecumenicall CounciL of sung Mass is directed to say , Turn to Page Tell

Page 2: 09.15.60

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Prelat.'Stresses NeedOf Discipline

WINDSOR (NC) - Cat~

olies will never halt the co...munist challenge until the,­"are ready to disciplinethemselves, sacrifice everythintand die for their' beliefs," abishop exiled from Red China 'declared here in Ontario.

Bishop Cuthbert M. I)'Gara.'C.P., 74, told'5,OOO persons at a

, Rosary observance here: "If thecommunists are willing to sacrl­'flce everything, nothing short ofthat will do to meet them head­on. Unless we're willing to dothis we're lost. 'No Marx, Enge~'or Stalin can save mankind. OnqJesus Christ can save us."

Dynamic Love• The dyr.amic hate of commUftooism can be stopped and over­thrown only' with dynamic love.said the Bishop, who was exiledin 1952 from the Yuanling dio­cese in Huan province 'afterspending two years in a co~'

munist prison. He had served illthe China mission fields sinee1924: " ' ,, Bishop O~Gara said he "learned

'the ,hard way about communiSmfrom the off~cers, soldierS.iuards ,and their propagimdaeorps"', while he was their pris­oner. He said "it was terrifyingto see these men offer so much,even their lives for communism.-

"They made it very clear to', me 'that they' would use ~veiY

methOd to force their grosS m~terialism and 'godlessness ort" thewhole w9rld," the Bishop said.

Entirely EvU "'Recalling the words of Pope

PiUs XII, that "communism' ..,intrinsically evil," the Bishop

added: "That is 100 per cent' evil,entirely 'evil ... the spawn OfSatan. Christ did not have a non­aggression or a peaceful coexist­ence pact with the devil nor'ca.bis Church have a coexisteDClepact with communism."" Bishop, O'Gara, a native oQOttawa, now resides at the Pas­monist Fathe,rs' St.' Michael'­Mo~ste~,in Union City, N.J.. ;

~Yening Communi~.., BRAGA (NC)-The Archdio;.;

cese 'of Braga here in PortUg81~as announced that certainworking-class parishes will di9­tribute Holy ,Communion in theevening, without Mass, becausemany 'working people are unableto receive the Sacrament duringthe day. At least the Rosary mustbe said and Benediction of the,Blessed Sacrament celebratedwhen Comm~nion is d,istributed.

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deemer." He concluded by Urg­ing all to remain· close to Mary,

',and imparted' his apostolic bleSs­ing. I

DQncers PresentReligious DrcllnQi

ROME (NC)-A dance troupefrom India,has brought Christianreligious drama ,in classicalIndian song and dance to some~of Eurppe's major cities.

The troupe came to Europe tb 'perform 'at the International,Eucharistic Congress in Munichin August, and continued its'per_formances in Vienna, Berlin;Zurich' and Rome. Prior to the'trip, some members of the troupehad appeared in London andParis, and at the ~dinburgh

Dance Festival., The 18 men and women ,~r.,

formed a religious dance-dramahere'at Marymount InternationalSell,ool before Valerian CardinalGracias, .Acrchbishop of Boml?ay;who brought them to Europe.

Classical DaneesThe artists ,present classical

dances from Hindu mythology';folk dances of the Kerala' Pun­jab; Christian themes with In­dian dance. techniques, choralsinging, in Hindu and Sanskrit.Sanskrit is no 'longer a liviriglanguage, but is the classic lan­guage of India.

Director of the troupe FatherGeorge Proksch, S.V.D., who ha~been in India since 1933, hasbeen' using cll,lssical Indian song~nd dance as a meanS,of present­ing Christian thought in a man­ner ada~ted to Indian mentality.

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,Quarter -MillionNEW YORK (NC) - Over

221,400 students have enrolled iD.the 327 e!ementary and 100. sec­on,dary',schools of the New YorkAr~,h4iocese.

Ordinary Sin giFinal 'Prayers, <

, ,Rev. ,Reginald M. Barrette, as:'sistant at st., Roch's Church, FallRiv;er,: celebrat~ a Solemn Fun':'eral Mass yesterdaymorninginSL Louis de France Church,Swansea,' for his mother, Mrs.Zenon D. (Rose Delima Corri­veau) Barrette, whQ died Fridayevening. ,

Final prayers after the Masswere sung, by Most ReverendJames L. Connolly, D.p., Bishopof the Diocese. ,

In addition'to Father Barretteand her husband,' Mrs: Barretteis- survived by four ,other sons,one of, them 'Brother Dacien,F.I.C., head of the BusineSBAdministration Department ofWalsh College,.CaIiton, Ohio, andfour daughters. ' '" ,

OFFICIAL

Worc'ester, SeeSaves Taxpaye'rs'WORCESTER (NC)-If Cath­

olic schools in the Diocese. weretQ close,' taxpayers would face~n ~stimaetd, $56.4 million billsfor school replacement costsand an adc!itional operating' cOstof nearly $8.5 million a year.

A survey by the ,Catholic Free, Press,' newspaper of this one':'

county diocese, revealed thesefigures" as 27,000' youngsters re­turned to 51' elementary and IThigh ,schools operated by, theChurch here. '

Cost-p~r-pupil figures used in .~mpiling the statistics were ob.,.taine,d from the annual report of

, the ,Massachusetts 'Deparbnentof Education. ' "

Replacement costs for· the ex­isting Catholic school building.were obtained.from the adminis­

,trator' ,of the " MassachusetUSchool Building ASsistance Com~'mission" Boston. He said 'theaveragepei'-pupll cOst ' for'" newsch~l ,~tii~dings' im~, t!th#p,m~t

, in, tlie State dur~g,~scal 7ear,1959 was $2,089. ' '

, Necrology,THE ANCHOR lists ibe aD-"

nlversary dates of priests who'served the Fall River Dioeesesince Us formation In 1904with' the intention' that the

'faithful will give them' ..prayerful remembraDee:, ,

, SEPT. 16Rt., Rev. Jean' A. Prevosti' A

P.R.,'1925.'" " ,~

~EPT.,I'J ,',,'Rev. Thomas F. McNulty, 1954..

, SEPT. 18Rev. Luke Golla, SS.CC., 1946;.

SEPT. 20Rev. Simon A. O'Rourke, 19111;Rev. Omer Valois, 1958.

SEPT. 21Rev. George Jowdy, 1938.

,

Diocese of Fall River

~~/C;:-;;:5--:Bishop of'Fall' River,' -' '

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept.15, 1960

Mass Ordo

'Clergy Appointments,

Rev. F. Anatole Desmarais, pastor of ,St. Matthew'sChurch, Fall River, to pastor, St. Jacques Church, Taunton.Effective Sept. 20, 1960. " - ,

, Rev. Aurelien L. Moreau, pastor of St. Hyacint~ Church,New Bedford, to pastor, St. Matthew's Church, Fall River.Effective Sept., 20, 1960. '

Rev. Henri R. Canuel, assistant at St. ,joseph's Church,Attleboro, to administrator, St. Hyacinth Church, New Bed­ford. Effective Sept. 20, ~960. ,

Rev. Bernard A. Lavoie, assistant at St. Michael's Church,Ocean Grove; to' assistant" St, Joseph's Church, Attleboro.Effective Sept. 22, 1960. . ' ,

2

,.. ,' , FORT.Y ,HOPR$,PEVOTION

Sept. 18- Holy 'Cross, Fall,River." "

St. Joseph, Attleboro.Sept.25-,-St. Anthony of Pad­

ua, New Bedford.Sacred Heart, Taunton.

Oct 2-Our Lady of the HolyRosary, Fall River.

Our Lady of the' Holy, Rosary, Taunton.

Oct. ,~ur Lady of the'Assumption" New Bed­ford.

~t. Roch, Fall River.

TBE ANCBORSecond-class "ail privileges autborlzed'

..1 FaD River. Mass, Publisbed evel'7Tbursday at 410 Highland Avenue, FaDRiver, Mass.. by tbe Catholic Press of tbeDiocese of Fall River Subscription priccl,IlY mall, postpaid $4.00 per "ear. , ,

FRIDAY-SS. Cornelius, Pope,and Cyprian, Bishop, Martyrs.Simple. Red. Mass Proper;Gloria;, Second Collect SS.Euphemia, Lucy and Gemin­ianus, Martyrs; Common Pref­ace.

SATURDAY - Impression ofStigmata' on St. Francis; Con­

"fessor. Double. White. MassProp-er; e;tloria; Common Pref-

"ace. .SUNDAY- XV Sunday After, Pentecost. Double. Green. Mass

Proper; Gloria; Second CollectSt. Joseph of Cupertino, Con­fessor; Creed; Pr,eface of Trin­ity.

MONDAY-SS. Januarius, Bish­op, ~nd His Corppanions, Mar_tyrs. Double. Red. Mass' Prop­er; Gloria; Common Preface.

TUESDAY-SS. Eustachius and__ Companions, Martyrs. Double.

Red. ,Mass Proper; Gloria;Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY - St. Matthew,Apostle and Evangelist, andEmber Wednesday 'of Septem­ber. Double of II Class. Red:Mass Proper; Gloria; SecondCollect Ember Wednesday ofSeptember; Creed; Preface of.Apostles;

THURSDAY-St. Thomas of Vil­lanova, Bishop an" Confessor.Double. White. Mass Proi>~r;

No ,Gloria; Second Collect St., Lin!ls, Pope and Martyr; Third

Collect St. Thecla, Virgin andMartyr; Common Preface. ,

AT RETREAT CONFERENCE: General Alfeed M.Gr~'enther, right, a Catholic and President of the Americ'an

,Red Cross, addressed, the: closing banquet of the 18th, , biennial convention of, the National Catholic Laym,en's

I ......_~-~-----......--~-----...I Retreat Conference in Philadelphia. At left is Bishop 'JohR'~ec:ider Urges Tertio'ries' Accept J~ Wright~f.Pittsburgh"and in 'center, Aux.iliaryBishop

. Interracial Charity: C:hClII~,nge:, '"Josep~McShea of Philadelphia. NC,Photo.' ' ", '

DETROIT '(NC) ~ The more der constitution and discussed p.op"eOb,·'serves 56th' Anniversa..vthan 100,000 members of the the convention theme, "The .. IThird Order of St. Francis in Franciscan Way to Christ". Of, Ordination to' Priesthood:the United, States were urged Mr. Roeblick asked tertiaries '" CASTELGANDOLFO (NC). _by a Negro leader here to accept to include the St. Benedict the .the challenge of interracial Moor apostolate in the activities Pope John reminisced about hischarity. of their fraternities. ,ordination day at a general

11 R b k f N y k, audience on the 56th annivers-~a y oe UC 0 • ew or, 51. Benedict, the first Negro

chairman of the thIrd order s Saint dl'ed' 1589 H :ary of his priesthood., ,i . 1 tit ' d th ,In. e was can- s· k' to th ' d' thnterraCla ap?s 0 a e, ma. ~ ,e onized in 1807 pea 109 ousan s 1ft eplea at the fifth conventIOn of " . new audience hall on thethe St. John the Baptist Prov- Taught by Christ grounds of his' summer homeince of the Third Order. "The apostolate advocates the here, Pope John recalled a spe-

More than 500 deleg~tes from solving of interracial problems cial blessing he' received from13 state provinces attended the among Catholics by. giving them' Pope ,St. Pius X the day he waseonvention. the soluti'on taught by Christ in ordaIned.

The 'delegates studied pro- the Gospel-Christian love," Mr. He said the saintiy Popeposed revisions to the Third Or- Roebuck ex~lained. placed his hands on the young

, ,"Another aim;"he added, "is 'priest's head and said, "Withto present to the non-Catholic great heart; my son, I pray the

'world a positive 'proof that the Lord and I bless you that yourChurch practices what it teaches priesthood may be a consola­about, racial equality. 'This proOf tion f~r the Church of God,"is embodied In St. Benedict the Pope John invited all presentMoor, a Negro and a saint.~ ., to' join' him in gratitude to the

Mr. Robeuck said interraCial' Giver of all gifts. He exhortedcharity, "Is not some' sort of be- them to do the will of God andkind-to-Negro movement like to "remain always in the light,be-kind-to-canaries week.'" goodness and: grace of, the Re-, "InterraCial charity is a' way. of life, the way of the Gospel,H

he stated.

Page 3: 09.15.60

, J

3THE ANCHOR.....Thurs·., Sept. 15, 1960

Please register with: Director of 'Adult Education, Stonehill College,.. North Ea'stoA, Massachusetts

. (Plea Ie make checks payable to Stonehilt Conege).........................................................................................................._ __ -

MODERN PHILOSOPHYMr. Lawrence S. StepeleviCh, M.A., Instructor, Stone10111 Coltege,. wilt COf>o

sicler modern theories, their background, and their authors.

OFFICE PROCEDURES SEMINAR .Moderator, Mr. Henry M. Cruickshank, M.B.A., Chairman of the Department

01 Busine.. Administration, Stonehill College, will present the talents of !' doz..welt-known business firms with national and international reputations. A doz.. ·speakers wilt demonstrate up-to-daM office techniques and sh~w you "100 War­To Sove $s In Your Business."

AMERICAN ECONOMIC POLlCY: A PRIMER FOR' THE INFORMED CITIZENMr. James L. WiI~s, M.A., Assi.tant Professor, Stonehilt College, wilt consider

hosic economi<: prohlems suel. asi~flation and unemployment, monopoly itsbusiness and" in the, trade union ,movement" .international economic relation..economic growth, and the policie. for coping with. these problems includingan appraisal of the Soviet economic system.

DRAWING AND PAINTINGMr. Charles Kerins, local portrait pa;'nter of p'op<! John XXIII and Pope Pius XII.

designer of the cover page. of '~The Catholic Boy" and "The Catholic Miss".illustrator of .books, paint... of 48 U: S. Navy oil Kene. ,from Perry to the Kor_War, and portrai't painter ,of many .prominentAme~ican.win teael. you ta drawand paint for pleasure. You'll paint the first 'night! .

. INTRODUCTION TO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES. Mr. Danlel J. Looney, Jr., M.B.A., Instructor, Stonehilt Coli., win .....

y- dollars this year and plan your next tal< year. 'This is an investm_t willia life-time return. " '

INSURANCE-BROKERS AND AGENTS EXAMINATION REVIEW COURSEMr. Abraham Brooks, LL.B., local insurance agent and broker, Lecturer at

Stanehill College, will lecture from the latest revision of the Standard Ans....e..for Massachusetts Insurance Agents and Brokers. Actual experiences in the l'eldwin be cited. and augmented by advice relating to home, car, and busi"e..insurance policie., choosing the company, choosing. the agent, self-in·suranc."distributing the premium dollar, etc.

PREDICAMENT OF THE MAN IN THE NOVEL. Reverend Robert F. Griffin, C.S.C., M.A., 'Assistant Professor, Stonehill College.

will con.sider ':Crime and Punishment by Dostoevski; Moby Dick by Melville; AllThe King's Men,' by Warren; The ,End Of The Jo:ffair' by Greene.

EFFECTIVE SPEAKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MEETINGSNu-. Herbert A. Wessling, M.A., Assistant 'Professor, Stonehilt College-"I.ea..

ho.... easily you' can gain a mastery .of yourself and be in control of the ....uations. which. confront, you. H

'

\Home ,........................................................ Course _

SECRETS OF THE POWERS GIRLThe John Robert Powers School of Boston wilt offer this course exclusively

for the ladies. There will he two-hour sessions 15n September 20 and 27, Octob«'11 and 25, November 8 and 22. Fee ,$10. Non-credit course.

DEVELOPMENT PSYCHOLOGY OF THE CHILDAssistant Professor Mary E. Shaughnessy, Chairman; Pub1ic Health ~ursing.

n... Boston College School;' 'of .Nursing, will . lecture on this vital ,mdpopulartopic. This course supplement. the Spring course "Understanding Adoiescence.·

BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL LAWAttorney George "., Connolly, local candidate for Statio Senator, win gi...

• survey course considering contracts, busineu organizations, agency, partn.....ship,. employment re,lations, sale., hills a'nd notM, creditor's' rights, and Unifor.Commercial Code:

'CREATIVE WRITINGProfessor Brauil Fitzgerald, M.A., well-known author of 2 popular boob

and 150 'articles', and stories, professional editor and manuscript "doctor" f!'l'authors, will present principles and methods of creative writing and construe­tive criticism and comments of student participants' work_

CURRENT EVENTS THIS PRESIDENTIAL YEAR, AssociaM Professor Cornelius J. Cleary,. MPA., Chairman of the Deportmentof Social Sciences, Stonehill College, .... ill analyze locat,. national and international·pr~blems. ' '

PORTRAIT OF THE PAPACYReverend William F. Hogan, C.S.C., J.C.D, recently returned to Stonehil

.College after 3 years' study in Rome, wilt describe !he election of Popel(33-1400 A.D.), the temporal power of the Popes in the Middle Ages, limits r:IPapal power today and influ'ence throughout the world and how the Pope'governs today with the aid of Curia and Ca(dinals.

GREATER SUCCESS IN REAL ESTATE TODAY'Mr. Henry W. Palmer of the Greater Boston Reat E,t,!te Board and memhen

~ the Society' of Residential Appraisers and .the Providence Real Estate Boardjointly offer this timely sequel to the Spring course "How To Start. Stay With.and Succeed in Real Estate."

Lodge

What About You?'

.~".'.' .

. . . a Franciscan Sister!Girls sixteen-and-o~er are n';eded

to serve God a. Nur..... laharatoryand X-ray Technician.: Accountants,Dietitian., Seamstre.ie., COok., ciotdin other hospital departments.. Mother Mary Elizaheth at St. MGtyof the Angel. Convent, Rod< I,land,Illinois, will' send y_ ......... infor­mation on this happy life.

Special consideration isgiven to "late" vocation,,:.

BUCK OSSICI('S

Angus·RedPrime Aged Charcoal Broiled Steaks

Roost Beef - Seafood - Special Poultry Dishes"WEDDINGS AND BANQUETS MAYFAIR 4-9888

IN PRIVATE ROOMS 4-9979

91 CRANDAll RD.-JUST SOUTH Of ROUTE 177

TIVERTON,· RHODE ISLAND

Life Are Still Free,Stresses

ENTERS COMMUNITY:Entering the Sisters of Ste.Jeanne d'Arc this month isMiss G e r t r u d e Messier,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Leo Messier, Notre Dameparish, Fall River. She at­tended Jesus Mary Academyand Dim a n VocationalSchool. She will make herpostulancy at St. AnselmCollege, Manchester, N. H.

Vatican GardensSetting- for Old.Lourdes _Altar

.LOURDES (NC) - PopeJohn has' told the Bishop of

'Lourdes that the old altarfrom the, grotto where theBless~d Virgin appeared to St.Bernadette IS being placed in thereplica of the Lourdes cave illthe' Vatican gardens.

The altar was presented to thePope by Bishop Pierre Marie

Sets $25 .Million Theas of Tarbes and Lourdes. Allelaborate white' Gothic piece, it

Campaign Goal had been the altar. of the grottofor nearly 75 years. .

NEW YORK (NC)-A cam- Bishop Theas had it removedpaign to raise $25 million to just prior to the opening inbuild a seminary, put up 'four February, 1958 of the centenarynew high schools and replenish of Our Lady's apparitions atthe archdiocesan education fund Lourdes. He replaced it with ahas been hiunched by .Francis· 'starkly plain table of darkCardimil Spellman. polished marble-part of a plan

The drive, opened by a letter to restore the original simplicityfrom the Archbishop.' of New and air of mystery of the cave.,York 1<1 t~e 401 churches here. AT-'CAPE MEETING: Officers of the Diocesan Council' '. Pope John has now written to

of. Catholic .Women meet 'at St, Francis Xavi~r.. Chureh, thank the Bishop for the old.New Seminary _ .' W. h v: R L d J DId' t . t' d altar. After stating that it is

The Cardinal said that the Hyan~Is. It -..ery. ev. eonar· • . a ey,. I~ rIC. mo - being placed in .. the' LOul;des .five-million:-dollar seminary. to erat?r,' are (left to. rIght) Mrs. ~us~~.U.9l?I~m~e, Diocesan .grottp in t~e'Va,.ti<;aJ;lgardens,he.be named for .the Cure'd'Ars, 8pir.itu~1 ~hairman;"IMrs. John.J. llarroyY'S, DIOcesan vice:, .recaHed that.h.il! three immedi,,~.,patron saint of parish priests, presi.d,~,nf "" Mrs..,J,ohriJ. Mullaney, Diocesan president.; Mr8:p.r.~d:eessOl;s i~ -the. papacy, a~d.will lessen demands being' made 'f h h 1£ h d ff d M ton the See's' twoo' 'ex'l'stl'n'g .sem- 'GI'I'be'rt .J' Noonan ,president of Cape. and..Islands district. e '. Imse, . a .' 0 er~ ~s.s a

'., ., the altar w,he'.l ,t was at Lourdes.inaries, CathedriH' College,' a " " '. . ..

minor seminary, and St'.Joseph'91 Bishop'.. Buys Land' ----...--...--------~----Seminary,"Dunw~odie, N.Y;, a' '''5''0'~IE'H'ILL' COLLEGE'major seminary. It will he built 'For" De'y'.e'I,opment . "I;' I~' . '. ,near Horim~h, N.Y. ' . ". .' . . "

With the new semInary, the' I "'1' T' ". Co-EducationalNew York archdiocese will make n -1-:"II1II0... ·ruro I" f Ad' I da major change in its education Bishop Connolly a~nounced . nstitute ou t E ucationprogram for seminarians: Cur-rently, there is a so-called. 6-6 today the pu~hase of a plotprogram whereby' Cathedral of land between Ro.ute 6 and.College offers four years of high

. school and two of college, and old Route 6 in North Trul"?st. Joseph's offers the last two for' the development of Ouryears of college and four of Lady of Perpetual Help Mission.

St e Will iam' s th~o~:~~w seminary will bring The Mission is under the di­Chur.ch Begins about a 4-4-4 program. Ca.the- rection,of the Rev. Dennis,Spy,,:

dral College will offer high kers, SS,CC., administrator of.'. Work is progressing on the school courses, Cure d'Ars, wilJOur Lady' of Lourdes' Church,new St. William's Church in Fall be a four~year boarding collegeRiver. The contemporary Geor- - and St. Joseph's will become a Wellfleet.gian structure, designed by the. four-year institution for theo- No immediate plans have beennoted firm of Maginnis, Walsh & logical studies.' . 'announced for the' plot of land.Kennedy of Boston, is being built·, . ' . .. "by th~ F. L~ Collins & Sons f?on- .... lIame Catholic Scholar at Harvardstruchon Company of Fall Rlve~. I~ ,Electrical contract h,as been Recipient of St. Bonaventure Medalawarded to Delta Electncal, Com- . '. '. t ldpany of Fall 'River and heating ST. BONAVENTURE, (Nf?).":'- the rUin~ of the ap.clen. wor.and plumbing to George M. Christopher H. Dawson, 'dIStlfi- were laid t,?e fo~~da~lOns of.Montie of FaU River. guished British scholar who Europe, and Enq~.ur;es.1Oto ~e-

. . _ holds the first Stillman Chair for ligion and Culture", In whichThe ~lew churc~, whIch IS pc Roman Catholic. Stu'diEi's at Har:" he relates. ~he orgamc de.velop-

ing bUilt east of the rectory OR d U .. ·t h bee named' ment' of European IslamiC In-Ch' St t 'U'replace the var' mversl y, as n . " '

lCago ree, WI the 1960 recipient of '51. Bona- dian, and ChinesecultlJr~s. .basement church that has beel!- t U· 'ty' Catholl'c Mr Dawson was born 10 En.g-. h' f St ven lire mversl s· .in use by parIs lOners 0 • A t" M d 1 . . land on OCt. 121889. He becameWilliam's for 55 year~., ~~: M:d:l,'swarded annually a convertto Ca'tholiCism in 19i4.

The new church. wIll have a since 1934' to an outstandingseating capaCity of about 800 Catholic l~yman will be pre­and. will be rea~y for Easter sented to Mr. Da~son at campusservices next Spr1Og. exercises on Oct. 4, the Feast of

Another unusual feature will St. Francis of Assisi, patron ofbe windows with a "jagged tootl1 Catholic action; the universityeffect," which will not be visible announced.to worshippers within the struc- Mr. Dawson will be the 27th,ture but will admit adequate recipie'nt of the medal, firstlight. awarded to the late Alfred E.

.-._....._.._._-_...-: Smith, New York governor and1928 presidential candidate.

Studies of ChurchThis year's 71-year-old nom­

inee has been prQfessor at Har­vard since 1958. The chair heholds is designed to attract dis­tinguished scholars and teacherswho can contribute, within thework of the Protestant-orientedHarvard Divinity School, llawiderunderstanding of the theology·and closely. related studies ofthe Catholic Church.

Mr. Dawson's career has beenprimarily that 'of interpretativescholar and writer. His printedworks number nearly a score.Among· them are "The Age ofThe Gods," a study in the ori­gins of culture; "The Making ofEurope," which ,tells how upon

Ozanam SundayAt H.yan~is:· Members'of the St: Vincent dePaul Society of the' Diocesealong with their· families and',piritual directors are invited to• Holy. Hour that will' 'be held.Sunday, Sept. 17, from'S to 4 in.the afternoon at St. Francis'Xavier G:hurch, Hyannis.• Conducting the 'Holy Hourwill be Very Rev.' William A:Donaghy, S.J., former President01. Holy Cross College and adistinguished spe~ker and· writ­er. Father Donaghy is at presenton the Mission Band... The Holy Hour wiil conclude....ith Benediction given by Ve~y

Rev. Leonard J. Daley, with Rev,William D. Thomson' as' Deaconand Rev. John E. Boyd as Sub­deacon.

Best Th.ings inBaltimore Psychiatrist

CLEVELAND (NC) - A psy- appreciate God's bounty.chiatrlst who is the father of Family trips that cost only a'12' children believes the best few pennies '~for gas' 'and pop­things in life are free and par- sic1es" can give pleasure andents ought to take advantage joy, he' emphasized, if parents'of them. patiently meet the individual· Dr. Frl'nk J. Ayd Jr. of Bal-: challenge of each growing childttmore has advised members of and remember their role asthe First Friday Club to "give~' te!lchers.,their children an ,appreciation Dr. Ayd, who at 39 haS had a~ the free things in life-t"e full civic, professional and fam­gifts of God-such as the sunset, ily life, credited the succeSS of• breeze or a beautiful day. his marriage to his wife's wH­· . A good' way to do this, he lingness to sacrifice:feels, is to take children to zoos.

.parks, historical shrines, bandeoncerts and the 8rt museums.These provide many opportuni­ties for emphasizing the spiritualinstead of the material things oflife.

Many marriages today are un­happy, Dr. Ayd said, becauseparents have failed. to teachtheir children to recognize and

Page 4: 09.15.60

A Delicious

Treat

Made Rite ChipsASk for Them 'faday

Catholic Students.Ask Study ClubsTo Combat Reds

LOUISVILLE (NC)The National Federation ofC~tholic College Studentshas "wholeheartedly" en­dorsed sit-in demonstrationsstaged throu~hout th(;! South bywhite and Negro students.

.A resolution adopted at the. federation's 17th national con­

gress said' the sit-ins support"the moral rights of Negroes."The delegates deplored the ex­pelling of some students from.schools for participating in thedemonstrations.

Another resolution recom­mend~ that campus groups beestablished to study communism.and to combat the Red ideololD"and tactics.

Serious Threat"The Communist party con­

stitutes the most serious threatto 'our democratic way of life,"the resolution said. "One of ourgreatest disadvantages in 'Uiefight against communism is ourlack of unders~nding of the~mmunist system, its ideolo(G'and tactics." .

In another resolution the fed­eration urged that the President

, instrGCt the U.S. Ambassador t.the United Nations "to take im­mediate· action causing the sO-:viet :Union to abide by the funprovisions of the standing reso­lution 'on Hungary."

.The students pledged to co~

tinue work to bring world opin­ion "to bear on the Russian in­terference with Hungary's rightto political self-determination."

The convention voted in favorof a resolution which wouldbenefit teachers in parochial andprivate schools under the "foll'­giveness" clause of the 'NationalDefense Education Act. .

The resolution pointed out thatthe new clause calls for "forgive_ne,!lS" of 10 to' 50 per cent ofFederal loans to finance a col­lege education provided the stu­dent will teach for a specifiedtime in a public school. The res­olution urged that the clause be

,extended: to ~ver those who wi.teach in parochial and other pri.-vate institutions. . ..

Another resolution endoreedthe "papal volunteers" program,'which calls for'members of thelaity to serve as missionaries iaLatin American countries.

1~ Man. St., cor. Bedford:-Open Fri. 'til 8 P. M.

BOW~N/SFurniture Store

JOSEPHM. F. DONAGHYowner/mgl.

'42 ·CampbeP ~.

New8edford; Masa.WYman 9-6792

HEADQUARTERS: FORCOLONIAL AND

TRADITIONAL FURNIT~I

Course on FaithSYDNEY (NC) -More 'than

5,000 non-Catholics have writtento the Catholic Enquiry Centerin this Australian city in re­sponse to newspaper advertise­ments offering a free corre­spondence course in Catholicism.

BRISTOL COUNTY'S LARGESTFEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATION

3~2%PAYSYOU

HEADS SOCIOLOGISTS: The new president of theAmerican Catholic .sociologic~l Society, Dr. Jack H. Curtis(left) of Marquette University, Milwaukee, is congratu­lated by his predecessor, Father John L. Thomas, ,S.J.,columnist for The Anchor, as Monsignor Terence J. Cooke,vice-chancellor of the Archdiocese of New York, looks on.NC Photo. '

Describe~ Program for Ed'ucatingBlind Chi,ldren in Parish Schools' .'MIAMI BEACH (NC)-A blue- child' from a liniited, highly

print for educating blind chil- specialized and segregated life.dren in their parish school while to an adult life which is directlythey continuei to live at home opposite. In many instances thewas sketched' by a. nun at the impact has been too great. Plac­American Federation of Catho- ing, the child in the regularlie, Workers for the Blind con- classroom helps make the tran-vention here. - -' sition to adult life easier."

Sister Anne Columba told .the The Brooklyn program wasdelegates that such a program inaugurated by father Alfred J.is working successfully in- the Weinlich, director of the dio­Diocese of Brooklyn, N. Y. cese's . Catholic Guild for the

A member of the Congregation Blind. Sister Anne Columba. of Sisters of St. Joseph of Brent- said, like a number 'Qf parents,wood, N.Y., Sister Anne Col1.!m-· she doubted the program wouldba traveied45 D)iles daily last work, ,but now is pleased withyear teaching the visually handi- the results.capped. She supplemented a reg- "The children were able toular parochial school program go along with all their otherby teaching Braille reading, lessons when the itinerant teach­writing and arithmetic to blind er was not there .since each onechildren. was 'equipped with a set of

In addition to teaching six Bra~l1e textbooks and, as far asi:hildren, enrolled in various possible, . Braille workbooks'SChools last year, Sister Anne which exactly duplicate those ofC()}umba also acquainted 81u-. their~ighted 'classmates," thedents, 'tellchersand.parehts with nun 'said. .equipment designed for .the "Besides textbooks, each childhandicapped. , has a Braillewriter and a special

Regnlar ClaSllroom arithmetic slate. Beginning in"'Since education no longer ean the· fourth or fifth grade, a blind·

be considered· a goal. in itself' child is expected to learn regu­but rather a part of learning to lar typewritiDg,and,must be pro-

ll've l'n a community," the nun vided with a' portable type­writer for school use.

said, "educators in the field ofthe visually handicapped havefound it undesirable to change a

Schools Announces

Academic Year. i

Mayi-Palmer Examinati~ns

4- :h-Catholic Teachers AssociationConven­tiooDiocesan Science Fair

-8-12-Examination-s-Fifth Marking Periodll-Feast of'the A'SCension-Holiday ,12:""-Vocation 'Novenabegim .I9-Distribution of Report Cards-Fifth

-Marking Period3G-;Memorial Day-Holiday,

Dlarcb ,13-17-Examinations-Fourth Marking Period

24-Distribution 'of Report Cards-Fourth.Marking Period . ,

29-Easter Vacation begins at end of :schoollUly

AprU'- l~Easte~ Vacation ends; classes resumed

I9-Lexington Day-Holiday

;hae, 1t-English 'Composition ExaminatiOli

'12-16-Diocesan ExaminatiolUt-Elemental'y. Schools ' .

Final Examinations-High Schools19-.20-21"7""Third Annual Diocesan School Picnic

22-'-Distribution of Report, Cards-Final;Promotions June School Report due·

22o---Summer Vacation begins at Close of.mornini ,:session. Elementary gradua­tiORS may·be held on or after June 18, -on reg:ular. savings accounts,or earlier when combined. with a high C!nd !JP to 1% EXTRA on Bonusschool graduation. High school gradua- .·tioos may be held on or after June 11. Savmgs Accounts. Inquire.Howev-er" all schools;· elementary and ~."._-"_:,,, :high, will· remain in session until-June .' . .22. No school, elementary or high, may.. • -i 'close until it has completed 180 actual - Sove in person,. or save by mail. HeresChooldays. . Postage Paid, your mcmey is insured safe by an agencyN()·school holIdays may be ,granted Both W of he U S Gowithout the approval of the Superin- ' ays t.. vernmen~.

~~e~~:tm~~tD~::~S::e ~~~~;~:y.AU re- FIRST FEDERAL.OF FALL RIVERSchools will.reopen September Ci, 1961. '

'2'l-Aptitude Test-:-Grade IX '.

Planning No Payment.For Seized Schools

COLOMBO (NC)-'-The Churchwill receive no, compensationwhen Catholic schools in Ceylonare taken over by.ttfe state thenation's new Minister' of Educa­tion has announced.

"It would be immoral for any­body to ask for such· compensa­tion," Badiuddin Mahmed de­elared i"'rt a speech in' the House.of Representatives.

The nationali;;;ationof Cath­olicschools in ·thissoutbeastAsian islandcountr;,' followedthe victory ot"the Great C-eylonFreedom party in the July elec-tions. ,,ceylon~s approximatelY'700,000

Catholics support .SOJN! 750schools, of which about 600 .aresiated for nationalization. MostChurch schools have been ' Fe:·ceiving ,government subsidieswhich help pay for maintenanceand teachers' salaries. The rela­tively few Catholic schools ,notscheduled for nationalizationwill receive no state aid.

husky, proved himself a goodsport by sleeping nights and notkeeping daddy up by walkingthe floors.

"I don't know ~hether Jim'will be an athlete or not," saidHerb, "but we're happy aboutthe way he sleeps."

J8[eart, Lungs and !LegS .

Standing in the doorway ofhis Olympic Village apartment,

,poised and confident, ready torepp the reward for all thoselong months of Spartan trainingand self-denial, Herb_ said:

"Fitness is in "the heart andlungs-and the legs."

Never beaten at the mile or1500-JP.,eter distance, this- polite,quiet-talking Aussie youth, aproduct of Christian Brothers

. education in' his native Perth,has been dubbed "The Animal"by frustrated four-lap rivalswho can't fathom his fantasticendurance. .'

The broiling Roman heat,which hit 108 degrees in theshade at Olympic'Village duringthe games' opening week, hasn'tbothered Elliott a bit. "I'msleeping just fine," he grinned.

He was one of those who at­tended theathleteli' audiencewith Pope John in St. Peter'sSquare on August 24. "I've been.over to St. Peter's ·two or threetimes already,"sa,id' Elliott:

First .Semester.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs.,Sept.15, 1960

Superintendent. of Diocesan

Calendar for 1960-61

4

Happily MarriedIt wasn't easy for the aston-­

Ishing Aussie who in 1958 ranthe niile under four minutes 11times while establishingtbeworld record of 3:54.5.

Today I:Ierb is happily. inar­ned and a father. He said re­cently that he doesn't have the"obsession" for track that he hadbefore he was married. But theRome Olympic evoked newsparks of incentive. "My wifeAnne was 100 per cent coop­erative with my training," Elliottsaid.

His son Jim.,("my wife callshiin)ames") - a 'six-month-old

January3O'-:"Begmni-Ag of "SeeondSemestel"

February'3-'-Distribution ,of Report Cards-Wd­

. 'yea!'1'7-Mid·winter Vacation begins at close of

school :day'2'l-Mid,.winter Vacation ends; ~lassee re-

$uDHKL . "

fleptember7-0pening of Schools

2O-Intelligence Test-"Grade IV and IX22-Intelligence Test-Grade VU ~ XI27-Aptitude Test-Grade' IX

Getober3-School Report due7-Principals Meeting-Elementary

12-Columbus Day-Holiday1'7-21-:Examinations-First Marking ·Period

. 28-Principals Meeting-HighDistribution ,of Report Cards-First

Marking PeriodJIlevember

I-Feast of All Saints-Holiday'·ll-Veterans Day-Holiday23-Thanksgiving Recess begins at close 4)f

sc~ool day , -:-'28-Thanksgiving Recess ends;c1tllJSeS

resumed28- 2-Examinations-5econd Marking Period

Deeember, , " . . ..'8-Feast ·of the Immaculate Coneeption-

Holiday ,9-Distribution of Report Cards-'Second

Marking Period23-Christmas Vacation begins.at -close of'

£chool day. ...,anuary .

2-Christmas .Vacation ends; ·classesre­sumed.

23-27-Mid-year Examinations27-End of 'First 'Semester

Second Semesiel'

See Has 62 ·PairsOf Priest-Brothers

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Therelire 62 pairs of priest-brothersIervIng in the ·Philadelphia arch-diocese. .

The 1960-61 .archdiocesan di­rectory. shows there are threefamilies with three priests each,and a family with priests whoare twins.

There ar-e 19 priests named. Ielly and 19 ·named Walsh", two

pairs 6f Kelly brothers and apair of Walsh. brothers. PriestSnamed Murphy include two·brothers; Gallagher, two broth­ers; . and Kane, two brothers.There are no brothers .among the14 priests named Dougherty.·

Herb Elliott Product of ChristianBrothers' School in Australia

ROME (NC) - Tousle-hairedand unshaven but br.ight-eyed,sharp and lean, Australia's Herb.Elliott stood impatiently await­ing his hour of Olympic glory.

And when that hour came,Elliot established a new worldrecord for the 1,500-meter run.His time was 3:35.6 minutes. His

. pace was so swift that the sixthman to finish, Dyrol Burlestonof the University of Oregon, alsobroke the old Olympic mark.lBurleston's time was 3:40.9. Theold mark was set by Ron Del~ny,the Villanova U. student whoran for Ireland in the 1956games. His time was 3:41.2.

Elliot is regarded as the great­est running machine among thezll-time ·mile immortals. For a1Qng time he has had his eyeson Rome and the games. He hasendured agonizing disciplines,has eaten raw oats and cabbage,sprinted torturously up steep

.. sand dunes to develop resistanceto fatigue, and· punished his'mind and body for months.

Page 5: 09.15.60

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Conferenc;:e Supports Urban Affairs PlanWASHINGTON (NC) - U. S.

Senator Kenneth B. Keating ofNew York has praised the sug,..gestion of the National CatltolicConference for Interracial Jus­tice that a Federal urban affairsdepartment be established.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs.,Sept.l~, 1960

M-K Restaurantfeaturing

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Hyannis TournamentHyannis members of Father

McSwiney Council, Knights ofColumbus, will bold their annualgolf tournament Sunday, Oct. :&at Hyannisport golf course.

"--------COCA4)IA~~ ~. Of' FAIl~

, ENTER LAY MISSION FIELD: Following a year oftrainingaa lay missioners by the Aid to International.Development (AID) of Paterson, N.J., this family will livefQr two years in a South American mission area. Mr. andMrs. Sam McmdeIlo, of Detroit, brief theirehildren, leftto right, James, Judy and John on places they will be seeingsoon. NC Photo.

Asserts~ Labor Has OpportunityTo Aid World's Underprivileged

WASHINGTON (NC)-Organ- poor. These actions sprun/t fint. ized labor bas the unique oppor- of all from the deep CompassiOiltunity of focusing the conscience of his own heart, but they wereof the nation and the world OIl also meant to give example t.the . problems of downtrodden the world." .and underprivileged Peoples, a .ChrlstiaD Dutypriest told • group of labor Father Cronin said that "per_leaders here. sonal interest" in tbe poor farm

"You have the power and the workers and migrant. laborers, inprestige to be their spokesman Negroes. and PuertQ Ricans 'andand ..advocate,?' Father John F. in slum dwellers is "primarily aCronin, S.S., declared in a ser- Christian duty hnd opportunity."mon at the annual Labor Day The priest told the labor lead­Mass in the Shrine of the Sacred era "In unselfish devotion toHeart. the needs of others, we find our'. After the Mass, William C. greatest happiness and peace. NoDoherty, president of the Na- one is. more courageous or morwtional Association of Letter Car- free than the man wbo is notriers, laid a wreath before the seeking anything for himseU.statue of Cardinal Gibbons, for- "The strength of those dedi­mer Archbishop of Baltimore cated to tbe needs 'of the unfor­who championed the rights of tunate is nore than humany" belabor. .added.

If workers in the labor move- Stating that the greatest chai..ment in the United States made lenge facing America today UIIt their concem. to visit boma a challenge of "mOl'al leader­of victims of povert, and dis.- s!llp," Father Cronin declared:crimination and to sbare the "We are judged by what wehuman concerns of the unfortu- are, not by what we bave. Therenate Father Cronin said, U. S. is no for'ce .stronger than 'Chria­aoci~ty would be transformed. tian devotion and compassion u..

Father Cronin, who is the u- fighting the moral rot of se1&­sistant director of the Depart- seeking and sensualit)- .....ment of Social· Action, NationalCathol~c Welfare Conference,cited the example of Pope Johnon his visit to Regina Coeltprison in Rome.

He has frequently left theVatican to visit the sick," FatherCronin said, and "be has giveRdirectly and personally to' the

1..ay Mission WorkersPlan GO,tham Session

NEW YORK (NC)-Tbe Sec­end National Lay Mission COIl­ference will be held at Manhat­taD College, Nov. 25 and 26,co-sponsored by the College andthe Committee for the LayApostolate.

Keynote speaker at the eoo­l.erence will be lames T. BarrW~.. assistant ezecutift d!nict4reI. the~ ... IiMica. Cu~

see Planning ServiceFor Married Couples

NEWARK (NC)-:A new com­m.unity service for couples hav_Ing "serious marital difficulties"will be started in the Newark:archdiocese.

Only couples who have ex­hausted other metbods of solvingtheir problems will be accepted.The program will consist of aIS-week series of group discus­aons.

Wives and husbands will meetID separate sections on tbe sameDight. Each group is to be self­governing and will decide theDature and extent of its topics illanswer to the needs of individ­uals in the group.

Spiritual BondsLink CatholicsOf Americas

PIURA (NC)-The specialties that link North andSouth America were stressedby a U.S. cardinal-at Peru'BNational Eucharistic Congress illthis city, the nation's oldestSpanish settlement.

Richard Cardinal Cushing,Archbishop of Boston, speakingto the congress as Papal Legateat its opening session, said thatPope John "was paying specialb'ibute to the special ties whichunite North America and SouthAmerica when he chose me, aNorth American, to representhim here."

The Cardinal continued:"It seems to me that we have

DOt only a common origin ashumans and creatures of God.but a common destiny as Amer-

. teans, North and South, ill theprovidential plan of God.

Redeemer 01 AllWfhe same Christ redeemed WI

all. Christ is the sole Redeemeref all the nations and tribes 01.lIlen. But Christ oUr Redeemer.. in a special way /I bond 01.Catholicism in NOI'th and SouthAmerica.

"Both our continenta were&st explored and first .ettle4lbJ' Catholics at a period of greetCatholic faith and Catholic m.llionar)' zeal. These Catholic mia­8ionaries and explorers scattereaaU over the map of North andSouth America the name 01.Christ and the names of the mys­teries in which Catholics com­memorate the Incarnation, Deathand Resurrection of Cbrist.

"Lakes and rivers in my partef North America be'1.r the nameof Christ's Holy Cross; in otherparts of North America theDames of cities recall the faithof the Catholics who first settiedthere, names like Corpus Christiand Sacramento, just as bere inSouthern America names like'Vera Cruz and San Salvador re­all the same Christ and thosame Catholic faith in Him..

Litany of Saints."The place names of both our

eontinents include a veritablelitany of Catholic saints andCatholic doctrines concerning theBlessed Mother of Christ: SanDiego, San Francisco, Los An­geles, St.' Augustine and St.Louis among tbe cities.of NorthAmerica; Conception, Asuncion,Santiago, Sao Paulo and LaPazamong the cities of South Amer­tea.

"Under the patronage of thesearne saints, fired by the samefaith in the same Christ, pro­tected by the prayers Dl thearne Madonna, receiving the_me sacraments, participatingfa the same Holy Sacrifice of theMass, loyal to the same Vicar~ Christ, the part of the world'that we share, North and SouthAmerica, is united, tada)' moreChan ever, in the determinatiOll60 remain loyal to. the sameGod."

Page 6: 09.15.60

MONDAY-St. Januarius anaCompanions, Martyrs,'. who' died,in the'persecution under Diocie.tian. He was Bishop of Bene­vento. Because he and othenwere active in visitirig ChristiantJin prison and making converts.'they were exposed to wild beastebut were preserved from hana.Finally they were beheaded.Preserved in' the Cathedral oiNaples, the blood of the saint.,congealed' in two vials, now

'liquefies when brought near 'themartyr's head.

TUESDAY - St. Eustace llIrwiCompanions, Martyrs. St. E...

.stace was an officer in theRoman army under Trajaa.Losing his honors' and wealthbecause of his conversion toChristianity, he was later' sOUghtout by the Emperor, placed iIa

-command of troops and seDtagainst barbarians who hadiA.vaded the empire. Returning vie­torious he was reunited with h~

wife and children, but when bestill refused to sacrifice to tIMheathen gods, the Emperor con­demned him and his family ·titdeath; , .

WEDNESDAY - St. Matthe",Apostle-Evangelist. Also knoWilas Levi, he was serving as a lascOllector at Capharnaur.' whim bebecame a' follower of Ci'lliBt..LitHe is known of him after theAscension. Most opinion is tbeIhe remained for several years iDJudea where he wrote his Gospel

, and later became the Apostle cil-Ethiopia, where accounts of 'hili'martyrdom are extan~. His shrineis in Salerno, Italy, where hill

'relics were transferred in the10th century. ,

.'1 "Weekly 'Calendar()f Feast Days

TODAY-Feast of the Sew.... '. &rrows of the B~essed Moths.

The ·seven sorrows were: proph..~y ,of Simeon, flight into Egy~loss of Jesus in Jerusalem; meet.:.ing jesu~ on the way to Calv8r1standing at the foot of the Cr08ll,removal of Jesus' Body from theCross, and burial of Jesus. .

TOMORROW - SS. CornelbJIIand Cyprian, Martyrs. St. C~nelius,' a Roman, succeeded st.Fabian ·as Pope during Deciwfpersecution in 251. St. Cyprian,of noble birth led an evil life iJlbis,youth but in middle life Wall

· converted to Christianity, •· tered the,priesthood and became

Bishop 'of' Cartha·ge. He Wldldriven fi'oin the city' during 'UMtpersecution of Decius, later w.recalled and subseQuentl,. wMbeheaded i~ 258.

SATURDAY-Feast of the 1m-"pressi,on of the Stigmata on ~

Body of St, Francis of ASsisi. Ja1224 on the desolate mountain­side of La Verna, the foun·cte.of the Order of FriarS Minor~lOOived the impression on' hieflesh of the five wounds of OurLord. .

,SUNDAY 7-' Fifteenth Sun4q· after Pentecost. Generally thiedate is the feast of St. Joseph. OfCupertino; Confessor. He Wall

,born in 1602 and with difficulty·obtained admission as a Broth.erin . the Friars Conventual;. but

- due to his rare spiritual gifts 1M'was promoted to the ,priesthood..Through his intercession,', nia..-miracles were, wrought both duJi-· ing his life and after his deatlilat Osimo in 1672.

" ,One Wai··..We.-Need·~""

IHE.ANCHGR-Diocese.oHall River'-:;-Jhurs.;Sept.·15, ·1960··':~ • .'. '. ~ ~ .. '. \ .. . • • • .' -:.' I ... '. • .. ' : ", .' 1 .' ' _ : ~ •

(®rh." e

·,Says .Diligen·t 'Preparaton'Underlies Today's 'Dialo9~

. ' By Most Rev. RobertJ. Dwyer," I>\D., .~ishop of R;eno ' :

It is a.prinCiple universally. acknowledged, as Jane<AustiJi .w9tild 8~Y" that each Stlccessive generation regards.. its immediate predecessor ·as either inept or ridiculous. Byturns we are amused or ~nfuriatedby the doings and sayingsof the contemporaries' of our Now in the nature of things,parents. IIow cou~d they and for the definition of tiie-h~ve been so. blind,. we ask" 'truth; controversy cannot be al­SO imperviolJs to the ob- together .avoided. If it is forcedvious? How could they have upOJ:! us it must be answered. Butworn such ill-fitting and taste- it is instructive to· note that the1 e s s clothes? ,Holy See, when it defines iftHow could they' . dogma or morals, never does so'have lived in by way of engaging in debates u c h morbid with those outside the household.'h 0 use s, and ·It assumes, rather, that thehow could they positive statement of the truthhave left the ,must be self-evident to all whoseworld in,. such .hearts and minds are open toa mess' for us 'grace.

Th e B t'h d Be to tidy up? P Human Pride,elr ro ers-an IS There are 8 It goes without saying thatIt is disturbing to read .the newspaper reports of ra~ial' thousand ways there have been mistakes made

l> in which this in the past in the field of Cath-and religIOUS preJ'udice that' is rearing up not ohly in lands "P ta ' I . 1prij1ciple could ohc- rotes nt dla og. It IS a-acrOSS the sea but in various sections of this country as be illustrated. Of late our atten- ways difficult to isolate the the­well. ' . ' tion has been riveted on one in ological problem at issue from,

Lest reading about. these unhappy events introduce particular, the question of reli-· the political or socia', matrix intoo much c,omplacency; Catholics have been asked by a gious unity. A reading of the which it is imbedded.

'current literature dealing with Theology, in other words, is.speaker at the recent Liturgical Week to examine their the ecumenical movement, or .seldom disassociated from theown attitude toward Protestants and Jews and those with with the promotion of the "dia- prejudices of the tl)eologians.no belief. log",certainly fosters the im- And in an era when religion was

Father Thomas Carroll of Boston's Guild for the Blind pression that until this genera- hopelessly entangled' with ques-tion came along, 'by the grace tions of political privilege or

ealled certain attitudes and prejudices among Catholics "as of God, nothing had been' done social advantage, all the goodobstacles to the external 'visible unity of all men in Christ, to heal the wounds of Christen- will in the world was helpless toshari,ng a common sacramental. life in a visibly ordered 'dom. disentangle it.Body under Heaven, with a common lovt! for His word, a The image of the past thus How many attempts to reach,

d h f h. d prOJ' eeted suggests that until a . plane of understanding have

ept o. c arlty towar one' another, under that' sh,epherd b f t t d b f f ., yesterday Catholics and Protest- een rus ra e y reason 0 ae'-whom Christ has placed to lead His fl~k.'" ants spent their time glaring at tors which had nothing 'to do'

Love of God and love of neighbor-these .are not . each other, calling each, other with theology as such, but every­simply dogmas· caIIingfor intellectual assent. Rather; they' 'narnes, and sedulously avoiding thing to do with human pride.

h b f' anything which might mitigate Clearer Perspe'ctive

aretrut s to live y" a~ts to ~eave into the very warp ,. . the quarrel. Then somebody in- Nevertheless, if there is someand woof of one's life, beliefs that m'ust show themselves' vented the te~ "dialog." hope for the dialog today it i.iJ\,the thoughts.one thinks and ,the 'words <me spe.aks a:n~ :D.'7th Centur,. Figures because there has been a slow,actions. one performs. As Christ was revealed to the dis- . This of CQurse is widly inac-, painstaking preparation for it.eiples at Emmaus "in the; b,reaking of bread/' so too is Our, predecessors' were by. 'no, ' . curate. ;Long before the new . means unaware of, the p'roblem,He revealed tQ the mode11l:day world in' the charity of term was'coined, and by long we by .no means disinterested in it.mind and, word and action 'of His followers.' mean'centuries, 'men of good will They may have found it diffi-

" " on both sides of the controversy . ,, While 'His followers de.plore preJ'udice, of a racial' or.,' cult to go about it, and their ef- than the heart. Yet thl's dl·"ta~'~ad dedicated ,themselves to the ., ....

. religious bent in others, they too must ',examine' themselves ecumenical problem. ' forts may have met with innum- 'and remote prelate probably didlest their o~. lives' be· tainted by unworthy prejudice They had studied it theolog- erable disappointments and re- more to advance religious und~

ically, examined its political ,buffs. Still they tried, and the 'standing ir, the England of ht.toward their Protestant or Jewish or unbelieving brothers. . I ts ·t h -fact that they were not put 'off time than ,any oth,er. .Th ' b th d' H' ' and socia aspec ,even I s et -elr ro ~rS-anls. I l' Ii t' d h d by·the outbreak of bitterness and Elected to membershl'p m' ........no ogica Imp ca Ions, an a .....

mapped out areas of understand- fanaticism which have marred Athenaeum, forum of the lead.-the Christian record stands to 'ing intellectual and sclen,i--,ing and sympathy which could ~

be enlarged' with the passing of their enduring credit. figures of the age, he, spread W._time and the cooling of human . Cardinal Manni~ talents, his brill-iance, his keeiapassions. We were struck; la'tely, by an 'wit,. to destroy the cornino.i

There is much that we of today Instance in point. Few church- Pr.otestant image of the obsc.....eou'ld learn fi'om such 17th cen;" men' of the 19th cen:'tury were as antist. Roman priest. RUb~.tury 'figures 'as. the Prot'estartt rigid in, their orthodoxy as Car-' shoulders with Anglicans ...philosopher' ~ibniz ana the, dinal Manning. Vigorous cham- agnostics, even' with the ..Catholic lreriicist Fenelon. pion of the'definition of papal .~oubtableThomasHuxley,~

, /. . .' infallibility, he ·tended. to 'iook _lng, them in co1lrteous d'e~'~tter .Than Debate 'with suspicion upon 'all those lecturing them in turn witlMMe

It .. is' DO new. discovery, for,. who f3l1ed .to see' eye: to "'eye -fear or favor, he literally WGIIitell;ample, that "eonversations", with him in regard to timelinesS the prejudice out of them.. ~which meltrul: exactly 'the :S8me ' " 01' the sweeping character of· itt He found' the' relatio~.thing as "dialog",.are more Eruit- .definition. . ','. .:' '-'stlmulating, whik! for them ,.luI than debate..The controver- . ,So~ewhat eold in~ture, a ..was '8' rev~latiolL It: was cII8Iaf

,.lalist h~/1. ,to .Score' a' point;. ,he 'linn and uncompromising dlsci- .iIl the best selise. It is ,.well ...haS to· win bis argument. The plinarlan, b~ approach to con-' ~ U to' remember that 'we' ...inevitable reSUlt is bitterness OIl ,temporary' problems was em,,: • 'Standlng'on the shoulders 01.'-&be part'9.f' the !Hle·~1I/0I'steq. pbaticau, 'Qif the" beaG !'alba .: like, Carliin.a1 ~~I-,

," .. 6"• , I'" "

1.'._

",1"

.' .. .~ .

• f" •

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,... ~

OFFICIAL ,NEWSPAPER' OF .THE DIOCESE OF 'FAll 'RIVER·',~bli~h~d weekly by The Catholic Press of the'Di~es~of'Fan Ri~.

. . 410 .Highlc:i~d Avenue " '. ,-' .Fall River, '~ciS" ", OSborne' 5.i151. .

'PUBLISHER "Most Rev. James L' Connolly,D.D., 'PhD~

, ,: GENERAL MANAGER ': ' ASST. GENERAl: 'MANAGER' , '',: ;'·R·e~. Dan'ie. F~·Shalloo,. M.A~ . " Re~".joh'n p~ 'Dri~I" .":,

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Page 7: 09.15.60

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Aippeals for End"'Of,Discrimination

OKLAHOMA CITY, (~C) ­Appeals to end racial dIsCrim­ination in Oklahoma's restau­rants were made at Masse.offered throughout the statewideDiocese of Oklahoma City anelTulsa.

Bishrop, Victor J. Reed of Ok­lahoma City and'Tulsa suggestedthe sermon topic for SWlda,.Masses after he had issued a

,congratulatory statement to theGovernor's Committee on HumanRights for'recom~endingimme­diate and full desegregation.

'The cGmmitteerecommenlla­lions came as Negroes: were con­ducting sit-in campaigns in Ok...lahomf} City and other areas illthe state: '

'r.he GOvernor's committee, astatewide organization of ZOpersons appointed by 'Gov. .1.Howard Edmondson, called forintegration of restaurants on astatewide basis to minimizerestaurant owners' concern thatwhite patronage wouid drop off.

Bishop Reed, in a televisedstatement, congratulated thecommittee and said that "noaccident of birth, especially ofcolor or nationality, should everdeter citizens of the UnitedStates, especially fellow Chri9­tions, from respecting the proper

, dignity" of their fellow citizens."I fervently hope' and pray,"

, the Bishop said, "that the'publiewill give unqualified S'lPP ~:t til>the recommendation of the 'tiov..ernor's committee~"

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While out for 8 DriftStop a' this Delight(ul Spot.......•......,

and the Ladies' Altar SocietY.Last Spring a statue in front

of the church was dedicated tothe memory of Dr. .Jerome Mc­Caffery, or "Doctor Mac," as bewas known, who had served asa family physician in the townfor 20 years prior to his deathlast Fall. Townspeople of allfaiths donated to the erection ofthe memorial.

Father ThQmson hopes that In, Norton, which has few recrea­

tional facilities, the proposedparish center may become a hub,of., community activity.

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one of the most active CYOgroups'in the area. "

Other' organizations ,hi ttieparish include theCatholie'Women's'Club, which was estab­lished by, Father Conlon, theHoly Nam~ Society, which wMreorganize-d by Fathf'i' :thomso~

Earlier Adm. Anderson hadcalled on the Archbishop andattended Mass at the Barcelonacathedral.

During the visit of the fleet,Auxiliary Bishop Narciso Juban,.of Barcelona gave First ,Com­munion and administered Con­firmation to 14 officers and sea­men aboard the airplane carrierUSS Forestal. Some 500 membersof the crew attended the services.

Bishop' of 'Barce1oin~ ,Visits .Navy, Cruiser '

BARCELONA (NC) - Areb­'bish~p Gregorio Modrego 'yCas­aus, Bishop of Barcelona, ,paitl8 courtesy call On Vice Adm.George Anderson, commander cdthe United.· States Sixth' Fleet,aboard the cruiser USS De.Moines.

~ewActiyitiesHeadAt Stonehill, College

'Rev.' Richard M; Gorman;C;S.C., '8 native of Syracuse, isthe new director of student ac­tivities at Stonehlll College. '

A graduate of St. FranCis deSales High School, he receiv~d

his A.B. degree from the Uni­versity of Notre Dame in'195i.,He was ordained in 1955; andreCeived. an M,S. degree fromF()rdham University' in 1956. Heis working toward it ,doctorate.

, rath~r Gorman taught at Man":hattan, College and was dean ,atK'ing's College, ,Wilkes-Bar-:e,before assignment to StonehilLHe will' also be an instructor illth~ education dep¢ment: " '

Feels Church FacesStruggle 'in Congo..

ST. PAUL (NC)-The CathoUeChurch in the newly independ­ent Congo faces dangerous times,a Dutch missionary priest saysand it is the lay missionaries whomay be able to save theendan­gered Church there accordingto Father Sebastian Jongeriua.,W.F., veteran of 20 years in theWhite Fathers' African mifljions.

The difficulty for the Churchin the Congo lies in its closeidentification with the departingBelgian administration, he said.The Church has fallen heir to illfeelings 'the natives held againstthe Belgians.

''The Belgians did much foreducation, medical care and gen~

eral well-being of the Africans,but their method was to drivep~ple with 8 whip.;" he pointedout.

With the effecUveness of 'theBelgian missionaries now re- Veil'ezuelan Capital.tricted by African antagonism.the White Father added, pre- Has New Ordinary,.erving' the Church's spiritual VATICAN CITY (NC):"":P'opeand material gllins' dependS oil iohn has' named 57-year-old.Uve priests. ' I, Al'chhishop 'Jose Quintero to' be

F· S hi" Archbishop of Ca'rac~, Vene-, " Inance coos ' 'zwHa. He now serveS as' Coad:'LOl':'lDON, (NC)-The gov~tn-: ji.ttor Archbishop cit 'Meri~ 1;1i.$

ment, provided full maintenance native See. ' " ,"tDr2,1l7 Catholic sChools fa' The Ca'raclts see in'theVene­England and Wales' at the begin.:. zuelan 'capital has been "vacantDing of last year, giving' fre. since 'Archbishop Rafael Ariaseducation to 548,340 CathOiici BlancO' died in au! automobilestudents. ',! accident' Iast septei:Dbet~'" "'!

Repoit CatholicPopulation Rise':?In South Korea'

'$EOUL (NCj~uth KO:­rea's Catholic populatioocontinues to rise, but recentpolitical events caused ada.:.cline in the number of adult baP-:tisms and catechumens. ','

During the year ending J~eSO, 1960, the Catholic populationof the nation rose 34,563 to atotal of 451,642, according to theKorean Bishops' annual report.South Korea has a total popula.,tion of 22,655,000.

But the number of adult' ba~tisms was 12,252 less than in theprevious year. The nwiiber 'of~techumens-those taklng' 'in..:struction in Catholicism-ae:.:Creased from 87,575 to 58,86ll:' :

'A part of these declines is t.b~result of the inability Of' thesmall number of priests to copewith parish work.,nd convertwork at the same time. ' '" ;

Another cause was discrimina­tion against Catholics by theousted regime of fonner' Presi­dent Syngman Rhee.

St. Mtirf'~ :"Notlon,': \PlartS -Ere~tion, 0'1" CenterTo Become ~ub of",Corrunun~tY4ctivity,

, By Marion Unsworth ' , ,. 11,te rapidly gro~g oo~e~ town of Nortori,,:~hich includes Chartley, Barrowsv.lle,

~mnecunett, Norto~CeIlter; Norton G,rove and East Norton, comprises 8t. Mary's par­ISh. where Rev. Walliarri' D. ~omson is now Pastor. A mission ~hurch "of St. ,Paul'sChurch. T~un~on,since i~ founding in 1904; 81;; Mary's became asepar-ate parish in1923. ParIshIOners dunng ,that time had built a chapelat Battows Street and Taun­ton -Avenue~'This was usedfor religious services until thepresent church was erected.

Rev. John L. McNamara was ­named first pastor. He immedi­ately setnbout ,securing parish'properties" by purchasing landfor ,a church, and a, faqn'house" :-.1across,'~he stre~twhich he c~; ;",1verted mto a rectory" " , - ,','

'The cornerstone Of 'St. 'Mary'. 'was,-laid in' 1924,al,1d first serv­ices were held 'there later thaty-ear. Father McNamara re­mained at the new parish until1938, when Rev. James A.Downey was 8ppointedpastor!,

Silver JubileeDuring Father ,Downey's p~ ,

torate, the parish celebrated .itsSuf~er Discrimination " silver jubilee. In honor of tho

Since 1952 when Korea's lead- occasion. the 'interior of' the 'tog Catholic layman, former church was completely reno-'Vice-President and' present' vated. In July, 1951, Rev. Chris­Prime Minister, John M. Chang; tophet: L. Broderick' was named

,opposed former President Rhee's' pastor, followed by. Rev. Jameschange 'in the constitution, Cath- C. Conlon in June of 1954. ,olics have suffered periodic dis.' Three years later the presentCrimination. 'pastor, Father Thom~on, came

The discrimination was sever-' to Norton. Former Diocesanest in election years. The worst' Director of Catholic Charities,period was from September, Father Thomson is Director of1959, to March, 1960, when for,;.' the Central Council, St. VinCentmer President Rhee was elected' de Paul Society, and headed the,to a fourth term.' Since Prime drive f!)r the new regional schoollV,[1!"ist~r Chang belongs to, Hte to be located in Attleboro.J;>emocratic party, the Lib~ral, Because 'of the" increasingparty headed by Mr. Rhee ,be- Catholic population in the Nor­lieved all Catholics' were sup-: ton area, Father ·Thomson plansporters of the Democratic party., to build, a parish center which

For the six months preceding will include four schoolrooms, 11

,the ,March election the govern- _ gymnasium and an all-purposement used police pressure to room.persuade Catholics to vote for "With 460 children attendingthe Liberal party. Catholic gOV-' Christian, Doctrine ,classes, theernment workers who backed 'chureh is not lar,ge enough," thethe Democratic party were pastor ,explained. "We hope tothreatened with dismissal. Bish.. start the center in the Springop, Paul M. Ro, -{lear Apostolie and, it will be constructed soof Seoul made these charges that it, can be converted Into abefore the March elections this school." LaSalette Brothers" as-reat.. sisted ~y Confraternity teachers,

, Gradual IDcrease Utstroct the, children.,The result for ,the CathoUe With an estimated 2600 parish-

Church was a significant drop loners, representing a rapidin the number of adult Koreansgl"Owth in the past 10 years,taking instruction for baptism.' Father Thomson also ministersSome persevered, but many to Catholic students at Wheatonfound the pressure too' much. College. around which the toWllSince the overthrow of the Lib:" originally developed.eral party and Mr. Rhee in April Once a month during thethere has been a gradual iii- school, year, Catholic girls fromcrease in the number of adult Wheaton attend an informalKoreans taking instruction. seminar on various topics at St.

Korea's Bishops reported thilt, Mary'i. Father Thomson hasCatholics here are served by ,high words of praise for the252 Korean priests and 221 students' work for the church.foreign priests. Active CYO

,St. Mary's curate, Rev: BernardSullivan, who was appointed toth~ parish shorUy after his', 1"-------------­ordination in 1959, is also a well-' ,known member,of the,commun-

Page 8: 09.15.60

: ,THE ANCHo.R~Diocese of Foil River-Thurs.,Sept. 15, 1960 ,ForI' River- ClubSets Reception

The Catholic Woman's Club ofFall River will opep the Fanseason with an open meetingat 8 Tuesday night, Sept. 20 inSacred Heart School aUditorium.A style show, coffee hour andreception for the club moderator,Msgr. John J. Kelly, will be on 'the program.

Registration for members wiltprecede the meeting and MrS:Michael J. McMahon, president,announces that during 1960-1961,golden anniversary '.'ear for theclub, fines will be suspended forfor~er J!lembers wishing to re­join. Goal for the year is to haveeach ,member' sponsor a :friendfor membership. ', In addition to regular monthly'

,meetings, an anniversary cele-'bration is ,planned for April 30;1961, feast day of St. Catherineof Siena,' club patroness. :, For the' September inee~ing,:Mrs: Emile Cousineau and Mrs;Alfred Berube will be coffeehour co-chairm~nand Miss MaryE. Sweeney will be chairman'of the hospitality committee. .

Fall River District' .oneNames New Officers':, New oUicers for 'Fall -River'

District One of 'the DiocesanCouncil of Catholic Women have'been, announced by Miss HelenChace, president, as fo~lows:

Miss Mar~ret ~ahey, chairmanof arrangements for the Bishop'sBall; Mrs. Raymond A. Poisson,spiritual development chairman;Mrs. John Sullivan; Family_,Parent Education; Miss MaryCabral, Youth.

Also Miss Mary Kirby, Dis­cussion Groups; Mrs. Edward P.~

Riley, Organization and Devele"opment.

,,'

Grail to Give Training:To Papal Volunteers

NEW YORK (NC)-The Grail,international movement forCatholic lay women, will trailllLatin American young womenin the U. S. for the lay apo!?tolateas "Papal Volunteers" in, theirhome countries.

The 'Grail program\ is .are-,sponse to the Holy See's call for"Papal Volunteers" from boUnof the Americas to aid the'Church in Latin America.

The first group of candidatea,from South and Central Americawill begin the intensive year'a'course of preparation ,on J~n. 20~

Special Attentioa'

"I remember with' special af­fection the shrine of Our Ladyof the Woods because she wasthe smile of' my childhood, the'custodian and the encourage­ment of my priestly vocation. '

"I always went there on pil­grimages with a profound feel­ing of tenderness which has not'diminished during the years ofmy'long service of Our Lord, ofHis Church and of His souls."

Pope J~hn visited, the shrinein 1954 when as Cardinal Ron­calli he crowned' the image ofOur Lady of the Woods and thenagain two months before hiselection to, the papacy.

, I "

The Family FavoriteAt School, or ot Home

0'

OS 8-5286 ,14RMS...;A. QuafmJ Atdk

'd" DAIRY, PRODUCTSa~, " ,~ ,'0, . ,

Penny For Penny,Yow Be~ ~Ood Buy

BYZANTINE 'LITURGY iN 'BRAILLE:' Blind,MichaelSupa, of Binghamton"N. Y., presents the first Braille copy,in English of the Divine Liturgy of St. Joh,n Chrysostom forblessing by Father Alexander' Maczkov, pastor of HolySpirit Church there. The 124-page book w.as transcribed byMrs. Alice B. 1annoli' of Boston. NC Photo.

Pope Sends Necklace for S'ta,tue'Of Our Lady in Native Vi Ilage

SOTTO Ii. MONTE (NC) - ' ,"All the shrines of Our LadyPope John° has sent a precious ared~ar to me. I have,visited sogold necklace to adorn the sta-' many, the one at LOurdes attue of Our Lady of the, Woods least 1.0 times, and countlesshoused in a shrine about 'six others 10 the east and west.miles from. this village in whichbe grew up.

The Pope sent the necklace to'Giovanni Cardinal Montini,Archbishop of Milan, and askedhim to take it to the shrinewhere the Pope and his familyprayed -together more than 70years ago.

,The necklace had been pre­sented to Pope John by ArturoFrondizi, President of Argen­tina, as a gift of his country'sCatholics. Cardinal Montiniplaced the necklace around theneck of the statue during a cere­mony at the shrine.

In a letter to the Cardinal ac­companying the necklace, thePope wrote:

Are You Wearing A'Pretty Hat?

It's'~!;,.

, Southem New EngIaRdi. ,Largest MiIliftet'Y Fashion StoN 'l~ SOUTH /MIN STIIEEI'

fAU RJVER

Pamphlet Leads FamilyTo Lay ,Mission Fie'ld, - ·DETROIT (NC)-A pamphletselected'from' a church magazine,rac~ sO impressed ,aSt.'~artin'sparishioner here that he' andhia

, family volunteered three, yean'of their lives 'for J.8y ,'missionwork. ' " '. ,.

In Januarj,,19S9, Sain Mon~J.­

10 and his, wife Mary read apamphlet published by the Asso­ciation for, International Devel­opment (AID):' which recruitsand trains laymen for work hi

, underdeveloped nations. I~headquarters are' located inPaterson, N., J. " ,

At Mr. Mondello's insistence,th~ couple investigated the po~­

sibilities of using their talents" for apostolic work In some ove~-

seas mission, post. The Mondellosand their three,children are now

, in Paterson where they will, com,­'pletea nine-:-mont1:' / training"course to prepare them for worJtas teachers' in ~uth America. ,-

Ma~ymountNun to Hea~

New California CollegeTARRYTOWN (NC)-Mother

M. du Sacre Coeur, president ofMarymount ColleGe here in NewYork, has been named presidentof the new four-year MarymountCollege at Palos Verdes Estates,~alif. ,,'

A native of' Halifax, N. S..Motha- duo Sacre Coeur has'spent 33 ye,ars on the Marymountcampus as instructor in classics,dean of studies and for, the pastseven years as president of the,~llege. '

: 'Provincet~wn ~DAThe Provincetown ,unit of the

'Catholic T)aughters of Americawill resume, 'meetings at 7:30Tuesday evening, Sept. 20 at St.Peter's hall. A travel motionpicture will be shown. Installa­tion of officers and the annualCommunion ,breakfast will be

'beld in ,October.

Sense of proportion 'ImportantIn P,lanning Balanced Garden

, By Alice BOugh Cahill "Sometimes we find ourselves giving considerable

thought to' the interior ,of o~r house, disregarding com- 'pletely its outside appearance. From September, throughNovember, howeYJlr, true gardeners ~re planning theiryards' for next season. Peo- . you'll want to remember thatpIe start planting new grass It IS always better to un.derplant

d ' h d I a home and add somethmg laterseed an sOlne ar y annua than to layout • jungle andseeds. (I have been told that gradually hack it away. Over­larkspur are especially good fall- planting, like overdressing, is in,sown. It's fun to' see the seeds bad taste. ,p 0 p,u p the If yours, is a homer, cottage,first thing' in you will aim for a cozy, neatSpring.) . effect of a dooryard garden and

We'd' like to old-fashioned flowers. You can• u g g est' that get it homey" cozy effect i.viJh

, when ' you' are climbing roses, Ii couple ofplanning , your shruDs, ,old - fashioned sty ~ egarden ,for the 'flowers, ,like the gardens, sur-S p r i Ii g, . you rounding Cape Cod houses. 'save space for' Simplicitr, Restraint'. !'Mary Gar- For a dignified 18th centuryden." , place, you should aini, for sim:'

In medieval plicity 'and re,straint. Think oftimes it waS a',: "the lovely Williamsburg gard-Christian custom to' plant ,Mary ens. In that restoration as muchGardens, which were m,ade up consideration has been given toof alltheflowe~sand,herbs t~at the gradens as to the interior of'are ,especially conhect~d 1;Iy love ,the, house~. Clipped ,boxwood,and lEigend" with t~e Bles~ed paths and flowers are planned,

- Virgin. 'Old' records descr~be to point up the structure of gar,,:such' gar:dens as 'planted wI~h dens and 18th century houses.eolumbine, lily-of-the-yalley, Some modem a,nd ranch-typefoxgloves, snowdrop,' Madonna ,houses challenge the gardene.r.'lilies, violets and roses. ' , Such houses can either be set m

In a typical Mary Garden, the a rigid frame of shrubbery,statue of the Madonna occupies sometimes, precisely clipped to• place of honor. , acc.ent the squa.re-cut lines of

'Planting time for Spring- the mode~n archl~ecture,or con­flowering bulbs starts with Sep- trastfed

fvI.lvidlY Whilth

h~eat ~assf­

tember and, can continu~ into' es 0 0 lage, w c 18 my pre -N' b 01' as long, as you erence.

ovem rc:.' the soil. ,Think how You don't have to be an exp.erte~~ttw~ulips and daffodils, lin- to plan the proper plantmgkg t~e walk to your front door, around your house, but you dowill look in the early Spring. ne~ to have a sense of pro­They seem to say, "Welcome to portion.

our house." Charity Ladies,to HearDaffodils, 'hyacinth and cro- d I

'euses should be planted as early Los Angeles Car inaas you can get the bulbs, whereas NEW YORK (NC) - Jamestulips can wait a few weeks. ~t's Francis Cardinal McIntyre ofadvisable to start witn good Los Angeles, will addr~ss thequality bUlbs from reputable first national assembly of thedealers, and follow ~irections American Association of thegiven, such as ChOOSll?-g spots Ladies' of Charity of the Unitedwith reasonably good soIl, places States here. The four-day as­where no' water will stand and sembly, starting Friday; sept. 23,where there'll be no one tramp- will be held in conjunction withlog. , the golden jubilee National Con-

Get Ready tor Bed ference of Catholic Charities andannual meeting of the St. Vin­

, It has been said of these Fall cent de Paul Society.months that they are the "get- The Ladies of Charity areready-for-bed" time and it is members of an international or­well to take advantage of the ganization of'Catholic lay womelldays one can work outdoors now who' volunteer their personalto assure that gardening.will run service in' works of charity.more smoothly when the rush From an original association ofhits next Spring. Beds and gar- 52 French women under' thedens spaded now and left to leadership of St. Louise de Mar­mellow with freezing will gain illac, organization patroness, it'time in getting your early has grown toa present world'planting done. membership of 450,000 in 27

Foundation planting around countries, including 16,000 mem- ,your house can enhance the ar- ,bers in 4S U. S. dioceses.chitecture. It builds up desire..able 'features; hides '.imperfec~

tions; it softens; it ,rounds out;it blends the man-made struc:"ture into the landscape.

This bleridiitg means planning.Before planting a' single shrub,you should choose the effect youwant. This Is a calie ,of, the oldsaying, "Accent the positive"­emphasize your home's charae,.ter rather than neutralize i~, '

, "

Page 9: 09.15.60

9

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~SS3,HEATING OIL

CENTERPaint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint

IJR~~S-~ 422 Acush, Ave.Q,.~3Dfi cor, Middle St-

, PARKINGNew Bedford

SAVE MONEY ONYOUR OllHEATI~ t~!I1.~~=

(;IfllA~l\.rn~ If. \'I'b\~@b\~

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fore5~el1's lEiedMrs, Lena Matthews will serve

as chief ranger for the coming ~season for St. Ursula Court,New Bedford unit of the CatholicOrder of Foresters. Mrs. AgnesDonnelly will be vice chiefranger; Miss Dorothy A. Tripp,recording secretary; Miss Kath­leEm V. Coholan, financial secre­tary; Miss Margaret ,Connelly,treasurer. "

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Sept. 15, 1960

Nurses to HearPapal Knight

Robert V. McGowan, K.S.G.,former chairman of the Dioc­esan Catholic Charities Appeal,will be guest speaker at the FallPlenary Meeting of" the FallRiver Diocesan Council of Cath­olic Nurses, to be held at St.Mary's Home, New Bedford, at7:30 Monday night, Oct. 10.

Rev. John F. Hogan, modera­tor of the Greater New BedfordGuild of Catholic Nurses, willofficiate at Benediction to openthe meeting. ,

Newly appointed standingcommittee chairmen for thec9uncil include Sister Marie-As­cension, St. Anne's Hospital,membership and program; Mrs.

, Dorothy Koczera, New Bedford,~piritual welfare; Miss Mary 1..'McGrath, 'Taunton, education;Sister Madeleine' Clemence, St.Anne's Hospital, legislation. '

Also Mrs. Mary, C. McCabe,Taunton, constitution' and by­laws; Mrs. Carlotta Robinson,Attleboro, finance;' Mrs. Cath­erine C. Connelly, Fall River,nominations; Mrs. Kathleen' G.Sherry, Fall River, publicity.

A nurses' retreat will be heldthe weekend of Nov. 11 at OurLady of Good Counsel RetreatHouse, East Freetow:n.

ELAINE F. MURPHY

TIte ,sign 01 Qualify.

*NortOR * No. Easton * E. Bridgewater

,* Ra~~lph ,* Plainville

cmd the new BrocktOn East Shopping Plaza

. BEFORE YOUBUY - TRY

PA'RKMOTORSOLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile· Peugot • Renalttr1 Middie Street, Fa1rhaven

;, ' ,New ,Beol~ord TeO!The Catholic Woman's Club of

New Bedford will hold its annualopen house ,and tea from 3 to 5this Sunday, Sept. 18, at theclubhouse. Mrs. Vincent J.Worden, first vice ,president, iachairman of the committee p~an­

ning the affair.

Vets, ·to HonorLeprosy Hel per

NEWARK (NC) - The Cath­olic War Veterans will, honorHoward E. Crouch, founder anddirector of the Damien DuttonSociety which dispenses fundsto aid victims 02 Hansen's dis­ease.

Mr. Crouch, of North Bruns­wick, will be given the organiza­tion's Celtic' Cross citation onNovember 19 at the 25th anni­versary dinner of the CWV De­partment of New Jersey in Mili­tary Park Hotel here.'

Presentation will be made byJames W. Fay of, Brooklyn,N.Y., natlonal.CWV commander.

Mr. Crouch!s a teacher ofbiological sciences at CalhounHigh School, Merrick, Long Is­land, and weekend administra­tor 9f Memorial Center for Can­~er and Allied, Diseases, NewYork City. He first became in­terested in the plight of the vic-

, tims of Hansen's disease (lep­rosy) in Jamaica, British WestIndies, while'stationed there aoan American medical corpsmanin World War II.

He interested fellow GIs tomake contributions for the wel­fare of the victims. After his dis­charge from the service he''founded the Damien Dutton So­ciety to continue the work.

The society is a world wide or­ganization, dispensing its fundsthrough the National Office ofthe Society 'for the Propagation

,of the Faith.

ATWOODWOIL ,COM'PANY

SHELLHEATING OILS

Soulll • Sea Sts.'Hyannis:' ' : Tel. tty, In

College Seeks FundsCLEVELAND (HC) - Notre

Dame College for women haslaunched a $1,350,000 fund-rais­ing campaign for new construc­tion on ita campua here. TheCatholic women's college wasfounded in 1922 and is Conductedby Sisters of Notre Dame.

,Sister~ of St. MarthaOpen Vocations Schoo~

WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Anew school of religious vocaf'ionshas been opened at St. Michael'llCollege here in Vermont by theSisters of St. Martha.

Young women from 18 to 20will be given employment at St.Michael's. They will be paid IIsalary, given board and lodgingand instructed on the life ofprayer and elements of religiouslife.

Following a trial period, I!!.l

applicant can enter a novitiate 'soon to be opened. The Sisterllteach and do domestic work inreligious institutions and rec­tories. '

Together with the Diocese ofPonce, the Arecibo diocese andthe Virgin Islands prelature nul­lius were made suffragan Seesof the new San Juan archdiocese.

Archbishop, Davis said thePope's action was "a tribute tothe zealous clergy, devoted Reli­gious and good and generouofaithful" of Puerto Rico.,

Two Attleboro Girls Postulants,At Sisters of Mercy Novftiate

Two Attleboro girls are among Tiffany Street, a member of St.this month's entrants to Mother Stephen parish, Dodgeville.of Mercy Novitiate of the Sis- Miss Condon is a graduate ofters of Mercy, Cumberland. St. Xavier Aca..1emy, Providence

They are Miss Marilyn L. Con- and Miss Murphy of Dominicandon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Academy, Plainville.J. Harry Condon, 42 Veery Road,a member of St. John the Evan­gelist parish; and Miss ElaineF. Murphy, daughter of. Mr. andMrs. ,Cornelius J. Murphy, 56

Gir!s' COJrrniva~ Bene~it$

li~~le Hospi~Q~ P.Oltien~$DEN:VILLE (NC)-Yoimgsterll

in the children's wing of St.Clare's 'Hospital 'here in NewJersey soon will have small rock­ing cbai'rs as a result of thta

• generosity of four grammarschool girls from White MeadowLake. "

The girls are Wendy Drobes,Barbara Rosenstein and Bonnieand Helen Block.

For the secORd time in tw@years the,..' ran, their Own car­nival for the' benefit of St.Clare's. They' raised $73.20 andturned it over to the hospitalwith the request that somethingbe bought for the childrens'wing.

Church Reorgan~zat~onof Continued Growth

Research Grants'.JAMAICA (NC) - St. J~

University has received twochemistry research grants total.­ing, $26,000 from the PublicHeaith Service of the U. S. De­partment of Health, Educationand Welfare. An $18,000 awal"dto tlhe N. Y,. institution is a ~newal . ',irant' ..for a ,three-yearstudy of the structure of proteinsthat may prove valuable incancer research.', The other re­newal,grant for $8,000 involves'. study of the cells of fungi, oneof the causative agenta for ceotam skin cliIieasetL,' . " . ' ",.,

Irosh Sis~er$ of MercyPlan Ul. S. Convents

DUBLIN (NC)-Irish Sistell'Oof Mercy will open three foun­dations in the United States, twoin Florida and one in Alabama.

Sisters from Skibbereen,County Cork, have left forStuart, Fla., to start a school andconvent, and Sisters from Ciona­kilty, County Cork, have leftfor Weesconnett, near Jackson­ville, Fla. Mercy Sisters fromDublin will leave this month toestablish a foundation iD Ala­bama. "

Cistercian Lay SistersReceive First American

PRAIRIE DU SAC (NC)-Thefirst American to become a Cis­tercian lay Sister made her sim­ple vows at St. Ida's Conventchapel here in Wisconsin.

, She is Rose Takacs of NewYork City, who will be knownas Sister Mary Benedicta andjoin two SwIss lay Sisters whocame from the Abbey of Frauen_thaI in Switzerland three yearsago to found the only commuriityof Cistercian nuns in the West­ern hemisphere.

Two American novices to theCistercian community were in­vested by Bishop O'Connor atthe ceremony. They are MaryBurckhart of Yankton, S.D., andGenevieve Hannah of BeaverDam, Wis.

RegardsAs Sign

SAN JUAN (NC) - The ad­ministrative reorganimtion ofthe Church in Puerto Rico washailed as proof that Catholicism"has continued to grow andprosper.", The statement was 'made by

Archbishop James P. Davis ofSan Juan in III message to Msgr.Mariano Vassallo, Vicar Generalof the diocese. Archbishop Davwis now in 'Europe.

Pope ol'ohn recently establishedthe ecclesiastical province ofPuerto Rico. He raised the SanJuan See to the rank of archdio­cese, and established the newDiocese of Arecibo and the Prel_ature Nullius of the VirginIslands.

ishing old toothbrushes."What in the world?" we

gasped."That's the way you tip,

Mom," Ginny explained. "Youknow."

We didn't know, but, soonfound out.

Seems you cut holes in a bath­ing cap, pull, strands of. hairthrough, then "tip" them withperoxide. ,

"Just like whitecaps on' theocean!" Susie exclaimed delight­edly at the end of the session."Just exaotly!" the othersagreed.

To me, it looked as thoughSusie had been frightened as ababy and the gray hair was onlynow growing out. '

The reaction of Susie's mothermust have been quite the same.We noticed at Mass the nextmorning that Susie had a close­cropped hairdo - the hair IIlIlblack.

Appointment, anyone?

Mother Carolina Aga'"To Head Sisterhood

MORRISTOWN (NC)-Motb«Carolina hall been, reappointed... a .second six-year term 118 '

Superior of the American Pnw­tnce of the Religious TeacheqI'tlippini. A nati~e of BruU, she'joined the sisterhOod ~ 1918and came to the U. S. three yean 'later. Her prov,inee hu 'foilIDuDdatioM.

Home Ha'irstyles Frighten MomA£ Ginny and Pa;~ learn How

By Mary Tinney Daly ,Over the years, this 01' house has served many a' pur­

pose. Currently, it seems to be headquarters for hair­dresser trainees, Junior style, as Ginny and her gang tryout hairdos. It all began a few weeks ago when Ginnyannounced at dinner, "1can't, I just can't go aroundlooking like this any long­er!" running her fingersthrough sunbleached hair. "Haveit cut," advised the Head of theIt 0 u,s e. "I'lltake you, toBarney" myb,arber. ,Howabout tomor­DOW?"

"A barber?Ob, Daddy!"

, "Well" let itgrow," 'fromMary's side ofthe table, "It'llgO through anawkward stage,but then youean French-roll it."

Ginny viewed~herself in theglass front of the china closetend heaved a despairi"'~ sigh."It needs shaping. It needs ­well, something!"

'It was my turn to join theadvise and consent group. "O.K..if, you want to use your allow­ance for the beauty parlor, goahead. It's your allowance."

"But I want to go to the mov­las, too. And with my allowance,a person can't do both."~ ClllIi'Velll1 1Ra11l

This was a curved ball 'andwe sidestepped it.

'''That's right," we admittedcallously.

Talk went on to other thingsa3 Ginny realized that furtherdiscussion of the hair questionwould, by automatic rule of ,"nounpleasantness at dinner" landber in the kitchen.

Next day, she and somefriends assembled with a storeof hardware such as you couldnot imagine: fat tin rollers,skinny tin rollers, and all sizeoIn between; fuzzy rollers, plas­tic rollers; spray and goo.

Both movies and beauty par­lors were forgotten as the op­erators started operating on oneanother.

Saturday afternoons becameeoiffure sessions with resultsthat were', to say the least, as­tonishing. The neat hairdo ofCecy Morris, for instance, com­pletely becoming to her piquantface with its ready smile, wastransformed into a you-name-it~b.

After a tortuous experiencewith enough metal for a spacehelmet, Cecy emerged after thecomb-out, so bouffant that herown mother hardly recognizedher. A bit more air" into thatwhipped-up coiffure 'and Cecyeould have taken off sans pro­pellers,, Everybody in the gang, Useemed, was learning the knackof taking a head of ordinarybair and making it look .like 81

blown-up balloon.Of course, if we needed hot

water for the washing machine,it had all been drained off inthe upstairs beauty salon. WhenIt was time to bake a cake,eomebody's head needed theoven-scarcity of electric dryel'(i,

Final Fla8coFinal adventure came wheo

we returned from market lastSaturday and found the amateurbeauticians bus y "tipping."That's right, TIPPING. '

Susie, it seemed, wanted herbair "tipped" and came to herfriends for the job.' There satSusie, red bathing cap on herbead, with strandS of her blackhair sticking through holes. 1m­pIle88rios hovered about brancl-

Page 10: 09.15.60

J

For information about the

:. Moly' Cross Fathers, or" .Brothers, .write to:

,:HOly'. CROSS FATHERSNorth Easton, Massachusetts'

by

Teixeira

, As A HOLY CROSS FATHER .Pri~st.Teacher ..... Hame'_Mi5sionerI:oreigri MissionarY Parish Priest .

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Force of Religion"We propose religion as the '

principlEi of unity, motivationand guidance .for students and ­faculties in university life rec­ognizing that religion and reli­gious knowledge and· practiceare the forces giving meaning touniversity life ..•

"We believe that after yearsof public apathy a breakthroughtowards Christian justice is no~in sight, We stress the need ofsolid 'religious and moral edu:'cation to add a needed dimen­sion to the movement."

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." . ,-" ..~ " THE BROTHERS OF vHE ..S~CREO' HEART,

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Simpli'ficcit~onsContinued from Page One

Communion."Sacrificial Banquet

This should help the laity to'receive Holy Communion morefruitfully, with· greater under­

,standing that Communion is thesacrificial banquet. It will alsohelp the people to take part in

. the solemn concluding prayers'of the Canon and the whole·Communion rite beginning witht~e Our Father-all things urgedby the Holy See in the HI58 in­struction on liturgical participa- '

',tion,- ....0 clarify the rite of Commun_

ion, at Mass, the', Confiteor, .Misereatur, and Indulgentiamprayers wni be omitted. Theyare properly used only whenCommunion is given outside of'Mass.

No DupliCation'A' final change i.n' the rite of'

Mass was foreshadowed - in the19ii5Holy Week restoration.' At'sung MasSes the celebrant w'm'no 'longer read the "texts of theEpistle and Gospel which ~re'chanted by the subdeacon or'deacon. This eliminates a con­fusing duplication. It also points 'out more clearly the distinctionbetween the celebrant's role atMass-presiding over the wor-;shiping .community-and the'role of the deacon and su bdeacon, .who read the Scriptures to thepeople. .

In connection with the Scrip­hire lessons at Mass, the new:rubrics urge the preaching of a .sermon, particularly on Sundaysand holyd,ays. At the same~·time, .an abuse is corrected. A second 'priest may not preach while thecelebrant continues the Mass.Earlier, the Sacred rongregation 'of Rites made a similar prO­nouncement regarding devotion.al exercises' going on' duringMass or the public recitation of ,the Rosary, which is to be saidoutside of. Mass.

,The 'new code also states thaton all occasions during the yearwhen the i.nvitation to prayer

. "Flectamus genua:'. (Let U8

kneel) is given, the priest andpeople are to kneel for a time 'in silent. prayer. before the"Levate" (Arise) and the re~ita­tion of the collec~ by the priest.This extension of the 1955 Holy'Week changes' primarily affects

Continued (rom Page One ember Wednesdays and emberwhich the four seasons of the 'Saturd.ays.year are consecrated to God. 'These periods have received Dennisportsp'ecial recognition as "weekdaysof se.cond clas?'-second only to Continued from Page OneAsh Wednesday and the days of Seating capacity of the church

.. Holy Week. With the saine em- wjll be expanded from the pres­pl)asis, 'the Holy' 'See in 1955 ent 500 to 850. Work on the

. structure is beginning immedi-urged bishops to confer Holy l' IOrders on ember.: Satl,lrdays so a e y.th'at the prayer and fasting 'of' .••.------------­the people'might accompany the " .~. SEG UIN.ordination of priests, deacons,and other clerics. . lruck Body Builders

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',GUID:E NEWMAN CLUB Ji'EDERATION: .Newly elected officers l)f the NationalNewm'-an' ClubF_ed~ratiori are, left t'o. right, Edward, .Orlett,GEmej-al: Motors'. In'st"itli'te"first ·vice-president·; Joan, Proulx, Cal'negie. Institute, third vice-president; Edward'Pron- ~c1tin'ske, Uhiversity., of. Wisconsin, president; Glady~ .Merk~,:Texas.WOJheh's:Uilive~sity,.treasurer, and' Thomas Grange, Union College second vi(:e-president. ·NC PhOto.. ' :.

.Newman C.lubs· Urge' Univer,sity to :,'Revoke Order'.' CLEVELA1';lD (NC).:=....1he Na:' tions t~e' resolution cited the -: . At' the same time, the Na.:.

tional Newman Club Federation action as' potentially dangerou~", tionalNewman Chaplains' As-has- uJ:ged the board' ofregen'ts' to student .morality. sociatitm 'representing some 750of the University of' Arizona to . priests engaged in Newman"reconsider and ,rescind"· its Cite,s Twin Goa'ls Club work, issued a statement'earlier action 'removing reli- . calling upon college' and uni-giolts'centers·from the school's For..Catholics versity officials to encouragecampus. . :LOUISVILLE (NC)-A Cath- openly the work of various reli-

A resolution adopted at· the olic in America's pluralistic so- gious, organizations on theirFederation's 46th .convention campuses. '

~iety has the twin responsibilitieshere asked the regents to "ex- of "keeping the peace'" and The chaplains' statem~nt didpand the campus around these "helping the community," a past nbt mention the Arizona 10i­centers rather than put. them president of Fordham Univer- versity situation. It stated in',out of the projecte~ lines of ex- sity sa. id here. part:pansion."

Calling the action a departure .Father Robert. I. Gannon, S.J.;fl'om nOI'ms of secular education superior of the Jesuit Missionsin America. the resolution added residence in New York, exploredthat it is "an afront to the tra- these two' points in his keynoteditio'ns of true Americanism" and address at the convention of thedemocratic liberty." . National Federation of Catholic

Dangerous to Mora.tity College Students.Contrasting'the Arizona 'reg- "To keep the peace," Father

ents' action with "the' fine rela- 'Gannon said, "suggests the spirittions" existing at other institu- .. of conciliation" that has cha'rac­

terized the reign of Pope John.He said that. this conciliation in_volves "no compromise in anyessential matter, still less any I

acknowle'dgement of defeat."Rather it c'onsists in spreading

the' charity of Christ by imi tatinghis amiability, Father Gannon' Stress Christsaid.

He stated. that "too many ofus are living in the past, nursing ,slights ,of another generation,aloof from our fellow citizenswhere no aloofness is called for."

"We hesitat~ to join nOn-Cath­olics in social, charitable,. andrJlc~'eationalmovementsthat arecityw,ide and. even national," hesilid. '''Yet what is more condu­cive'to seeing God in the neigh­bor:than to work with'the neigh- .hoI' w~en the neighbor is at :hisbest ;working for others?"

Men's Co~"CiI OffersFilms for Showings

NEW YORK (N:C) -'The Na­tional Council of Catholic Men's '1960-61 film catalogue 'contains125 titles,' 'most .of them filmprints of televi~i~n programs.

,The catalogue, which listl_films . that can be rented 01' .

purchased by Catholic groups orinstitutions, includes topics suchas Catholic Classics, Liturgy and ':Do.ctrine, . Lives of the. Saints,' .Church History, Church Mu'sic .and Communism. Copies .of the 'catalogue can be .obtained from .the Film Center, National Coun:: ­cil of Catholic Men, 50 East 42nd .-St.; ~ew York',City.: . .

Christian BrothersHave .Ne·w· 'Provincial

PHILADELPHIA (N C) -Brother' Didymus. John,' vice­president and dean of the facultyat La Salle College 'here since1955, has been named provincialof the Baltimore provihce of the

. .Christian Brothers. .Brother .Tohn succeeds Brother

Edelwald James, who had beenprovincial Since 1954;' BrotherJames has. been assigned to the''staff at' La' Salle' College.

As provincial, 'Brother Johnwill' direct the . work of morethli'n 600 Christian Brothers who'conduct one college and· nine'high schools'in the central At­lantic states' and Ohio.

10 THE ANCHO.R-Thurs .., S·ept. 15, 1960',

Prayers for Cor-goCAPE COAST (NC): -:- The

· ~ishops of Ghana have appealed·for prayers, fo\- peace, brother­hood ,and prosperity·, in theCongo. Led .by ArchbishbP JohnK. Amissah of Cape: Coast, the'Hierarchy urged both': privateprayer and special prayers afterSunday ~ass.es. "

Delegates of Men'sGroups Meet Today

'Cameroon Terrorists ' WASHINGTON (NC)~Repre­Slay Missionaries \ sentatives from more than 50

YAOUNDE (NC) _ Two mis- U, S. dioceses and· delegates fromsionar'y priests and a Brother national organizations of Cath­have been killed by jungle-rov- olic men will attend a four-daying terrorists in the central part. "Presidents's Conference" of theof this newly independent National Counc'U of Catholiccountry. Men here beginning today.

· It is not known how many .According to Martin H. Work,· missioners' and n'ative 'priests NCCM's executive 'director, the., have died in the terrorism that meeting will include considera-'has plagued Cameroon for more tion of a proposed joint councilthan a year. But besides the of the NCCM and the Nationalthree, who were missionaries of Council of .Catholic Women, re­the Sacred Heart of San Poentin, vision of NCCM bylaws, and newa prie~t and. a Brother of plans for council,financing.the same community 'Were Associate Justice 'William J.

, wounded and four native priests Brennan o~ the U.S'.,. Supremewere taken prisoner, One of Court w.ill,· be ,the principal

· these !las since been freed. speaker,' ata . dinner Sunday.The California-sized country l Pdor' to the 'dinner,' a· panel of.

of 3,230,000 'people on Africa's • NCCM staff members 'wril dis­west coast is a former ,French-" cuss problems 'confronting dioc­.,administered territory.' It re-, esan organizations of Catholic

· ceived independence Jan. 1. Its men~ John Cornelius Hayes, deanCatholic population, numbers " of the law school at Loyola Uni": ­607,000. . , . varsity in Chicago and president·

. , of. the NCCM, will preside at the .Says Grace, .of, .God, .~ panel sessiori. ..

Keeps UN Gqing, . 'PIURA: (NC)-God is holding

'the United Nations together, the·president of the United Nations '· General Assembly, declared here.

Victor A. Belaunde,Peruvi~hUN delegate, noted the Unite,dNations has weathered a num­ber 6f very serious storms ·in itSshort histox:y. He-' cited disarm­ament .controversies,. the veto,

. 'Ko'rea, Suez and the 'Congocrisis; say.ing aU'have: threatenedto . topple the international or-ganization. .

. The fact that 'the' United, Na_'tions has surVived until now, fieasserted,. is "a .miracle of'God!sgrace." •The continued 'vigor ofthe·United Nations, he ,said, de­spite all the internal ills' it hashad' to overcome, should be evi­dence to mankind that God is in­terested in fts survival.: . ,

Plan New RomeChurc·h to Mark ..~Op_~'s Bi rthday·- VATICAN CITY (NC>' .~'The world's bishops, priestsand seminarians have, been

.asked to contribute toward'·the erection of a Rome church'to mark the 80th birthday ,ofPope John.

The. request_ was made byDomenico Cardinal TardiJ1i, Vat­ican Secretary of State. .

The' Cardinal, also suggestedthat Cathoiic laymen contributetoward the building of, a center .to house laymen, from missionareas' 'who came to Rome for .higher studies. , .J

. ,. Cardinal Tardini's propo~ls"WE!re contain'ed in a' letter dated '

,A'pril 20 which has been' made... ,p'\blic by Civilta Cattolica" Jes- .

·uit review' published· il'\ Rome. ' .Testimony of Love'

- ' The Cardinal'suggest'ed .thatthe' church be named' for St.'Gregory Bai'barigo, o~ce a bish-.,op of the Pope's home Diocese'.of" Bergamo, Italy, It will be, hesaid, "a testimony of the love'

'arid venel'3tion of Cathoiics forthe Vicar of Christ."

Pope John will be 80 on Nov.25, 1961.

Cardinal,' Tardini noted thatsome students from mission'countries are already coming toRome to study. "But manyothers," he added, "would desireto come to the Eternal City if itwere able to offer them greaterhospitality and accommodaiethem ... It would be beautifulif'the faithful of the whole world­would contribute with theirgifts to bi-ing .this about in Rome, .elpse to the Chair of Peter, where '

"it would be possibl, f.or select~,' ~~rs?n,s Jo. carryon their

studIes."· The Cardinal asked the nunsof the world to intensify theireducational activities and in-,crease their prayers.

," I

Page 11: 09.15.60

-.

Address' : .. ; .

City ; ·; :.. : Tel .

MIDDLEBORO ROAD EAST FREETOWN, MASS.

1960 FALL .RETREAT SCHEDULE

11

..

Safety"

.-.EW BEDFORD, MASS.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Sept•.15, 1960

Record ClassAMARILLO (NC) - Seventy­

two seminarians, largest numberin the history of the Amarillodiocese, are studying fOl' the

· p l' i est h 0 0 d in seminariesthroughout the country prior toassignment here. Bishop John L.Morkovsky said the record num­ber of seminarians "speaks wellfor the interest of our people ofthe diocese in vocations."

·Dioc~se in MinnesotaMarks Anniversary. CROOKSTON (NC)-'-Pontifl­c~l High Mass was offered byBishop Laurence A. Glenn ofCrookston here to commemoratethe 50th anniversary of theCrookston diocese.

Archbishop William O. Bmdyof St. Paul presided at the jubi­lee Mass at the Cathedral o~ theImmaculate Conception. Msgr.James Shannon, president of St.Thomas College, St. Paul,l'll"eached. Priests and Religiousof the diocese attended.

The Crookston diocese wasestablished on Dec. 31, 1909. Ithas about 36,700 Catholics.

Announce FaIIRetreat Dates

Rev.. William J. McMahon,d.irector of Our Lady of GoodCounsel Retreat League oC the

· Diocese, has released the sched­ule of Diocesan Retreats thatwill take place this Fall at Cath­edral Camp in East Freetown.

Father McMahon has also an­nounced that the Diocesan Re­treat League will be representedat the Tenth Regional Confer­ence of the National Laywomen'sRetreat Movement. This meet­ing, which will be held Il'omSept. 16 to 18 at Atlantic City,will be attended by Mrs. Ray­mond Hamel of Attleboro, Pres­ident of the Diocesan RetreatLeague, and Mrs. St,anley' J.Koczei'a of New Bedford, Chair­man of the Ways and MeansCommittee'.

of

With

23---:Diocesa!" Laymen.30-Diocesan Laywomen7-legion of Mary

14-Diocesan Laymen.21-Diocesan Laywomen28-'-French Speaking Layw'omen. 4-Diocesan Laymen11-Diocesan Nurses

New Bedford & Acushnet.Co-operative Banks

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Fall' Riv~ Diocesan Retreat HouseP. O. Box 63-Middleboro RoadEast F~eetown, Mass.

P1ea"e reserve .a place for me for the Week-end

Retreat ~.eginning , .

Name :: , : : .

i is WILLlA~ ST.

.Our Lady of Good Counsel. .

Retreat' HouseNorris H. Tripp

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EXILED BY CASTRO: Jose Rivero, editor and pub­lisher of Diario de la Marina,' published daily in Havanauntil silenced by Castro early this year, looks over the firstedition of- th.e paper now being published in exile, in Miami,as a weekly. NC Photo.

Public Support for Private· Schoolslong Way Off, Jesuit Asserts

NEW YO~K (NC) - Public He' said the New York Statesupport of private education will . school bus statute which becamenot come about in this country law last May is "perfect" be­in this or the next generation. cause it provides "absolute

This is the opinion of Father parity" for all students. The lawNeil G. McCluskey, S.J., who be- makes it mandatory for local·li.eves the gralldchildren of to- school boards to provide freeday's students may. be able to bus transportation to studentsattend state-supported schools. attending private schools.operated .by religious bodies.· Urging further steps to aid

'Father McCluskey, associate private. education, Father Mc­editor of Am.erica magazine, told Cluskey dcelared: "No societythe second Sodality Congress of .. can live forever with a largethe Lay Apostolate: . segment of its people having the

. "Social, political and econo'- feeling of injustice."mic realities do not indicate's\1bstantial relief from Federalor state governments in the nearfuture." 0

He suggested, however, thatCatholics might look for some

. relief in the form of tax rebates,income tax reduction and in­creased health and tl'ansporta­Ij;fon services for children inChurch-operated schools'.

Hurricane ReliefSAN JUAN-A three and a

half ton supply of medicines,clothing' and blankets from theU. S. Catholic relief agency wasreceived here for homeless andinjured victims .. of HurricaneDonna. .

I

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Diocese G.ives AwardTo Union PresidentPIT~SBURGH(NC)~Thomas

Kennedy, president of.the UnitedMine Workers, has received thefirst Diocese of Pittsburgh Lab­or Award.

The presentation was made byBishop John J. Wright of Pitts­burgh in' recognition of .Mr.Kennedy's lifelong service tolabor aild the community.

In an interview; Mr. Kennedysaid that he and -his' union"haven't gone into the question

. of endorsing a ca'ndidate for thepr~sidency. We do· endorse con­gressional, senatorial and statecandidates," he declared, "butsince 1936, when. the union .en­dorsed Franklin D. Roosevelt,we have taken no ,position on·presidential politics." .

ST. WILLIAM,FALL RIVER.. 'rhe Women's Guild will holda tea from 2 .to 4 this Sundayafternoon at the Catholic Mem­.orjal Home: A supper will beheld d~ring November.

ST. MARY'S,SEEKONK

The Women's Guild will holdits annual Christmas sale Wed­nesday, Nov. 30 from noonthroughout' the evening. To beheld in the parish hall, the salewill include plan'ts, jewelry, par­cel. post, games, food, aprons andcandy booths.

The Holy Name So~iety andparish men will conduct their

.third annual public auction onthe church grounds this Satur­c;lay morning, starting at 10 andcontinuing through the day. Aused car will be the featureditem, according to Lewis Jack­son, general chairman.

Pastry, children's rides and alunch bar will also be amongattractions. Donations may beleft at the parish hall after 6any evening this week.

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,}'ALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will holdits annual membership tea from3 to 5 this Sunday afternoon inthe church hall. Mrs. WilliamBennett is chairman, aided byMiss Florence Lynch as co-chair­man. All women of the parishare invited to attend the event,which will include the unit'sofficial welcome to Rev. EdwardF. Dowling, new pastor.

ST. MARGARET,BUZZARDS BAY

New officers of SS. Margaret_Mary Guild include Mrs. FrankRocchi, president; Mrs. JohnEnos, vice president; Mrs'-AnnieEldridge, corresponding secre-

. fury; Mrs. Arthur Wills, record­ing secretary; Mrs. Fred Alden,treasurer.

ST. JOSEPH,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will holda cake sale this Saturday after~

noon from 3 to 8 in the schoolhall. Whist parties 'will be heldthis month, October and Novem... ·'bel' and children's parties are··.~

.. slated f'or . Hallowe'en .' and;Christmas.

Fall Planning

The Parish ParadeNews for this column should

be received at The Anchor.office by Saturday to appearin the next Thursday's issue.

ST. LOUIS,. FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will holda cake sale following all MassesSunday, Sept. 25. Mrs. Mae Cas­sidy is in charge of an-angements.

ST. TERESA'S,SOUTH ATTLEBORO

Women of the parish willsponsor their fourth annualfashion· show and card partyFriday, Oct. 7. Prizes will beawarded at each table in addi­tion to some 30 door prizes.Featured this year will be 11Lady's Fall Wal·drobe.

Links Anti-Sem'itismTo Argentine Reds

BUENOS AIRES (NC:)-Anti­Semitic outbreaks in Argentinahave been linked with commun:.ism by Antonio Cardinal Cag­giano, Archbishop of BuenosAires. He has decried the anti­Semitism which has swept Ar­

'gcntina since ISl'aeU governmentngents seized nazi war criminalAdolf Eichmann here and re­tU1'1led him to Israel to standtrial.

The Cardinal said: "1 am afraidthat' those woo use violence arebeing used,· perhaps withoutbeing aware of it, by elements

., which love the use of fOl'ce andcommunist methods."

ST. MATHIEU,(,}'ALL RIVER

Miss Grace M, Martineau ischairman of a committee plan­ning a Pops Concert at 8 Wed­nesday night, Oct. 5 in the parishhall. The Allegro Glee Club,under direction of Dr. NormanO. Paquin, will be featured, inaddition to other musicians andsingers. Tickets are availablefrom committee mcmbers.

ST. ANNE,}'ALL .RIVER

St. Anne's Social Group willhold a fashion show at 2 Sundayafternoon, Oct. 2 at Venus deMilo Restaurant. Mrs. Albert G.Auclair is chairman. The unitwill also hold a rummage saleTuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 18and 19 at 352 East Main Street.A regular meeting is set forWednesday, Oct. 5, at St. Anne'sSchool.

SANTO CHRISTO,}'ALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic ,,"omenwill hold its first Fall meetingTuesday, Sept. 20 and a fashionshow at 7:30 Wednesday evening,Sept. 28 at Venus de Milo res­taurant.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

Mrs. Joseph 'Gromada willserve as first 'woman president'of Parent Teacher and Alumni

SS. PETER AND PAUL, Association. With her will be}'ALL RIVER Joseph Amaral, vice president;

The Women's Club will hold Mrs. George Wrobel, secretary;'a rummage sale and fashion show .. Mrs. Carl Erdman, treasurer;in October. The bowling league Mrs.' Frank Janas, publicity.will open activities .t 8 tonight . The unit will hold its nextat Durfee Bowling Alleys. Mrs. regular meeting Wednesday,James Wholey is chairman for Oct. 5. A fashion show is sched­the rummage sale and Mrs..•ob- uled for Thursday, Oct. 13' atert Colbert is in charge of a White's restaurant.harvest supper, also on the Fallschedule.

The Women's Club .will spon­sor a parishola Wednesday, Sept.21. Over 200 prizes will beawarded. Chance books' are tobe returned to the rectory bythis S\mday. . ..

. BLESSED SACRAMENT".'ALL RIVER .

The Women's Guild will holdits' annual meeting at 7:30 Wed-.nesday evening, Sept. 21 i'\ ~he

parish hall.

SACRED,IIEART,NO. ATTLEBORO .

St. Anne's Sodality. of . theSacred Heart Church, No. Attle­boro will sponsor a whist partyon Wednesday evening, Oct. 19,in the parish hall. Refreshmentswill be served and door. prizesawarded.

Mrs. Floi:ida Poiner and Mrs.Idola Briere are co-chairmen.

ST. MARY'S CA'l'HEDRAL,}'ALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will· openits Fall season with a member­ship tea at 2 Sunday afternoon,Sept. 18 in the Catholic Com­munity Center, Franklin Street.

I

Page 12: 09.15.60

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,,'

IDALIlGMUR§ Of S'iT. PAUll.Invito you"o e;rlo (14-231 to Imb07 bl

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Heroism in .Tragedy;,

God Love You

But so also do our self sacrifices for the 1IIl0ly Father aid suchmissionaries and missions as this; Send your sacrifices' to the lIIlolyFather through the Society for the Propagation of the Faith.

By Mogt Rev. FunUo!l1l J/. Shee!1l, lDl.D.

There are fires iIi: the Missio'ns as anywhere else, but there Is noinsW'ance. Perhaps it is because we, the fellow-members of Christ'sMystical Body, through oW' charity, are meant to be the insurancefor the 'losses our missionaries must sustain at their posts. Thefollowing is taken from a l~tter which we recently received..

GOD LOVE YOU to J.M. for $3 "Piease accept this .for theMissions in reparation for sins. of my past life, also for the vocationsof my five children and my other special intentions." ... to M.J.D.for $100 "This represents the amount of a vacation which I took butat which time I did not go anywhere." ... to J.M. for $100 "I hadintended to will this on my death, but am sending it now. It is inthanksgiving for God's care of me."

(

The t~n letters of GOD LOVE YOU sPell out a decade of tiIlerosary as they encircle the medal originated by Bishop Sheen tohonor the Madonna of the World. With your request an!i thecorresponding offering ,.on may order a GOD LOVE,YOU medalin anyone of the following myles:

$ 2 small sterling silver$ 3 small 10k gold ffiled$ 5 large sterling silver$10 large 10k gold filled

Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and lI\ail it to theMost·Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society forthe Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y ..or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

"I had taken twenty new converts and forty of the childrenof the squatter school to attend a' Pontifical Masa at the Stadium.Y GO conld not imagine our consternationwhen we came back after Mass to findthat' everything in our squatter area hadburned down. AU the poor children startedcrying and weeping, because DO one knewwhere their parents were! They ran around•'The converts looked for their families, theirwives and their children. They acted as ifthey had just lost their heads. all cryingand weeping.

''It was Ulte the end of the world. Every-() where we heard the women screaming and

the children bUrsting into tears. I was ery­ing too, for the' fire was a real shock tome. About 250 huts were destroyed in thesquatter area, and 1500 were made home­Jess.. My squatter Shelter foil' those poor refugee children wasalso burned down in the fire. For six months I worked with myown hands fifteen hours a day to be more identified with their~u~er and misery;"

Would that the press instead of considering as "news" whateverinvolves the breaking of a commandment, for example, mW'der,r9bbing, divorces, etc., would give to the world the heroism thatmatches tragedy such as is found in this priest. The world is not asbad as it seems. 'Ten just men could have made up for the evils ofSodom and Gomorrha. So a priest of this ·kind atones for much evil.

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~e<& ·lfHr.[p)@i[)'ni1'®~·. TROY (NC)-The New York

State convention of the Catholic.Central Union and the C'atholicWomen's U'!1i~n has u;ged theU. S. to press the case of the cap­tive natiqns in the. coming UnitedNations session.

The New Yorkbra'nch of. thesociety, formerly the Catholi-eCentral Verein, made its appealin a' resolution' directed at theU'. N. Ge1?-eral Asseniblysession,said: '

"With the -coming of the -C@M­

munist tyrants to the SeptemlDermeeting of the General Assem­bly,". the resolution stated, "thetime would be opportune toexpose before the' world .thismass genocide and mass enslave­ment of the captive natioDJl bythe Red overlords of Russia andChina and their satraps in. thesatellite countries."

The resolution said it would'.. be "an act of great courage and.. patriotism" for U. S.- representa­

tives at the U.N. to again expose ". "the colossal hypocrisy of thl!communists towards these cap-tive natibns." .

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. " .. _._ _~~.. ,~_.~~_ _ ~~~_.I.1 _ _.". __ , _ .

.THE.A.~KHOR-Djocese oUoll ~iver-Th~r~.,Sept.l5,~~\$O...'. - ':'. . . ... ' . . . . ,-' ".".12

Roaring ReceptionLIMA (NC)-Richard Cardi­

oal Cushing of Boston receiveda roaring reception from Lima'spoor when he announced he wiD.build a' convent for the Mary­knoll Sisters who work amolll',~

M~Hr~o@~® .im~~~e~ MM~M~~O[b~O~@1?g@ffil@tm ~~@M~~~.

. By Father John. I... Thomas, S.J.Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. JLouis lUniv~rsity

"We've been married 14 years and are expecting our8th child. Beyond bringing home his pay my husband hasnever accepted one iota of responsibility. I'm banker, main­tenance man, gar-dener, bill-payer, repa:ir mali andsooD.plus being wife and mother. It is worth repeating, neitherWhen I ask my husband to husband nor wife has any choicehelp, he answers, 'I'm just in this matter-their obligationsa happy-go-lucky slob whQ flow directly. from the maritalwants to go through life with ccmtract into which' ,they have .a minimum of unpleasantness.' freely entered.. They had DeWith this pregnancy I've reached right to marry if they did notthe end of my strength. Must I go intend to' accept· these responsi-

. on bearing more children?' 1 bilities toward each .other . and,can't even pray .anymore." their -children. .

it would be consoling. ,to· be.,. But you are married, Madge,Ueve that marriages . like y:ours·aridyou.want to know what youwere exceptional 'and ra~. ui'i-' can do with an adolescent hus­

. fortuna tely, lVIl:idge, the'y . are 'ali . b~d who obviouslY .·r.egards·:·his .

.too common. ~Of course your sacred obligations:as·a'joke. Must LATE VOCA VONfirst. mistake was' ~o ma~ry' a: '. 'yotigo OIi bearing children with . TJl': J{)hnperen~ialadolescent although I' .. hun.?, . .,' . M. Hickey, 45, former~up~-readily admit that. it's not Tal'",. '9f .course not, for he has intendent of the Erie,Pa.,ways easy to' ascertaIn whether -clearly shown. thaChe.is either. public school system, is en­the partner yoti choose has'stop- iqcapab~eor. ~willii1g to' as- 'route to Italy .where he willped maturing" somewhere' in .. sume .the 6bligatio~.,0:f .father- .the teims. .. .' -hood.lrigeed, it·would·have been' study, for the priesthood, at'

Young men· more prudent ' to. have' haq "a Beda College, Rome. Asheand .- women showdown on this malterhefore ',-sailed,' he said he expected towho refuse ,to you reached the present 'breakfug.. complete his' 'task in fourgrow ·up have . point:. .no' right·' to' Children are a sacred trust and years, shorter than usual,marry;' Posses~ a man whose self-confessed phil- because he already had -re-.sion. of, the . osophy is "to get through ute ceived his Doctorate in Edu-mere biological- with a'minimum of unpleasant- cat {o Ii al Philosophy'. NCcapacity to re- ness", has no right to claim the Photo. .produce, or prjvileges of fatherhood.even ability and . Although you' say you havewillingness to . discussed this problem with him,!lold a' steady . you obviously have not COD-

job, constitute vinced hini that you're serious.no adequate grounds for, enter- He .still thinks it's aOJoke. Hence,ing Christian marriage. you must be firm and ~ear.

Because people raised in ·our Point out that as long as.he re­society tend to -think of mar- fuses to accept adult responsibil­riage in terms' of legitimized ities, .he can make no claim, tomating rather than responsibie be treated like a man. Be spe­parenthood, all too many young cific in regard to' what yoU.people select their partners expect him to do.solely on the basis of what ~ he is willing to change histhey assume to be emotional or . ways, you may have to . startaffectional compatability. slowly, spe~g out in consider-

SerioUll Commitments able detail the contributions heThey say, "We're in love, and is expected to make. This may

therefore we're ready for mar- take time, for he 'h:ls muc!ltoriage." What. they really mean learn, but contrary' to .the oldis, "We've been going together saying, you can teach some oldfor som~ time now and have 'be- .dogs new tricks. It may help tocome so emotionally involved .remember that some adolescentsthat we wish to live tog~ther." mature quickly, once they realize'

Although they realize that liv_ they must.ing together normally implies Mutual Servicechildren, they give little thought A final note to younger wivesto either their capacity orreadi- who may face the same·prob1em.ness to assume the many serious, ff you di:;cover you have .marriedlong term commitments associa- an adolescent, don't make theted with Chri~tian parenthood. mistake of bearing all tQe re-

When men and women assume .sPo,?-sibilities for the familythe right to procreate as a couple, merely because you are current-they also accept the obligation to ly able to' do so. .raise their cl;1ildren as a couple. Sooner or later; as the size ofThis obligation. is not a matter yoW' family increases, you willof :choice for either partner;' it reach the breaking point and it 'is implicit in the right to pro- may then be difficult to securecreate, so that both spouses must cooperation. Learn to share fam- . JP>~<DJl1il$ - N1~'W ~~!Jil@@~$ .be capable and willing to assume,. ily responsibilities from the very NEWARK (NC)-Archbishoptheir obligation fullJ' if they de-' start. . Thol;llas A. Boland of Newark

· sire to use their marital' ~ights-.. The Cre:ator designed marri~ge' has disclosed that six more high ,Meaning of Ma.rri~ge, ' ,-- ..partners to'pe "h~lp,l"-ates."Once schools -""three for b<ws and

Your problem focuses attf}n_- ,-,~Il1en .. and 'women 'marry, this three for girls-are plannedflilrtion on the 'very meaning of '~m:.uflial_, service" constitutes. the archdiocese. Eleven new highmarriage itself. When ca0S?a1lS .<their' ,pririi:a~ way. ofl!ervil;1g'.'sShools have been built in themarry, they agree to aId .each God.. . .. . .archdiocese in recent years _other in fulfilling their' essen-- . , . • ..''; fou~ 'forbo~s, three for girls andtial Christian vocation to' love~@h® Dtlme]!'o' BllJli~d four. coeducati-onaI.

·God and neighbor: by dedicat- 1..<Jl .;,S'"~.. "y", 1L·····I·b~;".. ·r',y '.' ~iog themselv.es to theserviee of <JlCl. • ....

~ new life, that is, to the procre- .NOTRE DAME '(NC) -:- The .ation and education of children.' Univei;sity of ,Notre. Dlime has

, 4lthough by its very nature announced plans. for a, 13.-story .this family enterprise of bear,.: library to be erected' b~ginning

,iIig and rearing children invol- next year at -an estimated cost of.ves a separation of functions and '$8,000,000. It will hriuse 2,000,-.

. of labor, it definitely demands 000 volumes' and provide study· mutual support and equally facilities for up to one-half of3lia:red responsibilitY: . the urriversity's 6,000 students'

Neither husband nor wife is at one time. . . . .free to restrict theiroontribution .The present libra~y,filied to·to limited areas such as bring:. capacity. with nearly 400,000'· iag ~ome the pay' check or serv- " !books, was erected in 1917 ,whtmiag as sexual partner. Tbe "sin,. Notre.. pame.. .tuld. anenr()1lmem

'cere .fulfillment 01 their. Yoca- one-fifth. i~ ~resent 8iz~" . . .,!ion demands not only ..love;

" OOmpanionsI-!ip, .and the ·sbaring.CJfone another's'bufderisbut.also

,a serious cooperation,in raising'.aDd training the children·' with .'which God has blessed' theirlIDion.

Page 13: 09.15.60

Ttf£ ANCHOR-I)jocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. 15. 1960 13

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Gold Medal Perfect Whipped Bread is madein smedl batches iust .like grandma usedto bake - but· because the .new perfed'

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Page 14: 09.15.60

/

i. ...

"

',f'

~Expects' T~acher':

It,afio Reversal,­Within De:cQde'~,'MILWAUK~E -(NC) .~j

The .present ratio .ofone, lay,;

teachel!' -~ every three R~'

ligiou8 in CathoI~e eI~men­

tary and seco~dary schools inthis 'country will ~hange in 1970 ,to one Religious' for, every twolay teachers, an official of theNational Catholic EducationalAssociation has predicted. .

Father O'Neil C. D'Amour saysa complete financial reorganiza­tion is needed to meet this bur­den in. the field of Catholic,edu­cation. '

The NCEA 'official; expressing:his views in an' artide: in' the,'Catholic ,Management Journal,declared: :

''Undoubte'dlysin'ce' the parisllschool is So closely allied to thepastoral responsibility and since 'centralization of financing 'inev-'itably will result in'greater cen­tralization of' control, there willbe resistance to' this 'concept(concentrating pupils in' lar'geinterior parochial schools). How;;"ever,recogniiing the 'ctiltu.r~·

social and' econ~mic 'develop';;ments of our society, there seems'to be no other way'ili which wewill be able' adequately andjustly to maintain our' schoo~.".

, ,.

Disc,ussesDoctors., ,.

".Jesus saw a man sitting IA die, custom-house. ,named Mat-·thew; 'and He,said to h1iD.' Follow Me. And be rose up and fol.­

lowed Him." Tbese' simple' words are the basic'explanation of 'a voc:aUon. SIMON KOITHARA and

ErlI~AP'_ JOSEPH' KOOTTAPLACKAL, students at SAINTJOSEPH'S SEMINARY In' INDIA, and SiSTERELIZABETH and SISTER EDITH, novices of the

,MARONITE SISTERS' OF THE 'HOLY FAMILY iD~LEBANON, are "follOWing Him." .,' The eost eli

.. ' training Simon aDd Joseph for the prlesthooclls$800' for eacli of them, tile cost of training Sister Elizabeth and'Sister Edith' 101' the 'Slsterhood is _. Could 10ti PAl fOt the ~~.ttalning'l)f .'of them!· . ,

~ , . . . . .

GENEROUS YOUTHS have alwa" aaswerecl God's Invlt.&loa to serve IIiia .. prles&s and reUglous. Appeals made.Ulrougll Catholie Agencies,' for the means to conduct seminariesand. novitiates, have always been answered b,. the sacrificialcenerosity of people who have an understanding of the fin...cial problems involvecl iD the education of priests, sisters. andbrotbers. The CATHOLIC NEAR BAST WELFARE ASSOCIA.·

.TION .bas two Clu... speclficall,. founded &0 give aid ill thisfinancial .bardell til.. Is always pr~nt and pressing. The(,::HBYSOSTOMS ·were es"'bUshed to help, maintain seminaries;MARY'S "ANK ... establlsbecl to. help. maintain' novlUates.Does for membership III eacb 'Club are one dollar a mont... ",.,C~ Y~~ i9Df O~ OR,BOT~ '01' TRESE CLUBST

-WHAT THINGS A MAN SHA....L SOW, those also shaD bereap ..• Therefore, wbilst we have Ume•.l\.lli us work good to aU'men but 'esPecialiJ to those who, are of the household of thefaith." Membership in the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARBASSOCIATION Is one way of beeding the words of Saint Paul;you~membership belps to extend the Kingdom of God on earUaand by it you reap m8ll7 spiritual, benefits.Perpetual Membership: Annual Membersbip:Family ..•••••••••• '; ••.$100 Family ...•.•.•.•••••••••.. $5Individual •• ••••• •• •• • • 20 IndJvidual •••••• • • • • • • • • • •• 1

'alANY ~ ~ QeOfJie WAYS 0" HELPiNO tile MladollS.. MlssIonar.e..·' _. oar. ill donate oae Of ihefollow.1Dt~ '~itb. la 'memc.r,. of a "iIeoea.l'loved oDe 01' ill bGDOI' 01• ,U~ re~~,,"~ ':'" . . .II•• Kit,.,' ..••,$~~ ,~.. BoeI: ~ 1',$85 . PrE ••••••••••. $15"II~~, •• ,'J~ ~ ....:, •• 11 htiiiieeslUlil .. ;"li':

'AS A NEWLY. ORDAINED PRIEST,,':;'. ., . ." '

,PLJl:ASB REMEMBEIl GOD AND alB MISSIONS III YOUR', ; ... ,;. LAST WILl. ,AND T,:&TAMEN'l\" ",

~'l1e8r~OOissioliS~.",:".,','"",' FRANcis'CARDINAL SPEt.n.MAN.':P~,:' ,'", """ ';,·"' ..:..,.,....'~TuoIiy,Ncd't5eC'ir/ '" '.' , ''''' i:"

':'" ""':. ", S.,"hIBC8f!lM"nIcaIIoM,foI', :,,' .,I, CATHOUC'NEAI iAST WELFARI :ASSOOAl1ON ..... .': ~

"'480 ,Lexi~:,~"'-.;'~ 51:, New York "·,·N. Y. : :""',

, . the first parochial ,assignment of the' present Bishop of TrlchurIn India was to the village of, CHERUJR, then 1!I little hamlet

located in the, Diocese ,which he now .'"goverlll\. Only on.e hundred Catholicscomprised. the, parish ,when His Ex-,cellency was ~ta~ioned there;, todaythe parish Dumbers GOO families a.nd ,it is still growing;. The reason for itscontinuing growth Is the fact thatUie Government has chosen this: areato locate a Government Training In·stitute an Engineering College, andthe '. AU-India Radio Station. Father

1'htHo.L. Fathtr'i'Mission AitJ ANTHONY VELLAN'IPARAMBII..'J 'who 18 now the pastor' of .CHERUR,

fur tht Orimtal Chtmh Ita sought the help of the Bishop inlnillding * new Chureb, the cost of whicb' will be $4,000. Since ,the Bishop Is alreaQ over-bUrdened witb requests for finaneialIlelp' ' be . hail appealecl to &IlL His Excellency writes;' "This Iswhere I was first parish priest.. I know tbeir needs. Kindl, help , ,,',them. The,. are' poor and' the plaClfl has become' vel7 .ImportantIII tile civie sense." Can you send a donaUoD to help buUcl tblsClauroh In CIIBRURT .

-They are tremendousl,., inter­ested in, what they can do per-'sonally to help, and a great manyare eager to go to mission fieldsthemselves to bring the doctorsthere up to date." '

',-

LARIVIERE'SPharmacy

Prescripti~ns called forand delivered

HEADQUARTERS foRDIETETIC SUPPLIES

. 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439New Bedford:

Medical Associatio"Plan ,to Aid :Mission

CHICAGO (NC)-The' Amer­lean 'Medical Assoeiationmaybecome a working partner ofU. S. ·medical mi'ssionaries serv­ing church groups overseas.

.The :proposal 'discussed . byAMA· and various church offi­

'cials here would make the asSo­ciation serve as' a .clearinghouseof medical, information for mis-

, sion outposts; organize' teams ofspecialiSts, to bring' mission doc­tors up-to-date on new develoP.ments and expedite .postgraduateeduca'tion of doctors returning.tothis country. '

Among those attending themeeting here was' Auxiliary

'Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New. York, national director of ,the

Society for the Propagation ofthe Faith.

Historie MeetingHe told newsmen the gather-

ing represented an "historiemeeting of particular interest tome in its relationship to Amer­

.ican foreign aid."·. "In the past, foreign aid hasbeen regarded with one aim to.establish' a ·first trench for dem- .ocracy. A second' aim has been \0foster better trade.

"Here is illustrated a citsin,~·~ted type of foreign. a,id with noselfishness . involved," BishopSheen Said.

, -. The proposal stems from a'resolution presented by- a group,of Oregon physicians and.adopted by, the AMA house Ofdelegates, at its past midwin&er ,meeting. .

Growing Interes&The resolution recognizes the

responsibilitY of organized med­icine for the postgraduate eel&­Cation of American doctors ..foreign missionary ,Posts.

Dr. Paul S. Rhoads, profeSllQll'of medicine at Northwestena'University, and, editor of tbeAMA archives of internal medI­cine, ,.and· chairman of the med­ical committee of the Presb,.~

terian Church, said at the meet-'ing. that there is 'a growing iD- .terest among U. S. doctors Ill'work of medical missioos. Be'exp18ined: - - , "

j~

THE ANCHOR~[jIOc~5~'of FaIIRi~er-Thurs.,'Sep.t ..l5;)960,r' • :'j "!" • r . r' '''~' ,~ .., t . .14

'Asserts"Price Competition,Unpop~I,ar.bu~.:Health,flll

By Rev: Andrew. M:.Greeley .Msgr. George: G. ,Biggins will be in. Europe for the, next

several weeks. During. that ,\tlme Father Greeley wl;U ,be hisgu¢st columnist. Father Greeley lS'the author of the book The'Church and the Suburb,S (Sheed and Ward, 1959). A secondbook on the problems of American young pe~ple .Is scheduledfor publicationln early 1961: , ..

"No 'we don't think the little foreign jobs are any. threat. We're convinced,tiuii a big, medium-priced prestige,car. will sweep the market., We'll have one out in a year ortwo. Right now, the plans are to call it the Edsel." Thus

l!lllokea Ford executive fiye to c~me in for some abuse' iny~ars ago when I asked him such a context.if; he felt that ,the little ::Perhaps the busineSsmen are.

G ' "b " h' h righ~. For ~he term, conjures up . . ,. ". .erman . ugs w IC were visions of secret meetings, in,ter- .. , .STUDIES HERE: Father, Joseph. Sipendl; center,

beginning to swarm into Amet,-' . 1 ' d . . th T 'k C th I'lea would' pose any 'serious com- l'I,ational plants and. for m a '. assistant secretary for e ucabon III e anganyl a a 0 Ie

Piitition fot' , , '.' p~nn~ col1us~on:'Suchadmin-."·WelfareOrganization will study·s~hool.administration'~t

istratIon of. prIces ,is practically . ' . '. . '. .. H - 'h'" 'h" 'ts"'" "th M 'AmeriCan cars: nOi'lexistentIIl America.' the UmversIty. of, Cahf9rma.. . ~e ,e ~ .a; WI sgr.

Much Ii 0 n - 'And most American business Frederick G. Hochwalt, right, andFather WIlham G. Marley"sense has since men compete in all kin,cIs., oi. C.S.Sp. in Washi'ngton. NC ,Photo.been spoken: A ways: few of them can afford ~"Fortune article rest content with the share.Ofdesc1'ibed h 0 vi the market they have> If they,• smooth Edsel do, the,., are very shorilyoutsales team had of a job. . . , "lined' up a na- ' Nevertheless competition In'tional . organi- prices is distinctly unpopular

"'~ zation' of deal- and. with some reason. It can bee:r5hips. a very pain,fulp,rocess. It is also.',There was great mystery about a very healthful process--iil thethe shape of the new car. There long run.

,was a huge advertising 'cam-paign. 'There was the anguished' Improvement ResuUs'eomplaint that it was not" ·the' When price' competition" ispoor who were buying: the less' fotced by some outside group the:expensive foreign carS" ,·but' 'result has normally' been the'those who could afford' better.' long run improvement of theImplicit in such' a complaint was' industry; The 12.7 per cent of thethe assumption that if you could market which foreign cars tookafford a costly car you were' ,last year, led to the Americanunder some oh'ligation to buy it. compact counteroffensive' which;" , AJneri~an 'Bugs" has routed most of theforeigil:. Now the Edsel has come: and' intruders-altho' the impudent;(me" its quiet death a shocking, VW's continue to multiply.contrast to noisy birth; but the The switch' to compacts haa"'bugs," now outrageous in color, been expensive"for the autO' in­continue to swarm, and have dustry, but benefits are becom­i)een. joined by modish and pop- ing more and more apparent.giar American "bugs". The,Falcons; Corvairs, Valiants,:::Many conclusions. could be' 'Comets, Tempests; J88's, anddrawn from the Falcon's. suc';' Specials may well mark the be­ceeding the Edsel as Ford's "new ginning' of a new era in Amer­car." One might argue that the lean automotive production.motivation research is still some- Price competition cannot bething less than infallible or that . the sole' ordering agent of' aaadvertising cannot yet fool all econ,my. In fact, man,. of thethe people all the time or that industries where the purest, com­"bidden persuaders" cannot'sell petition existS',are the scenes oi.the pu~ lit things that are not anarchy and chaos.really wanted-at least not more 'In some ,of. them-tbe Newtitan 'once, or that the car is no York' docks, trucking, coallOnger a status symbol to the ',mining, ladies 'garments-largeAmerican family,. having ,been' unions have had to introduce·Succeeded by such .delights as stability to guarantee some kindboats, swimming pools, and trips of employment. continuity forto Europe. I their members, often with du-

Means Many Things bioull results f()l' the ,oommoa.But there is one other lesso~ good.

which might be overlooked ill Catholie Teachingthe rush of psychiatric explana- Catholic social teaching makestions for the popularity of the is quite clear that competitiollVolkswagen and its ilk: compe- 'will achieve its desired effectstition· is a good thing. Such a only in a framework of cooper­truism is uttered so often that ation according to the norms ofmost people have forgotten 'how social justice and charity. It IIItrue it is. , ' by no means clear how this caa: Of .course, competition caD.; be done in the ·concrete. order.

mean many things. It can mean, But· in a nation where comp&­C9mpetition in advertising, in tition is so lavishly prais~d, ~heretechnical,improvements in mar- must be constanfattempts'to seeketing techniques, ~ horse- that price competition'does not.power, in TV quiZ programs.' ,on the one hand, turn into chaOs,

, :'But this is· not exactly what 'or on the other hand; vaniShAdam Smith and his followers from everything but afte~-dinner,)

meant. They meant competition .speeches and party platforma.,1fi prices and this is exactly what _ .

, t~e s":lall foreig~ cars (a~d their. Cyprus Gr~eks Give~meC1can.' cousms): brought to '~Seat to' Catholicsthe auto mdustry. ..., . " " .',' "~; HeaUhfulProeess " , NICOSiA (NC)~Greek: Ortb-

American businessmen be- odox Cypriots have· given: 'one 'cfum~ apoplectic w:hen one, men-, ~f th.eir· seats 'in the parliame~ttions "administered prices." The of thiS newly independent, Medl-:­name of Estes Kefauver is sure'· terranean' island to the country'. ,. ' Maronite Rite Catholics.M,.' issioner is Flying,~ j " Maronite. Rite Catholics have.

also' been given represen'tation9wn -, Plane to Congo :;on the, ChristiaJi Communal. 'AMSTERI;>AM (NC)-A,YQllng" Council. :. .

Dutch missioner is flying to the . Cyprus, form~ Britiah.colon,..tUrbulent Republic of Congo in' became an· independent republiClits own plane to. organize the last month.' The -President IIIoonstruction of churches,' schools'" Orthodox Archbishop Makarios. ' .... , '" .~d hospitals. . ,'", ,The government is,based/on ~ ':' ,W'hite's Farm D'airyCFather Joop Calis, O..M.I., wi,n . two large national communiti-.' ,

.determine during his fir8t'w~k~""'Greek: and Turkish. The Greek' -, '. ·sPEciAl:MIlK~ :the' Congo whether it is safe " majority has 35 seats In: theilew From Our~to bring in his l3-member band Parliament and the Turkish T steel Hercr~flay missioners..Father Calls, minority 15•. The.presidimt, mUst :', . e. '~ho is 35, founded 'the group of., always be a Gre~kand .the vice- A~lhn.t, M~WY- i44s7: .f,i.;ve women and eight men.' presiden't 'a Turk. Both ,commun-i: The Oblate missioner received ities have wide legislative • ,~ial Milk

his small plane from a Dutch'air-' powers in regard to their"'owa: • Homogenized YIt.,D Milkpiane dealer, Bam Schreiner of" comfuunalmatters.' ",,:,,' • ButtermilkWasse'nar. Mr. Schreiner paid >,' In a-total populatioil'of,-more,' '. tropicanaO~ange Juicefor the priest's flying lessons,and , than 500,OOO,CathOlics.'number,., : •. Coffee; and. Choc.. MilkS\i.pplied a pilot 'to 'take hini'a'rill' ':about 6,700; of 'whom Some '4;000 • Eggs ~~utt8!~s'pli1.:O-~ to, th!il.Co~go." "J" .'.belong to ~ Maion.i.te:'Rite.., ,-;,,; '-_ _ _-.-. ... -

)

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o

PATROHAl FEASJOF OUR LADY Of "LA SALETTE

ANNI'l.E~~ARY' F~'STDAy' 'OF Oli~ LADY '(>F' ,LA SALETTE, . September 19 .

". ,;', ,MomingMasses: 6:30' ,7:00. '7:30 8:00·,",~ry' and nenedict~on: 3 :00 p.m.

, .' ~vening MaSs','and Benediction': 7:30p......,sftinon.bY,~,he.Rev. RaYmon«(~edue,M.S."Mi~ion~Qa,the ~hilippines

,THE ANCHOR"':"Thurs., Sept. 15, 1960

,Third Order to MeetLAFAYETTE (NC)-Memben

of the Third Order of Carmelites,Disca~ced, will meet for the fiftbregional congress of the souther.province here in Louisiana from

- Oct. 14 to 16. Delegates are ex­, pected ,from chapters in LouiS).ana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Tex­

. as, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mij,;... souri and Illinois. ,.'

Peru May GrantVoting Privilege"roAIl Religiou$.

LIMA (NC) - PresidentManuel A. Prado has askedthe Peruvian legislature toenact a bill granting Relig­ious, the right to vote.

Diocesan priests can vote nowin Peru but members of religiousorders are denied suffl·age. Thereason alleged is that i'eligioulmen·and women are not free andhave to take orders from their~uperiors.

:If the new bill is passed, all, Peru's men and. women in reli­,gious orders will be able to vote,provided they are 21 years ofage and Peruvian citi;r.ens.

The new bill also asks for theright to name naturalized citi­zens as bishops of Peruvian dio­ceses. The present law demandathat all bishops of Peruvian diO-ceses be natives.. .

However, if the new law goeathrough, it will be necessary forforeign born priests to adopt

,Peruvian citizenship before ae­. cepting a Peruviap diocese. ~

to be :observed . at the

SOLEMNITY OF THE FE~ST OF OUR LADY. OF LA SALETTE.' SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 at 3:00 p.m.Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament' given byHIS EXCELLENCY JAMES L..CONNOLLY, D.D.,

Bishop of Fall RiverSermon bY' the ~ev. Joseph A. Nolin, M.S., Foreiglll Missions Procurator

Blessing of automobiles at 4. p:m. SundayIndividual Blessing of the'sick with the Mos.t ':BBessed Sacrament on

, . ' Sunday at' 3 :OQ 'p.~. .

LA SAL,ETTE SHR'EN'EATTL~iJORO, -MASS.

SOLEMN TRIDUUM OF .PRAYERS: SEPTEMBER 15, 16, 11Morning Masses: 6 :30 7 :00 ·7:30 8 :00

, Evening Mass and' Benediction: 7':30: p.m.Sermons by the Rev. Normand:lJeget, ~.S., Missionary in the Philippines

. Confessions:: 6:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.'

SEWING CIRCLE: Sister Ste-Hedwidge, with twomembers of a sewing circle organized at St. Francis XavierSchool. While helping with the making of school uniforms,the girls also attended regula'r doctrine classes. Nearly allmembers of the circle were baptized.

<=> .', •

Now at the community's ;'1 would like to fling a chal-motherhouse because of poor lenge to the youth of Fall Riverhealth, Sister ~te-Hedwidge de- , . Diocese," she says, "a challengeclares that she, can never thank to carry the torch of truth fuH~God enough.' for her time' in . flaming to t'he ends ofthe world:Japan, "the happiest years of my ,The missions need them tOdaylife." , ,. : ,'.. all never before!"

~ ~othol.ic' 'College' Innocerit'Pleadingso!':Children: Vital 'FactorAdult Courses 1· , J ' .'. C·' • : 'S . ·M· .. .Enroil60,Ot)O n,. .apanese . on~ers.l9~s,ays, ,.lSSlonerPEEKSKILL (NC)-:"'More ' ,. ' ~ By Patricia McGowan

than 60000 adult Catholics A veteran of 24 'years missionary servic.e in Japan is now stationed .at the Mother- 'are participating in one of house' of ',~~e 'Missionarr Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in Montreal. She is Sisterthe fastest' growing move- Ste-Hedwldge, the ~ormer Blanche Ross of St. Anne's parish, Fall River. "Married inments in the Church~ttie Cath- St. Anne's parish,'" she writes, "my. pare~lts lived in Fall River all of 50 years. Of theirolic .adult education program.' 18 children, 10 are stili .liv-

Father De~ales S~anderwick, ing and four pride them-S.A., writing in the September lb' . h'issue of The Lamp Magazine se ves on emg paris lOne~s

'published by the Graymoo~ of dear old St.' Anne's." Sis­Friars here, cites the growing' ter Ste-Hedwidge first went topopularity of the program in the Japan in 1930. At that time itUnited States. He writes: ' was very difficult to obtain gov-

"There are now 80 Catholic ernment p'2rmits to open fo.reign­colleges and universities con- taught schools, but she and herducting adult education courses. companions eventually' opened aMany parishes and independent kindergarten.. ,

· Catholic organizations have ai- "~n spite of difficulties andranged sirp!lllr programs." hardships ,of,All kit~ds, the school

In its earlier years the Church prospered and hundreds of littleIII America had ·-to concentrate ones learned in its classes 'to lispon building churchei, grammar the' sweet names of Jesus andschopls and convents, writes Mary. Except a few, all wereFather Standerwick,'but now .it pagans. pirect teaching of reli':

· is turning its e~ towards· adult . gion w,as strictly forbidden, butCatholics who are faced with the ~e Catholic spirit· {'. the ·schooldifficulties of modern life. was not without wielding a ben-

Over 100 Courses eficial influence on parents andFather Stander.wick, a teacher pupils." ,

· at St. John's Atonement Semin- '. storm Clouds· ary" Montour Falls, N. Y., ~oints But storm clouds were gatper-out that most adult courses are ing, says the misSionary. Inconducted once a week in two- December, 1941 following Pearlhour sessions and, last eight Harbor, the convent was closedweeks. In some programs, over and the'Sisters were interned for100 courses are offered. They in- two years until in 1943 theyelude: languages, philosophy; ,were repatriated in exchange forlabor courses, business studies, political prisoners who had 'been·theology and home economics. held in the United States.

A sound adult education pro- Although Sister Ste-Hedwidgegram, says Fa~her Standerwick, found her homelan,d "very beau­will give the average Catholic tuul and very fortunate" she·the ability to synthesize his longed ·to return to her "b~lovedmembership 'in the Church and Japanese.'"his citizenship in the United The time came she relates inStates, without de'triment to 1946, when she ~as aboard 'theeither. first ship available to civilians.

Citing his own optimism for She was assigned to Aizuthe future, Father Standerwick Wakamatsu.envisions the expansion of adult "The scars of war were visiblecourses from the parish level to everywhere and I was deeplythe university. He also expects moved by the moral and tem­future ~tholic school buildings poral distress of the people. Edu­to include facilities ~or ad\llt cation of youth being the mosteducation. , ' pressing need, we immediately

"Catholic adult education may set to work to open.a primarywell be the enlightenment we ,school, although .we did notneed to keep our Faith strong' then have any available meansand intact, yet help us to meet of buildirig.' .today's world head-on;" Father .'!Up ir.. our attic :we fitted outStanderwick concludes; two small classrooms where the

first grade pupils entered joy­fully. After the war,' permits

.were easier to obtain and grad-ually, with the generous help offriends in America, we wereable to build St. Francis XavierSchool."

At present the school housesnearlY 1,000' children fromkindergarten . to high schoolgrades, says Sister Ste-Hedwidge,Most are non-Christian and con­versions are very slow.. "Theapostolate of patience is still theone to be exercised in Japan,"she notes.

Innocent PleasOften, where, conversions do

take place, it is a case of childrenbringing their parents into theChurch, 'says Sister. "Japaneseparents are so fond 'of their chil­dren U!.at they cannot resist theirInnocent pleadings."

Sister's particular work iDJapan was visiting and instruct­ing the sick at home Or' in hos­pitals. She recalls one conversionin particular that.. brought her·Br~at con!!Olation.,, "For several weeks I had beenregulal'ly visiting a woman dyingof tuberculosis. On one visit Imet her mother, an old peasant

.woman who looked me over in asuspicious manner. .'Leave ·mydaughter alone,' she said. 'She'doesn',t want to hear, about yourreligion. She has one of her own,the one 1 taught her and inwhicb she wants to die.'

"Turning to the .f;laughter, 1asked her if gJte really wantedDie to go. Gasping'for.,bre~tb,She .bnmediateJ.y replied,. '0 negai

FIRST FROM U S Fi~ ttashimasu. Please, please do not• .:. fin. leave .me before 1 am baptizec:t.'

leminarians from the United That setUed the ~atter~ In, spite .states 1;0 ,enter t~' IriSh 01. Grandmother's uttered irripre­Seminary of the, SOciety' of ,cations,· 1 Poured.' the. savingSt. Patrick at. ' .,.Dugan,' wa~ The woman passed awayCounty Wieklow, <Ireland, ~fullJ'.~ daY8later.~ \

..-e theIJe ~ ~ent' grad.-' .. .Chancery Movesutes of :Manan HIgh School. ' ST. LOUIS (NC)~After U4Owatonna,' :Minll. They '.. ,,.... in lIlakesbift quarter., thellobert :Mitebe~,:~ aDd ebaneery of ,the 'A,rchdi~ 01. 'Bo aN N L..- ~...._ -w..' at. Louis will move to • perma­M. q~• ...,~a. ~ DeDt be8~quartel'll:Dear ~ st."

. ': J;.GUill cathedral" ',', " .' " ~W""~~U_~~W",,~~~g~~~~~ua.~~~~~~Ug~~~rs

, :

Page 16: 09.15.60

c

President de ValeraOpens Rural Week

CASHEL (NC) - PresidentEamon de Valera opened theannual Rural Week of the Peopwof the Land movement here atRockwell College, which 18staffed by Holy Gho_ '; Fathers.

The Irish president said M ...·hoped the movement would pro­vi<re key personnel for • eivjJ,defense force of 100,000 men andwomen now beiDg set up b;' tIMgovernment. .

It was announced that • biol­mph)' 04. the late Father .lohaBayes, founder of the People ofthe Land., will be published thia,.ear.The purpose of the move­ment 1.1 to induce young farmpeople to star' OIl the laocL

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many \Ulbelievers hav:e a deepersenSe of iJiternational justicethan do some Catholics.

While the leaders ofcommu­nism have lost whatever ideal-,ism their movement once had.nevertheless "they do stir up anidealism withb ,the rank andfile that is strongly imbued'with a sense of. mission," theMaryknoll .priest asserted.

He challenged the delegatesto the school action meeting toconvince Catholics "that Chris­tian living is more than 'Jesusand I.'''

He said AmericanCatholiCIImust be brought to share theburden of .the world's poor.

"That burden is the challengethat faces us," he declared. "Wemust not only lift it from thebacka of the poor, hunglT andsick of the world,butwemw.talso convince our 'Catholic peo­ple that the burden ;must belifted, not out of charity, -not outof pitT, but from a ,d~ andabiding sense of intemationalfustie- ..

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AppraisesEHo~To Ai'd VocationsIn Latin America. VATICAN CITY (NC) ­

L'OsservatoreRomano hasreviewed the efforts of the'Catholic world to .spur re­ligious vocations in Latin Amer-ica. .

The Vatican City daily madespecial reference to NorthAmerican and European proj­eclD to help relieve the prIestshortages in Latin America.

It noted that the PontificalCommission for Latin Americahas decided to create 400 schol­arships for major seminariansfrom poor ~istrlcts.of LatinAmerica. Ninety of 'the scholar­ships will go to Central Americaand the other 310 will be a1­Ioted to South American dio­ceses.

It also singled out the actioaof the newly established' Can­adian.,Latin American Episco­pal Commission for ApostolieCooperation, which has estab­lished 400 four-year scholarshi~

.J. for Latin American seminariana35,000 'EASTER SUNDAYS: Examining I.B.M. elec-inCanadian seminaries and uni-

troniceompnta-tions of dates of vernal equinoxes, of.paschal versities. •full moons and of Easter Sundays for the next 35;000 years. Among other effon. at the

aec0rding to the Equita1;)leCalendarPlan, ~ire F1lther QuiD- :=n~ ~':Ol~~~:;,ton Roohr, O.F.M:..C~y., lef,t, and Father EvaristK'iesuz, 'VariOUll Romaa universities hrO.F.M. Conv.at the Inter-l'ravinceConference of the Friars leminarian. and the assignmentMinor Ccmvent'Ual at Auumpticm Seminary, ChaSka, MiIm. of chaplaincies to Latift Ameri­NC Photo. . can priests in·some of·the~

. of religious <ordeN. .Anotherprojeet is· the settin«

up 'ofseho'larships for Catholic'lay professors so thattbq mayraise the' educational levels olCatholic schools in their areas.

Among nations which have ap­plied for scholarshipa for theirla,. professors are Argentina"

. Ecuador, BolivUi, _Guatemala"Honduras, Nicagara, Paraguay.Braiil, El Salvador, Peru andthe Dominican Republic.

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,ChaUe.nges CClfhoUc~ to :Dev'elop,Sense, of Internationa'i Justice

NIAGA"RAiFALLS (NC~­

American Catholics must de­velop "a deep and abiding senSeof international justice," thepresident of theCatholie PresaAssociation said here..

Speaking at the fourth annualconvention of the National Cath­olic Social Action Conference,Father Albert J. Nevins, 'M.M..declared:

"We must make our C!1tholicsrealize that Christianity is nott I' U e Christianity unless itreaches out toaH mankind."·'

"TheCatbolic Church inAmerica was never ·afflicted

'with a greater handicap thanthe 'JesuS and l' concept of re­Ugion which was taught for somany years in our . parochialschools," he said.

Father.Nev:ms emphasized thatthe success of. the U.s. Churchis to be measured' "in the in­ternal .formation 04. thePeap1ewho belong to it." .

..And on ,the basU Oflthiscriterion," be . continued, '"Iquestion very strongly whetherthe average 'Catholic bas an,­sense of misSiODwhich he musthave to be a full Catholic.

"I questionwbether the ave­.rageCatholicever contemplateethe human race from the teneualbis religion or understancDhis religious obligations towardhis fellow man as an individualand a collective totality."

Father Nevins declared that

'That they did not succurn'1ll tothe pressure and counter-pres­sure was chiefly due to tiheleader already mentioned, DomDenis Martin, a man of rema'l'k:­able intellig~nce,courage, dis­er'i:tion, and-prinCipaUy~faililt.

As remarkable in their .severalways were his monks, men ofvaried antecedents and at1l'ii-

. butes, all thoroughly imbuedwith the Benedictine spirit. ''fbleauthors sketch the previouscareers and accomplishinents ofseveral of these monks, and sointeresting, ,are their respectivestories that one could wish fora fuller treatment.. However, what matters is theirachiev~ment aaa eommunitY.They soon· won the respect ofthe Moslems, eventually 'theirCl0nfidence.

lmpar.tial .in the political ,eon­test, yet manifestly committed tothe principle of justice ed al­ways . ~ractising c'haritT, the,.brought Moslems and' Fren<'hCQwnists together for discussi0os.These antagonists· had felt ,that'such exchanges 01. ideas wereimpossible..

Bol'dea Seek' A,i.In addition, the moDks saw to

this .education of Moslem boys,started a' home for abandoned'children, were so solicitous forand helpful to the siek that themonastery ~as besieged daHybyhordes of theailins and. theirrelatives. .

They made Christian teachingand the integral Christian lifeknown to Moslem intellectualsand religious leaders. One ofthe latter, the Grand Sheik ·of[slam in Morocco, ultimately ad_mitted to Dom Denis "I wouldrespect the conversio~of a Mos­leqi to Christianity if made in a .certain 'way ... The conversionmust not be by violenee or ,argu­ment but by splendor of ailife liVed according to thattlr'uth." .

SllmDlel' SemiDan'Of inestimable value have been

'the sessions, each Summer OfUte international seminar at'themonastery of Toumliline.Hun­dreds of participant. from manyParts of the world gathered .forit in 1956 and. the years there­after.

The more reeent seminarshave been restricted bYl»litical

.conditions,ancJ ODe per~vea

,that the .monastery'sexistenoeis sti1l precarious because of ,theshifting situation in Africa. Nev­erthelesa, only a. few months agoToumlilinemade its first founda­~o~-in the Ivor'y Coast Repub­lic 10 the west of Africa.

Thus; the Benedictine wit·nessto Christ persists and spreads ina part of the world which isprominently and urgently in thenews, a part of the world whichhas a decisive role to play in the'future of mankind.

Sees Better OutlookFor Negro Clergy~LEVELAND (NC)-A Negro

pnest who has guided some 400ccmverts into the Church---iR­eluding 20 o(his'own race-saysthe best way to handle the inter_D8.tlional problem is to "act .por':'mal and be yourself.". Father Allen Simpson of Kentom the Youngstown diocese be­lieves things are looking .U; ,fl)l"the Negro clergy in ,the. U. S.When he entered St.. Augustine~eminary,BaY St.Louis, Miss.,m 193~, there were on!lysill:Neg1'o priests in the tJ. S.Toda,.there are more'than 100.

"Now/'he added, "almost anthe major orders have Negromembers and the number ~ ,diocesan priests is growing."

Father Simpson pointed out.that the first lmown Americanof Negro blood to become apri~st· was Father James A.Healy, later'the Bish'Jp of Port­land., MaiDe. 'Two of his ·brotheNa180became priests. ODe, • .leauit, ..~ec1 .u,preSideat,..~~V.........

TKE ANC+iOR-DiCllCeSe Gf f~IIRjver":-Jihurs.,Sept. U~ 1'60

Book Relates Achieveme:n'ts­Of Touml;i~nlne Benedictines

BrRt. Rev. Msgr. John S..KennedyToumliline, in the Middle Atlas Mountains of North

Africa, has been ,caUed the most extraordinary monasteQrin the' ~orld. A considerable claim, but it may:be justified.

· 'That the monastery is at least very extraordinary isevi­dent from a reading of Bene­'dictine and Moor (Holt, Rine­hart and Winston, '$4),which its authors, PeterBeach and 'William Duaphy, sub­title "A Christian Adventure inMoslem Morocco."

They are di-· ,rect in begin­mng the storythey have ,toteU: "In 1952

'twenty Bene­· ,dictine monks- left the Abbey· ,of En - Calcat· insouthwestemFrance andsailed toCasa­'blanca, 'Moroc-

" -eo. They went· too miles inland and' ,stoppecl.

Neal' the Berber :town of~,,on a plateau in the Middle AtlasMountains, they :built .,.. mcmas­wyandcal1ed it the' P-riCRT ofChrist the King. Intune, ~tbe

mGnastery came to be bownomy as Toumli1:in.e,theQ/lmeOf.• nearby spring ... The ,twentycreated the ODJlY/community of

· 'Ohristian mOIib in N~th

Ak'.ica."Pope Pius XU had ell:!press4'

asked the Benedictines of En­Calcat to make this foundation.Be .wanted them "to carry intomission countries the stable ex-

'.mp'le of the perfect 'Christian.Iife ... Several times berepeatecito us, 'Prayer and examp1e aretile forms most urgently' de­manded of the aposto'late ~u

MCIlslemcountries.' "Few Convert.

Theapostolate in Moslem,eountries has,althoughcarl"ied.on for generations, yielded el[­tremely few converts. Deeply;penneated .with their own rel.i­CiON, the Moslems have been in-

. tel1Sely-suspicious and distrustful'of·';Christians.

Moreover, as eximlptified in!Morocco in 1952, there is :the factthat in colonial areas where theDatives are Moslem, :the 'Chris­tian I'eligion' is identified witlh'llhe resented EUropean powers·and colonists. . .

Further, proselytizmg 'efforts<In Morocco were forbiclden ibyitbe French authorities.

The monks, ·then,wantecl:simply to make the,preseneeofChl'ist felt in a society .soUdlyIMCIlSlern. They eame to '''bear''testimony to Christ and llot!hingmMe."

As the prior, Dom Denis 'Mar­tin,. was to put it 'Sometime 'later,

· -Here wbere a people lives a,p­parentiy ,outside of the Redemp.­

, ili6n, our task is to place 1ibem.m contact with it,"

That task was formidable. Theeountry was utterly strange tothe newcomers from France.'Their means were severely

'limited. They were viewed as-kance by both the Moslems and.the French.

Coming to a head was a crisisiIn which the Moroccans would.fiercely strive to throw of{French rule, while desperate at­'tempts would be made to keepthis rule in full force. The'monkswere caught in· the middle ofthiaconflict. .-

'Mail'Smut Arrests.Reach High of 389

WASHINGTON (NC)-Azrests· during the past year in cases of· alleged mail order obscenityreached a new high of 389., the

· Post Offioo. Department am­Ilounced.

· The department saidtha\ thiswas an increase of 23.5 'Per cem:tover the number of arrests forthe previous year.

Accbrding to the report 4'l'foreign fraud 'and obscenity or­ders were recommended,during.July to the Post Office judicialofficer by the general counsel'soffice. If issued, the orders wouilieut off remittances sent by mailfrom this country to mail aRler

, tnud or 'IIIlU\. dealers ,opeI'atiftCtlbroaci.

~.

.....,

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A-2 - Unobjectionable for Adults and' Adolescents

Separate ClassifieatiollAIIotamy· of a Mu,.-Subject matter ••ceed. be..... (1# tIlOrat occeptabiltr ...Ii

propriety ill .. _ ......ia 01 ...terta.......

Costa Rica TradesWeapons' fo, Toots

LOS ANGELES (NC}-MoolJof the world's' nations are stoeli_piling weapons, but in CostaRica they're swapping arms fmrfarm implements, according toMariano Quiros, editor of theCosta nica~ Catholic ·weekI»Illco Catolico.

"Constitutionally, we have no­army," Mr~ Quiros said', "W<r: de.have a Civil Guard of only 2,00&men. The previous. governmenllleft three war planes, and wetlraded them to the U. S. fertractors.

"'Fhe meldern army weap0I\l'@ft hand' were traded,for farrniJa2equipment, and two large MID,.

I!lanaellrs were converted intele0}Jeges," he reports. "It au.lillways been a Costa Rican E:OIb­

~ that there should be 1lWJIe

Wan,t PresidentST. LQUIS (NC)'- The st.

Louis AJrchdioeesan Couneil oiCatholic Youth is looking Em •new president for its teen-age!leetion. :Robert E. Kal'bac, 13, I'e­signed f:rom the post and joined,the Novitiate of the Brothers 01.Mary.

THE ANCIrtOR- 17Thurs., Sept~ 15, 1960

Suggests. Divorc'e.Bani for 'arents

WASHINGTON (NC)-A do­mestic relations judge says he i!Jnot sure it is right, "proper Oi'

goo<\." to permit absolute di­vorces if· the estranged couplehave several minor children.

Addressing the Family Law~etion of the American Bar As­sociation, Judge Roger A. Pfafil'of Los Angeles. 'County Superiol?Court noted that the divorcedmother' with several chil'dren.finds it hard to remarry. How­ever, he said, the husband fa<i:G!3'no similar difficulty.

When a husband remarrie!'J'and has another child, he ap­pears before tne court and ask&reduetion in support paymentsfellT the offspll'ing of his firstmarriage. Frequently his firstfamiLy must seek public aid, thejudge olllseJrVed.

In Wisconsin. under a newlaw enacted this year, a mar­riage license can be withheld1lJTCilm a male applicant if he is­faiHng to support minor chil-,Elll'en under II previous ceurt@rder.

South AfricaFailure

l'Wt even suspected that Christiancharity 'was applicable to thatfield. We are, all guilty, not onlythe pll'esent Nationalist (party)government, but all of us. OUlf'

only expiation CaD be an enor­mous effort to make Christiandlarity a reality in race relatiems.

..lit may look: pretty hopelessat the present time. But the ]lie­

cuHarity of the virtue of hope illthat it fklUrishes best in desper­ate eircumstances. As a church.­man X would ~ our grea testneed· and duty is to face thestiupation and train oW' peopleto see racialism Christianized. Itis not easy, but the attempt m\:iStbe made."

VIEW MISSIONARY ACTIVITIES: Father FredF01ey, S.J., from Taiwan, aided by two lay missionaries, setsup his exhibit of 100 mission ptl'otos at the opening of thenth annual meeting of the U.S. Mission Sending Societies,in Washington, attended b-y some 800 delegates. Left to:right: Irene Ho of Catholic University, Father Frederick A.McGuire, C.M., Mission Secretariat executive secretary,Fllther Foley, and Paul Liu of the Virginia Polytechnic.l!nstitlute, NC Photo, .

Our Man In, Hayana .Po"enor.Rue 'de ParisSapphireSavage' I'nnocent.

• Seven' ThievesThat' Kind of Wome"The AngM Wore Red.The Captai,,'. TableThey Co.... to Cardura,TIIird' VoiCeT1ItlI earth is MlMThreatTlir_ Mea ill • loaf'TIger Bo.yTaucb of larcenyUpstairs and' DO""".......Why Motst I 0;..Virgit> blOndsWIld, StrawberriMWOnc:fetf,,1' CovntryYO""lJ PhifadefphioM

Gigantu., the I'Ve MamterShe !!lemonsHannibal, Sang. Without EndHoliday For loyen Surrendor HellHouse of Usher Tarza~ the Magnificen'I Aim at tho Stars Teenage,' From Outer Spacle'Ice Palace Ten So¢ands to HellIllegal Tl\e BellboyMario Octobro TImo MachineMiracle Trapped in TangiersMount"'n Road Valley of the RedwooCl.Mummy Village of the DamnedNature Girl and the Sfowr Walking TargetPayor Die Walk like II D,agonPorgy and Beas Warloc:ll:P.!itpne, of tho Veiga Witd and the InnocontRelum of ~ Ft, World of Apol

Unobjectionable foJ[' AdulLI'm A!I Right, JackInherit tho WindIt Started in NaplesLot No Man Write

My Epitaph'Look Back iA Ang,wMagici_Mcm Who C.....d Cheat

DeathMiaA Who UnderltocMl

Wome"Mirror Haa Two ~.M',,",ow, Inc.Music Box KicJNaked Mojo'North by Narft.westNude in '0 Whit. c..C!)caaM 11E>dd•. Againet T_Got The Seach .0- Foot' ill HoI'0.- .... W..........

UnobjectiolIllable lim" Genell'~ PatronageGirl Most Likely. Stop, look and' laughGunfighter. of Abilene Story of MankindHovo Rochet, Will Travel S~ary of Ruth.Hercules Swan lokoHound That Though~ He The la_' Day. of Pompoll,

Was G Raccoon Tho lost WorldInvisible Invader. Tho Magic BoyJpurney to Center of earth Thirteen Fighting MOil

Jungle Cot 13' GhostsLibel 39 Stepslittlo Savago ThirtyMon"On A String Three Bravo MenMichael StrogoH Throo Como to KillModern TImes Toby TylerNoaso for a Gunmag Town.' Like AliceOkrahoma Territory Twelve .Hours to KillPollyanna Twelve to tho MoonPower .Among Men Under 10 FlogsSlavos of Carthage Wal<t TanSnow Queen Warrior" SFavo GirlSon of Robin Haodl Westboundl 'Song 06 Si...... Ma....

The Particular CGuncii of St~ Vincent de Paul Societyof the AHleboro Area sponsors legion of Decency List as apubfic service 10 readers of The Anchor~

Legion of DecencyA-l

Ilamo Flamo8cn HurBig eircu"8<g FishermenBig JeeterBig NightBlood and SteelBroth of a BoyComancho StationCa5t a lang ShadowCi.cus StarsConspiracy of HecwbCassocksDay They Robbed the

Bank of EnglandDino50urusEdge of Etornityface of FireFor the First TimeFar the lo.,., of MlIIeGallont HoursGroen MansioA.GollOt. Doy

An the ....eYoung Cannibals

Ang,y Hill.Ask Any Girlllest of EverythingCash McCallCollege ConfidentialCayer Girl KillerC,ane. Are flyingCrinllort KimonoDott't Giye Up .... ShIp'ost and Sex.,'our Feat <>-G) Blow.r-. Skutt. eI ..---

c.ok. •...... ill P1nIo r....He Who Muet D.N_ Fro... the NIlMow. of IAtr'"Hypnotic ..~IcIlotlliif..

A-3

Angry led PlanetBobo"e Goes To W.BotBottle of the SexMBecause They're YouneBelb Are RingingBorR to bo lovedBridal PathBut No! For MeCage of EvilC,azy for loyeCurse of the UndeadDevll's DiscipleFour-D MootGazeboGiant BehomothGiant of Malath_

.---

B - Objectionable ia Part for AllAnd Quiet Flow. .. Do. Happy Anniyen...., Rebel BreedIleat Generati_ Head of • Tyrant Riot ... Juvenile Pr'-Belayed Infidef Hercules Unchained RiM and Fall ofIletwe... TIme and Etwteity Home Before Dark logs DiamondBluo Angel Karran 0' tho Black Mv_ Rood RacersBluebeard'. T_ House on the Waterfront Rookio

Honeymoon. Hiroshima, Mea A_ Raom .c3Born Reckle» I, Mobster Room at the TopBramble Bush Intent .to Kill Se. Kitten. Go To CoIJegaBuckot of Blood Inside the Mafia Sign of the GladiatorCan Can It Started With ..... Solomon and ShebaCarry CA. Nu,.. Jadt tho Ripper Some Came RunningCircus of Horrors last Mile Some Liko It HotCraek iA the Mirrcw low The SoA. and lo......Cry Tough leech Woman Strang.... Wheft W.Doddy.Q let's M';ke a.-. Meet 'EIghth Day of ........ til' Abner SIlod. LonigaRElectronic Man... Macuntbo. lo... Subwoy i.. the SII,.Elmer Gantry Middle of the Night Summer PlacefeMate Missife to !he Moon Tolle .. Giant StepFemale and the ,... . Naughty Girl Three Murd'...._Fiye. 8f'anded Warne.. Ney., So F.w Tall, Story.iye GotH To .... Of· lOYe,...... ...... T"""eJ' of' l .....Forbicld_ Frllit Party Girl Virgin Sacrificefranke",""n's, Davghew P(Jti"um High. School WOOt Pric. MurderF.... Hell To EtetRity ~ect Fvr~ovgIs Whet'ethe Hot Wind Blow.From the TerrClCle 'retty Boy Floyd WI\o Was That lady?Ganaate< Story Prime TO- Wiclted Go to HellGene. Krupa -Story Psycho Wife for a NIghtGirl. Town 'us'- Wild Ii"",~eot St. l.......... Queen of· 0-..... Space WIRei' Across h J!yerlf/oderl

Robbery 101 Race Young Caplin.. .GuAs, Girh ...... e;-...... Rolly Ro-d tIM Aaeo a.,.Y0UfI9 Je.se Ja_M MaR.

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Adult Educa,tors ptan·October Conelaye

PITISBURGH (NC} - TheNational Cathorie Adult Edu~a­tion C'ammisslon will be here0e1l. 22 and 23'. The confel'enae

. wrn discuss the financial siabFE­ify af Church-sponsored aduheducation programs and the·teaching methocif5 best suited totil~ leveE of education.

Fuvther north, on Korea's eastcoast, fishermen. are sufferingbom the effect:; of a bad Sum­mer fishing season. Several paJ'­isi'les-, aU connected with thefiBbing industry, are getting,;}special aUoeatfon for the reliefof fishermen's families.

CRS Aidi$ VictimsOf Korea Typhoon.

PUSAN (NC}-Catholic ReliefStivices-National Catholic We1­fal'e Conference has alloeated

, 19,008 pClunds. of floW' :for reliefof~ the victims of a typhoon thatswept across the sQUtherD partofl Kocea.

WOl'st hit areas were Chejoislaoo and' the southeast (tOastal'ound. Pusan. Over 7,000 ll£I'esat pice' land and nearly 1,200MUses were destroyed, leavlAi'

about 5,000 people homeless.

C-Conde.....Mad......iseh Str~ RosannaMating Urge $ovoge EyeMill,",'s Beavtifool Wl6. SaYag,. TriangleMi;ss JvIiO Seyen, Deadly 5"_Mbav Semred!Mom and Dod Sensualito (BonofootMoon /a 81_ Sayage)Hoked Night. • SI'lauld<t Said ....Nano SiiJs of the 8argioeNl~ MeaYea Pefl' Smile. of a Su.....- H;ghtNo Orchid. far Mi. Scm of S;nbadl

aIonclI. StellaOne Summer eI ~trollers, TheOseOf' Wilde n.ircl Se..Pa,i.....Jgh. TiVee Forbidden StarioMPauionate SumftMl' Thrill' That Kille. ThePleasel Mtr. 8cb_ Triols of Oscor Wild..Pot Bouille (loy,",e ef '-blV"lOloted'PriYate liYe. of Wasted u-. anct The

Ada... and e... Birth of Twi... 'Private Property Ways of loveQve...... 01~ Women Without Names~ YOUftSt and the Domaedo It..

Adorable. Creature.Jtnol. Gad Created W_Baby Dolt8ecl of GraN..... TheDespera.. Womeoo. ....Eapresso Bon~

Flesh h WeakFrendt line, TheFruit. of Su_rGoa. of lo...Ga,den of lEd..I A... a Camera/licit Interlude... RoncleI.e Plai';rlotter~· from N.y WltochalIlian., JIIAgI... GocId..loY. I. My Prof.asioa .lady Chatterl.y'. le.­layer'. Retu..laYers. TheVoodo:-.i...... G-...

Page 18: 09.15.60

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KofC' to Bowl .Thomas P.McDonough of the

Knights of Columbus, NorthAttleboro, will begin its bowlingseason Monday, Sept. 19. atCasino Alleys. Harry Collinsheads the league" with RosaPoirier as secretary.

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFolI ~iver-Thurs.,Sept.1S,1960 Fo'ur Transfers ofDioc~sanClergy: ' • June 14, 1928, in the Cathedral Continued from Page One

The Catholic in America Basilica of the Assumption in heavy apostolic and parochialBaltimore by the late Most Rev. duties,

Courage of Bisho'p Hughes ~.~~~~elo/B~~r~e:~e,D,D" Arch- Yet It~:tp~~:o::rarsernot !ess

A • Chi- R· Father Moreau served as prayer, but better prayer, By re-Halts Ant.- .at 0 Ie lots assistant at St. Michael's, Ocean ducing the quantity 'of theGrove, Sacred Heart, New Bed- Church's prayer, the' Holy See

By Rev. Peter J. R~thill~ Ph.D. _ ford, St. Stephen's, Dodgeville, hopes to enhance its ~uality.Production of ~asoline in the United States had to and St, Hyacinth's, New Bedford. This' is a vital ,point and sums

Q'wa'it the drilling of the first successful oil well in 1859 He entered the Navy as a Cliap- up the goal of the 'liturgical re-, d lain on'July 19, i943, and served· newal and reform: greater holi-

at Titusville; Pennsylvania. Itwo!ild seem that someha , in that duty until Sept, 25, 1946. ness in the worshiping,commun-been made in advance from thefiash-fi>::es of anti-Catholic- He returned to the Diocese and Hy, priests and people alike.ism which flared after. the of. Nativista converged 'on the after' serving 'as assistant at St. In effect this mea~s that the'

M h tt ' Anne's' Churc'h I'n New Bedford d·'·· O'f'" h' 'ld be sal'd 01'burning of assac use s Church of St. Philip Neri in Ivme~ICe s 9 u, had anoth'er tour of duty' in the g w'th unhurrI'ed devotl'on

Ursuline convent in 1835. SouUiwark, a Philadelphia' sub- . sun I ,Navy as Chaplain. This wasfol- because it is briefer, and with

Once the stopper'· has been urb like Kensington. Deterred lowed' by an assignment as as- greater understanding, . becausejerked from the -jug of mob- by the arrival of the military sistant at St. Theresa's Church, it is·simple.r. "'Compensate" forviolence, the insidious fumes from taking any action, the New Bedford,' 'an'd on Dec. 10, the shortening, the Pope urged,

crowd congregated again the fol-are almost lowing da,Y. But the knowledge 1953, he became pastor, of St. "by greater diligence and devo-. ossl'ble to Stephen's. Church'in D,odgevilIe. tl'on." WI'th the same hope, theunp that the .militia had orders tocontrol. Re- fire were an assault made pre- . On Nov. 22, 1955, he was ·trans- new code urges that the separatemonstrances vented' anything more thim 8ul- ferred to the pastorate of St. hours of'the Office be recited at

and appeals . . Hyacinth Church· in New Be4- the appropriate times of the daygo unheeded. len threats. ford'. "both for the sanctification of

· because the Catholics Flee Father Canud the day and for spiritua:l fruit,"action had One disturber, was arrested' Father. Canuel was also born. From now on,' only the hour of.

· even its 'be- . and imprisoned in the church 'by . FATHER LAVOIE in Fall 'River and 'receivedhis' Matins may.' t>e recited on' theg . nl'n"g out- the military. The next day: w,as . classical and 'seminary trainh'lg pr.evioiJs afternoon,'" and thell,I~ . " . . Continued from. Page One . .' , ,side, of the Sunday and Mass' was :not' of:' . at'the' Seminary of St: HyaCinth' only.if there is • just cause.

.taw: '.' fered in ·St. Philip Neri.·By thi!l . 'education' at Notre Dame School in Sherbroke,. Canada, and St. ,. ,'..."'Conce!:t~d . ' ~ime' the ·mob.. had .ripped",tw9' and then. went to Assumption Mary~s Seminary in Baltimore... ,·Pr.o.t·e·'st~'.,.. '".V.,.O·y'~ge'

. t . f h' t ""h d k Colleg'e,' Worcest'er, for his class-., H' ·d ......d by 'the' lateaction agams.,. '" ,,' , 'cannons rOqi s Ips·a • e oc ,s. . e was or am",·' '.... . .the' C,hurch however, awa.ited,r,These;,· wer~ . dragged. to·. t~" lcal training. He, studied at St. Bishop ·tassidy'··in, St.. Mary's' '0"n'. Wa'r··sh'·.·p .'the .. for\nati~n, ..of ;tiie~ative :,' ~li~rch "doorsand:'the' fus~lit, ',' Mary'S .Seminary, Baltimore, and Cathecitlll on·'June 1', 1936.. -. " I :', .... . . . • " ~ •

American ,.Party, 'whichis' be-.... but, ·,wetpowder'.·~oHed'jhe.,.e.n,.:,.. ·the Sulpician .Seminary in Wash_ . upoir' ,i>i;;lin'iti~n,:'Father'CaR;. c ~DINBURGH (~C)-'-The Freelieved'to have .begun.at Ger~il- ,gines of destruc.tioA·.. ;.... ,. : '. ington. H;~' '\yas,.ordained ..by the .~. u~l">serVe(....'~""assi'st8iit at St.' Ch~r.ch of·Scotland has p~otested.town; Peimsylvania, in 1837. Its .·Sunday afternoon more mili- . late Bishop Feehan :It St: Mary'.· George's' c'hiirch;Westport,St. to 'Prime Minister. Harold Mao­deClaration of .principles de-.' tia w~re called. ·because.of;.. the. C!lthe!,lral on lI4ay:.~5,192~, . Matthew's Church, Fall. River, milIa!,! against the use of • Brit.manded ·that. all public offices increasing ugli~e~and size of' ,Father. Desmar~l1S. s~rv,ed ~~ Notre Dame Church, "Fall River.. ish. Warship to ,carry the Papal

· should'·.,be limited to. native the .crowd. Finally actual wJlr- ..· assi~tant at _Blessed Sac~all1e1\t .. He went to <St. :J'oseph's Church; Legate to celebrations in Malta\Americans only. The real ob- fare broke, out, with ·the c!l~- Chllrch, ~oly Ro~ary,_ Noh~ Attleboro,' as assistant.on June 8: iDhonor, of.St.Paul~·jective 'of the par,ty in· attack-. nons being fired at the soldi.ers· Dame, ~llIn Fall. RI~er, and ~ 1954. He'is the Diocesan Director The Free Church's Monthl,.'iog Catholic immigrants may be. and the ~ilitary replying with chaplain ~t S1. Joseph',s Home 1ft of the Holy Name. Society; Record, in reporting the protest,readi(y"recognized from the epi- thei~ musk~ts.. " the. See CI~Y. In 1947 ?e became Father Lavoie'- described the journey of Aloia:-thets used 'in ,their newspapers: , By the lowest estimate 13 peo- pastor of St. There~a s Church,. . Father Lavoie was born in Flln ius Cardinal Muench in the'~irish Papists;" . and the.. "de- . pIe were .killed .and .more, than, So; Attleboro, and. In 1950 was River' and' educated ill St: H;M,S. Surprise as ·"an insull·tograded slaves ofcthe Po~." 50 . wounded.. Th0':lsards.of. ,.tr~nsferre~ to th~ pastorate of, . Matthew.'s .School and Assump- our sovereign and to her ProteiJ.-

Church Burning-· . Catholic families fled' P.hiladel- . St.J<?seph s Church In~ttleboro·tantsubjects." ''. By,' 1844 the Nativist Party phia,: and martial., law was in, ~e went to St. Matthew s Church tion C.ollege, Worcester. He re- :Repr~senfled Popewas knowil as the American Re- force for weeks in the city. In I;>ecember of 1953. ceived his seminary training', at .

, ' • 't' E 1" ..'. Father Moreaa the Grand Seminary of Montreal. Cardinal 'Muench, former"publican ASSOCIa Ion. ar y. In MeetlDg- lD'New York . M" th l' He was ordained by Bishop Con- bishop of Fargo, N,D., and now.May. Philadelphia' ,members ,Public' indignation an4 horror .t;:::~rRivo:rea~~n~d::a~:dl~: nolly inSt, Mary's Cathedral on 'a member of the'Vatican's ad-were notified to meet m ~he sub- was widespread at the anarchy ~ t D School' St, Charles. April 25, 1959, and has been' ministrative headquarters staff,urb of Kensin~ton, heaVIly peo-. of t~e Nativist riots in Phila- C~ll:e e am~herbroke .. Canada,. serving as ." ,assistant. at . St. was personal representative of.pled, wi,th Insh.. Under such .delphia. Bllt a similar revulsion ahd:ft. 'Mat 's'Semin~ry in Bal- Michael's Church, Ocean Grove, Pope John to celebrations inproyocatI~n, of course, tr~uble had taken place 'after the burn-. timore' HeY was ordained on since t:i1at time.,. '.' .Malta commemorating the .19thbroke out. Several were killed, ing of the Charlestown convent, . centenary. of St. Paul's ship..scores injured, and 25 1030 and yet the mob spirit had not D'ep·l·o·r..e' Apat.hy i,n.F,a.c·e.of.Re.d.. T,hr.eat wreck there. The British frigatehomes of Catholics were reduced been 'quenChed: . ' brought him from Naples to theto-ashes." . . Actually bloody barbarities Contin'ued' from Page One' the pattern r,>f youth ~emonstra- - Mediterranean island.-, .Th'ough military \ ai4 ·was, 'had increased; why were they to 'Mr, Hoover, ·c.illls "the success-.· .' tions. ·that they. often win the

h t d t Catho P'l 1 h' , The Monthly Record asked:ealled, t e nex ay wo, ~ end at . hI ade pia" It .was ful com,inunist exploitation and sympat~letic tolerance; and even'h b ed to the H h f N "Since when and by whoselic churc es were urn .' Bishop John ug es 0 ew manip'ulation of youth imd stu.., support, of teacher, church and,G . W h' gton had . I'd ' contrivance have the naval shipsground, eorge as III .York who shored up a' So 1 dent .. gro'ups' throughout the Civil liberty groups, and. ev.ee, . .

. h b 'ld' f of this Protestant country beencontributed to t e UI mg 0 foundatlon upon which reasoned world a maJor challenge. He of some newspapers;· Moreover,.~ne of them, Saint' Augustine:s. pubHc opinion couid stand uti':; p'oints', out that 'yo'uth represen. ts j, udges. are in,elined, 'to '. be Ie.n- ,placed at. the disposal of t~e.

1 f th S· t of Char . " uJ. Vatican 'for .th~ purposes of the .A schoo. 0 e IS ers.. ... shaken. ali "exp.10s.ive f<?rce," which at lent 1D dea~Ing wIth, youthfity was likewise 4e~troyed by' ~ When re'port'~"of the first rio~ the same time' can' w;n tolerance demonstrators·br<:>,ught Into court. .~man Catho~ic' C~~rch?~ . I

flames, . . . "0' in' Philadelphili's ,"suburb ~f and~ 'even sympathy for mi&- Many people can ,recall .that The Free Church of Scotlancl. Almost exactly 11 years be- . Kehsington reached New York;." guided' ·demonstrations. in· the 1930's there 'were ·numer. known as the ~'Wee Free," is allfore, the Board of Guardians o~ Nativists' there lit the fires for 'ous radical youth" demonstra.,' offshoot of the Church of Scot-Philadelphia had framed a reso~. similar action. A huge: ·,mass.. " . Explosive Force tl· lions, There'is a .belief that there land, a ~rel!byteriari body.lutionof th,anks,to other Sisters.. m'eetlng was called ~or Centr~l 'He .says that· only recen.y'

Th stuiients in . the United States' will, be a r.ecrudesence of these. The foll,owing Monday' , epark." Bishop Hughes WIllS not Were incited to 'serve communist demonstrationa in the mont~

Spirit of the Times,' a· secular intimidated. aims, while they have before to com'e,newspaper of Philadelphia, como: . 'Second Moscow them the clear·.evidence that ~n . The FBI says many of theinented on -the large number of When Napoleon in 1812 reached Soviet Russia; Red China and re'cent student riots abroad rep-

'people w.ho had gone. to churctJ,· Moscow the retreating RusS'lans everywhere the~Reds control a resent the fruition of years ofthe prevIous day to thank Go~ burned the city as they left. Re- nation "the. reins on 'youth are . com1p.unist agitation among these'for' havin~ been p~~served fr~m ferring to this' method of de- held in a viselike. grip," , young people. Because of the.harm durmg the riots, ,- fense Bishop Hughes publicly . 'Successful CouP' success"achi~ved by demonstra-,

"~nto ,;ill ch':lrc?es, we should. decla~ed: "If a sing'le Catholic The FBI director speaks with tions against the' Un-Americanhave .sald, exceptmg the Ro'!'an . Church were burned in New 'd' Activities' .Committee in San'CathPlic.':,~,. In ,0bedienc.e.tothe Y'o'rk, the cI·ty would. become"a' particular intenSIty regar lng

f 'h B h th the disturbances which occurred Francisc"o, itjs exp'ected that the~rders 0' t e' IS o~ e~ w,er~. second Moscow" during hearings 'of the U, S. program 'will be enlarged andnot .opened for ?ubhc ~orslliP. His quick investigation re- House of Representatives Com- spread in this country.

. ~Ishop FranCIS Patnck Ke~- vealed that New York .state. law. mittee on Un-American Aetivi­rICk had sought sanctuar~ In provided no compensation for tl'es held in San Francisco lastthe home of a Protestant friend. ......N t 'th t· d" g d . g th churches urned by rIoters. The May 12 to 14.'o WI s 'an In, urln e " .riots he had issued the fonawing bishop. thet; warned .t~e . mayor He says 'ii~ is vitally import­bulletin to the Catholic's' of ·his tha~ .qathohc property, .~ould 1?e ant that not only the students in-d' . , protected.., . ~ volved in 'that in~ident, but also

IOcese, Determined Sentinels students throughout tile nation"I e~rnestly co?jure you; aU' Actual self-preservation Hughei whom 'communists hope to ex­

to aVOId all occasIOn of exclt~-,. did not leav.e.:to illlpromptu a'c:' '. 'ploit ,to similar situations recog- .ment, and to shun aU public .t.10n, but quickly stationed up, to nize the .communist tactics"places of assemblage" and ·to do 2000" armed men' around each' . ii' b­nothing that .in any way m.ay. church. Reaiising that s'uch mea&- . which resulted in thoseO'lsturexasperate. Follow peace.. w~t~ t.u:'eS· were danger.ous 'in ,them- an~~s; adds that persons. in . a:al~ mef\, an? have that Chanty. selves; the. bishop. utilized' the . Pos'ition to know .have·called,wlth<?lIt which no man. can.. ~ Freeman's Journal· and Catholic this "the most successful' com­God,"- '. Register . to ·rush instructions RlUnist coup to occur in' the Sail

. Militia Prevents Assaul~. "." that no Catholic was to 'strike Francisco area in 25 years.''. Not only' were level-minde~ the -first blow,' If attack came,' .. , , ,.... . .P h " f . 'd . , Trace Patter.hiladelp lans 0 eyery . cree " .however; 'they were 10 take as '. There were .other incidents oft .

shocked by this debacle;.the en- ' ;' many lives as' necessary before other campuses, andwhil,e' theytire nation waS horrified..The .giving up their 'own' for theBaptist Advocate commented: 'cause of liberty. 'may I)ot have been immediately"The will of, thepeop'e is in- . ',. How tremendous was the in- inspired and directed by Reds,disputable. , . the ultimate con- fluence of Bishop Hughes! iiot a they could well have been

, f th' ',' '1 "f ll' .... ' '. .prompted·by,reports of the hap-s~qu,ence 0, IS pnnclp, e u y. single de~enderj however impet- penings in San Fra,ncisco, it isearned out IS anarchy. Unfor.., uous, moved against .the Nati­tunately Philadelphia had not vists;' On the other hand the stated here..

h d f 'th ·"'t 1 .,. ' ,. It has been found in ,tracingseen teen 0 e loU a accep- sight 'of the determined sentineistance of the -teaching of Jean quelled. all plans the agitatorsJacques Rousseau. may have devised. No incident

Two months later the nQise of of any kind took place In Newthe Independence Day celebra;. . York during May, 1844, nortions in this "Cradle of Liberty" again after the second, bloodyresembled more the silence of outbreak in Philadelphia duringthe tomb when compared with the following July.the days immediately following. (Next week:Arclibishop Hughes

. The evening of July 5 a crowd Takes a Bold S~p)..

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Prelate Praises: "Christian Action _

SAN JUAN (NC)-The swift,islandwide' formation of the,Catholic-oriented Christian Ae­1lk>n political party has showrJ"a high Catholic and civic spiritwhich _ .It aside political difiep..efI€e to unite in defense of ChI'1&­Uan values," Archbishop Jamefl

.:P. Davis of San Juan declared. ' ', 'The 'Puerto Rican Secretary 01State has not officially certifiedllhe party, but the CAP leadeftlhave med, with his office 82,O~

swo¥n a1fidavits of members _'ro' electoral precincts.

The party was started bstMay wheJl the Puerto RicanHouse of Representatives killed,B'" Catholic-supported meaSUl'efor establishment of a released­IJime ,program for religious i!l'­struction of public school stu-,dents'. Tille party was encouragec\by ,Puerto Rico's. Bishops andCatholic lay leaders; but theysilressed it was not Church-spon­swed; ,

Archbisbop Davis, said Puerto:JlUca;n {:atholies "responded 110the,necessities of the moment" inI:i~ingup behind the formationo:f the CAP. Registration of theparty was completed before anA",g, 28 deadline. This makes theCAP, engible to take part in theN;ovember elections after it ..officially-eertified.

T~E ANCHOR- 19Thurs.• Sept. 15, 1960 _

Pope Converses.With Patterson

CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)­World heavyweight championFloyd Patterson was among 9,000]lIilgrims at a general audienee~ve,n by Pope John at his Sum­mer residence here.

Mr. Patterson, accompaniedby his manager, Cus D'Amato,tal~ed with. the Pope after theaudience and received a specialblessing for himself and hisfamily.,

"It's an experience that I'll re­member for the rest of my life,"the boxer said, later.

Mr. Patterson, a convert toCatholicism, said he made thetrip to Rome out of respect forPope John and because the Vat­ican had sent special good wishesto him at a dinner in honor of hisviCtory. over the previous cham­pion, Ingemar .Tohansson.

During the general audiencePope John urged the pilgrims tofoster a spedal devotion to theMother of., God. - He said thatwhen a child recites his first HallMary "there is nothing, nothmg,more beautiful and, enchantingt~at t~e salute" to the Most Ho1¥: .Virgin. spoken by a child." ;,

B~oJ:'e ~ding the ~udience~

P01,le expressed liis good wi~hes,and blessings in French, English,Spanish~nd Germa,n. '

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Confraternity to Hold'Regional Congress .

SPOKANE (NC),.--Some 2,500d$i!legates from five states areexpected at the 11th Northwestregional congress of directors ofthe Confraternity of ChristianDoctrine to be held here Sep;'tember 16 to 18.

"Emphasis on Better Teach.-'ing" will be the theme of themeeting at Holy Names Collegeand Gonzaga University.

Seven six-hour institutes willbe beld 10r'-CCD members andparents. Discussions will dealwiih teaching methods for upperand .Iower grades.

Chris von Saltza of California,who won the gold medal in the400-meter freestyle swim, set­ting Ii> new Olympic'record indciing so.

.The parish priest said ham­mer-thrower Hal Connolly ofCalifornia was downCast· as hetalked about his failure to q,ual­ify. Hi won the gold medal inthe 1956 Olympics. and still holds~..world record., ,Wilma Rudolf of Clarkesville,Tenn., is also listed in the visi­ton !Dook. Italians refer to heras "the' gazelle" because of hergraceful'running style.

Jack. Keny, brother of Prin­cess Grace of Monaco and n,competitor in the 'skulls, wasanother visitor to the church.

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-Olympic Competitors TemporaryParishi~ners at Rome ',Church

ROME (NC)-Catholics tak­ing part in the. Olympic GamesWlCl'e temporary parishioners ofthe Church of the Holy CroSs onthe Flaminian Highway and £re­quently visited the church. '

The· StigmaUne F~thers whostaff the church.' ha'\-~ had m~eontae1:s with Olymp." visitors.They report that on the firstFriday of September more than70 ~ec~ived Communion.

The Irish were said to be themost frequent visitors. Theyeame to a Mass celebrated dailyby their chaplain.

The names of -many, medalwinners 'are inscribed in a visi:­tors' 1IIOok at 'the church en­trance. Among them is Polishrunner Zdzislaw Krzyszkowiak,who won the gold medal in the3,OOO-meter 'steeplechase. A par­isb priest saidi the Pole arrivedin the middle of one Mass and¥emained to attend the followingOmle.

C:onnoUy DowncastAmerican athletes visiting the

church included 16-yeiu-old

€)L.Y~ICWINNER INTERVIEWED: Chuck Johnson,N.C.W.G~ corresponqent at the Rome Olympics, interviews&n 13ragg, ex-Villanova star, holder of the world's poJ:evault·record. NC Photo.

to 'the outside and Captain JoeMatalavage doing the plunging.The Midshipmen sailed to vic­tory last year largely due to thepassing prowess- of their quar­terbacks who are now with theFleet. This may be a major fac­tor in the Eagles' attempt to getoff the around in that their de­fense is considered top-drawer.

Crosstown rival, Boston Uni..vernity has also drawn a tartarfor an opener. The Terriers have,a date with nationally' rankedPenn State in the hills of West­ern Pennsylvania. Steve Turkalo,former Coyle great, is maltinga spirited bid for a starting guardberth with the Terriers: whoare, allegedly "loaded" up bont.

Reports from South Bend, In­diana, indicate that Sophomorehalfback Marshall Reilly of At-'Ueboro has made quite an im­pression on the Notre Damecoaching staff, Reilly scored twotouchdowns last, week in theIrish's first intra-Squad scrim­mage. A good" bet to start attackle for Notre Dame is BobWilliams, ex Archbishop Wil­liams' star. ',,, "

There'll a story behind WiL­liams' going to Notre Dame. TheIrish were particularly interestedin Mark Chiros, the State'a-lead;'ing schoolboy scorer and l:ihl­teammate Dennis Lynch. How­ever, in evaluating the gamefilms, sent out by Coach JackGarrity, the Notre Dame staffwas struck by the effective Hne­play of young Williams. The restin history. .

What about Chiros and Lynch?As far as I luiow, ChiroB, an allA student enrolled at NoueDame, but no mention of b.imhas been -nade on the gridiron.Lynch elected to matriculate atPrinceton University.

Talking abo u't - Princeton,Swansea's Bill Marr, the No. ];eandidate for blocking back 06

the Tiger eleven, has had hisfootball career prematurely end";ed by a tmee injury sustainedwhile playing basketball thissummer. Marr, a'senior, had let.;,tered in both his sophomore andjunior years. . '

Oil the lOcal grid front, areacoaches met with Southeasternofficials in Taunton last night to'consider the rules and ruleschanges for the corning !leason.The session, an annual affair,watJ presided over by boardpresident Stanley Grabiec c.fNew Bedford. '

Elected to serve for the com­ing year with the genial NewBedford High hoop mentor wereVice-president George Shott OlfSwansea, interpreter Nick Carig_lia of Warren and the indefatig- At. b •able permanent secretary-treas- .ch ishop Praisesurer, Har~ld Qualters of Mans:' Home Finance Planfield. '

Thanks-C,"vl".Offl.cl"als' MELBOURNE (NC)-Coadju­tw Archbishop Justin Simoncl1l

For Aid to Congress of Melbourne ,0 pen e d theMUNICH (NC) _ Pope John Young Christian Workers' new

has asked that his thanks be ex- ~q\1l8riershere with a special'blessing on their home-finane­

pressed to civil authorities in ing ~nel'ative.Munich for helping to make the ..recent International Eucharistic "It would be difficult to name,Congress here a success. , a more valuable' social serviee

The Pope made the request b:l than ~hat of setting up younga letter to Joseph Cardinal Wen- ' 'families in their own bomes bydel, Archbishop of Munich. He "tIleir' own 'caoperative efforlB,"wrote that he had followed pro- he said.eeedings of the congresS on tele-Vision:' ' .'

The Pope expressed the wishthat the congress would "reflectfor mankind the hope of a sereneand lasting peace" and that itsspiritual benefits would increaseconstantly.

Attlebo,"o ',ManOut for Irish

NOTRE DAME-Marshall Rei­II)' of Attleboro, former Attle­boro High grid star, was one ofthe 70 candidates reporting toCoach Joe Kuharich and hisstaff on Sept. 1 for the opening01 fall practice' for the 72ndseason of football at the, Uni­versity of Notre Dame.

This year, Kuharich's secondseason as head football coach atNotre Dame, the Irish will beout to better last year's recOrdof five wins and five losses.

Baseball Playoffs F'eature'-Fall River and Taunton,

By Jack Kineavy,The final game of the best of three series for the Dioe­

uaD baseban championship will be played Saturday after­nooD at 2 P.M. at South Park, Fan River. St. Patrick's m'expected to go with Bill Walkden who authored a neat seven,.hit, ~1 victory over Immae­ulates Oft Saturday. On thefiring line fm- Taunton willbe Hank Wojtkunski whoevened matters Sunday with aD

eight-hit, 5-2 win.Leading bit- r"'-~~"~::;':"';l,

tel'S in flhe I j " ,':'i;!:eries thUD fmr i " • 'Itmve been the \ 'li8D1e two young I

men. Walkden } ,~ ,wen three for ( ';is.,'three in Sun- !" ,., ,',-day's 1Q sin g l, "". 'cause and had l~a double in four ' "trips in the firstgame giving ':him four in seven going into therub,ber eonteSt. Wojtkunski hadtwo safeties in each tilt in sevenappearances.

The fielding star of the seriesto date has been Immaculate'sJack Morr,issey. The formerCoyle mainstay handled ninechances flawlessly each game. St.Patrick's left fielder, Joe Bar­tioza, carne up with a fieldinggem in the opener when he shoe-

'stringed Bill Tinkham's linerand doubled the runner off sec­ond.

The Fall River team whichcompleted the regular season un­defeated was without the serv­fees of pitcher-firstbaseman DickBonalewicz who reporteci backto college early for varsity griddrills. Bonnie led St. Patriclt's atthe plate in addition to being the~ub's No. 1 hurler.

B.C.-NaV17Boston College opens its 1960

!Eason 'on Saturday when astrong Navy eleven comes toBoston to test the first edition ofthe Hefferle regim~. The ad­vance sale has been brisk but 8tI01 the first of this week therewere still some ducats available.The game ,will be played atB.C,'s Alumni Stadium.

The Eagles are pretty mueb ofa .question mark, espeeially inthe baddield where graduation&oak the likes of Jim Colcloughand Alan Miller, both of whomare now with the Patriots inthe A.F.L. Diminutive JohnAmabile, veteran signal-callerand a better than average pas&­er, is back to direct the attack.

Navy will again feature' astrong running offense withWinchester~s'Joe Belino a threat

Page 20: 09.15.60

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LEAD CATHOLIC COLLEGE STUDENTS FEDERA­TION: New officers of the National Federation of Catholic

, College Student~ are, left to right; (seated) Carole Cooper,of Elizabethtown, Ky.; college and university relief- adminis­trator; Father. John J. 'Conniff, Washington, chaplain;Thomas A. Geil, Royal Oak, Mich.,iJresident; Therese A.Bruneau, .Whittier, 'Calif., executive secretary; Sandra

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. 'dent; Anthony V; Scialla, Waldwick, N.J., religious affairsvice'-president; Thomas O'Herron, Newburgh, N. Y., inter..:nati~nal relations vice-president; 'Fred G. Attea, Buffalo~ .·socialaction'affairs vice-presid~nt;and Richard J. Cummins~~ron~,N;Y;, executiye'vice-president. NC Photo. .

Passionists Officiate .u. s. 'Wo~k~r Home .cfter ',20:,·'Years 'Newsstands Cleaner'At P~rents/Jubi~ee In Communist.·Rulec:l':'Lithuania ". In Europe Tha~ He.re~, ,PROVIDENCE (NC) - Three . CLEVELAND (NC) - News-·Pas'sionist 'Fa,thers; sons of Mr. LOS ANG~LES (NC)-It took:' Lithuania to Moscow finally ~tands and bookstalls in 'Europeal'ld. Mrs. Frank D. Regan of Hiis him 20 years to· make it but pa.ved~the,way for hiin to ~leave llre cleaner than in the Unitedcity' officiated at a Solemn Mass' Ralph Samson; 66, an American the.-Sov'iet' Union. ' . ~tates, a sociologist reportedmal.'king their' parents' 40th wprkingman, is finally home :' Mr. Siimsort was born in Lithu~ after ,a two-month tour of II

wedding anniversary.' . from Red-ruled Lithuania. - ailia ap.d came to 'America at'the dozen European countries. '1

The Mass was celebrated in'· After' several weeks at his age 'of'18 in 1912. Millard L. Jordan,Fenn Col-the chapel of Our Lady of Peace home in St.Ca'siroir's parish here, , ,', ....'. . ,.lege sociology department head,

. , ' b ' '.:,"1 got ,a J'ob in a ,textile millRetreat House in near y Peace. he slowly'is shedding the weari-' '1 " -told a meeting of the :Citizens for

. Dale.' " ness that shows in tired blue three days after getting, here/' he' Decent Literature here that he, .. , • j. sald.· '''} :worked 12 hours \Ii day; ,...Fa·tller' 'C'y'p"r"l'a:n" R g C p' eyes and' in' grey" mem.ol'iesoJ: . was; unable to find anything on. e an; ..,.. .' .... and:,nights'too, for 15 cents an .was' 'celebrant' F'ather Cronan Moscow and life in a "kolkhoz," hour." European newsstands to 'compareReg~n,,·C.p.,:~as 'dea~on and'" a . S?viet ~llective farm in a with the filth arid rubbish easilyFather Colum~ille' Regan, C.P.; . captlve:natIon.. ' He said he came to America available' in America.was subdeac6n. Father Cyprian" . With plowman stolidity, he because' his parents were dead ,A vetel'\ui at ferreting out ob-

and he had"no 'wish to be drafted . t' bl I 'who has been studying missiol;: ,toid' the' experiences of a man I Jec IOna e materia, Mr. Jordanogy at Baltimore, Md., is to leave whose life seems to have been into the army of the Russian is outgoing chairman of the

, czar by rem.··ahling in Lithuania. Cl 1 d C·t· ffor an,assignment in the Philip-., on a collision course with the eve an I Izens or Decentpines; Father Cronan who has . major tragedies of the past' five When World War. I came he Literat)lre, a non..,denomina-been at Holy Family MQnaster.y, . decades. . ' joined' theU. S. Army, served Monal, communitywide group

, h b' ." two years as a private and was h' h t T f 'ld'Hartford; Conn., as een as- H' 20' .' " ff t t t '.' W IC opposes smu. wo- 0'. .' k' 's 't P IS. year e or 0 re urn hono.ra.'b.ly disch'urged in 1919. He . . f th . toslgn~d to wor 111 cran on, a., to th ·u·s '. d b" S " t a.lm O' e· gr.oup IS: arouse.and Father 'ColumkiUe is sta- e ..,w~s ?aus~ .y. o:'le '. was not Se!1t overseas. .' public opinion against obscenity:tioned' at Mother of Sorrows :t;'~I~sal t~ rec.ogmz.e hIS A.m~,!rlcan . V:i~i~ :Home ll.ndto insist upon 'enfol'cementMonastery in Springfield Mass, . CItIzenshIp, 111 SPlt~: of. ~he fact of obscenity laws.., ." that the U. S. Emba'ssY' 111 Mos- " After'thewa'~ he w~rked as a, . 'Priest ..·,·SO Years . .' co'w at one point isSlied him' a laborer,' When he' received Ii

U. S. passport.' The: 'Soviets 're':' . $600 y.eterari;s' bonus, he decidedCINCINN;ATI <N:C)- Arch- jected it.Mr,' Samson h;ld to go to return to Llthuanb for a visit

bishop Karl J ..Alter of, Cincin-' . back to the ,kolkhoz. to his' old liilin'e...-, ,'t: 'II . It th \ 50th' • .,., ';. PersiStence WiOs '.. '....., - :.~ .,..... - .

na I WI mar e anmver- . , ':1 w~rit,in 1936, with a tw~

. s~r'y .of 'hi~~rdination•~.the, "Doggedness, determination, year '~, permjt~a:nd • didn't get.priesthood on. Tuesday, Sept. 2'1., .persistence ana two 'trips from 'tt0!J1e' mi Aug. 10, 1960," he· said;

Blesses ,Wing. PROVIDE;NCE (NC)-A thl'eemillion dollar wing of bur Ladyof Fatima Hospital, North Prov_idence has been' blessed byBishop Russell J. McVinney ofP.rovidence, after whom it isnamed.." The hospital opem!d in 1954 asait institution for the chroll­~cally ,.ill,but demands were'~. great for, a. regular hospii,al '.that :ijishop -McVinney,: au­D'ounced iii 1958, that the addition:,",ould be built to serve thispurpose.

Stresses UrgentNeed to Mold-Moral, Values

CLEVELAND (NC)Man's most urgent task to­,day 'i~ to sift the "kernelsof knowledge from the chCiffof opinion," Bishop Paul J. Hal­linan of Charleston, S.C., has foldthe Newman Alumni NationalCOJlvention., Modern man is in danger o(be,ing "suffocated by, opinions,': ­'Bishop Hallinan said" "butopinions _are no llubstitute forknowledge." When knowledge isreduced to opinions, he declared,moral values evaporate into ex­pediency and "truth is nothingbut the sum total of hands held'up when the polltaker asks:'How many think that mercy.killing is .l good' idea?' "

What mankind needs today,Bishop' Hallinan emphasized is'what Cardinal Newman called'"the foundation to the intellect"-principles, dis'criminating con­victions and a good grasp' ofconsequences.. "The self-made man was a

emyth, of the' 19,20'5.... the Bishopc:; .. recalled. "But today's self-

. centered man is no' myth.' He .isit dismal' reality. As we 'becomemore social, in' 'I)ur demands­.more leisure, more goods,.' moreSecurity-we become .more self­ceiltered in our own sense o(obligation-my privacy, my com­fort, my money, my time..

Christian Thinking"There is more outcry about

the mentally sick; but there is'lCss compassion f9r them. TherE;are more p'oliticiansworryin.gabout the aged voter; but thereare fewer children doing "muchabolit the aged 'parent," . ­, The "Age of t~e Laity" will r~-:

main only a slogan until Catholicp'arishes develop men and wom_en· of knowledge; holiness a.lIdgenerosity who are capable ofpenetrating society, with theil;Christian thinking, Bisnop Halli-

,nan said.

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