20
" , , ORDINARY MAKES AD LIMINA VISIT: The Most Bishop is shown after his private audience' with the Holy Father last Wednesday. Left to right, Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of ·the Diocese, the Holy Father; the Bishop, and !\ir. Joseph -P .. De'laney,sOn of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney of 424 Linden Street, :Fall River, a . . .. student at the North American College. The Holy Father ...expressed his deep affection 'for the faithful of the Diocese and his thanks for the wonderful Spiri(ual Bouquet and Peter's Pence offering. He sent his . blessing to the clergy, and faiifful of the Diocese, and special blessings to all working for. the Attleboro Regional High School. BISHOP'!'! OFFICB An Anchor of the Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL tives, abortion and sterilza- tion. Apart from the shocking ladt of morality Catholics and man;( others see reflected in the Stan.· ford propos,als, there are othe.r serious faults with the reCOIn·. mendations. Many feel, for example, that the report fails to mirror faith.· . fully the complexity and man.1 apparent contradictions corn.· mon to population studies. Nee does it deal with the politicll-L liability many think a govern- ment-promoted birth control Turn to Page Eichteen World's, Problem Underproduction Rather Than Overpopulation WASHINGTON (NC)-That morally and disastrous argument of solving poverty by eliminating tlle poor has been recommended to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee by the influential Stanford Research Instituttl. The' MEmJo Park, C·alif., in- stitute, one of several agen- cies working with the com- mittee on a study of factors that may affect U, S. foreign policy, was asked to relate what it sees as the potential impact of nonm.ilitary scientific devel- opments." . The best the group could do iniildicating what it sees as the most promising answer sci- ence has' to meet the, challenge of an increasing world popula- tion was' to' echo. the Hne of the professional birth. control- lers: greater. us.e of contracep- . A training session for the Special Gifts·'.workers for Attleboro's Bishop Feehan Regional High School heard praise from the Holy. Father and the announcement of a $25,000 and a $10,000. gift even before their phase of the drive begins. In a letter sent by BishopConrtolly from Rome' to Rev. William D. Thomson, episcopal chairman of the $l,225,000 drive for the·· 'I Century' of 'Growth Marks Holy. Father's mterest when ." . informed o{ the project and ""orth Amer.·c n College th.e cordial and special blessing a sent .bY the to those ROME (NC) _ The North American College's first workmg to. assure Its success. h d d' .' "Et I C't .. th t k . The Bishop spoke of the school .are, m a.n. erna Iy a rec ons In to the.Holy Father. at his private mI11emums, lIke an evenmg gone. But the college that has aJdience with the Pope held on well over a thousand young Americans for the third' of the month. . priesthood has been singled .' .: , . The Special GiftS phase of the t f ' th' t' t b' tli . run PontIfIcal Gregorian Unf.. Dr.ivl;! will open on Sunday in ou rom es e versity. all: 12 parishes that the new encouragement' gIven It by 'Today's college plant is sua school will.serve. , the popes. The North Amer- . spanking new, a showplace on Robert V. McGowan a chair- icim is a co'nege 'in the European the Janiculum Hill only a halt- m:lU of the campaign a'nnounced sense not the American:' It is mile from ·St. Peter's Basilica. ItR at: the meeting that Mr. Barney a and its faculty is stable, its sources CIf Doyle, publicity chairman of students go to .class at the Jesuit- . Turn to Page Five the drive, and a member of St. Mary's Parish in North Attle- boro, hasdo,nated $25,000 in' honor of his wife, Mary Baldyga Doy Ie, for the altar in the chapel of Bishop Feehan High. Mr,. and Turn to Page' Eighteen Announce Initial Donations' For Attleboro High School Catholic Youth See. Remedies In Religion WASHINGTON (NC) - More than half of the U. S. governors have issued proc- lamations for National Cath- olic Youth Week, Oct. 25 to Nov. . 1, the founder of the observance said. . . Msgr. Joseph E, Schieder, director of the Youth Depart- ment of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, said he has high hopes that the remaining TUfn to Page Eighteen PRICE lOc '$4.00 per Year. Thursday, Oct. 8, The ANCHOR "A great and evident door lies open, and strong forces oppose." , 1st Corinthians 16:9 October 15, 19Q9 Dearly Beloved in Christ,- These are words of a great missionary,-St. Paul the Apostle. He labored in the face of bitter opposition. He suffered persecution of the worst sort. But he persevered because he was conscious of the hunger men have always had for the true Faith. And he knew, too, that he' did not work alone, but the Spirit of God was in ·and with him. So too the missionary of our time. War and want have brought· distress to many hearts' and homes. Many reach out for a,better and surer way of life than the·one renewing the passions and evils of the jungle, which seems. so apparent to-day. So they open the door wide to the ministers of peace and justice, and those that hold aloft the be,acon of faith and hope in Christ. , .But strong' forces oppose. They stir up enmities and suspicions. They talk hypocritically of free.dQm the while TUfn to Pace TWG I)IOCESE OF F RIVER }'ALL RIVER. Fall River, V I 3 N 41' 8eeond CI... Mail PrlviJe..e. 0., O. 'Authorl.ed .t V.II Rber. Ma... Bishop Connolly Requests .Generous ·Mission Support , ,

10.08.59

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. A training session for the Special Gifts·'.workers for Attleboro's Bishop Feehan Regional High School heard praise from theHoly.Fatherand the announcementofa $25,000 anda $10,000. giftevenbeforetheirphaseofthedrivebegins.Inalettersentby BishopConrtolly from Rome'to Rev. William D. Thomson, episcopal chairman of the $l,225,000 drive for the·· Robert V.McGowan a chair- icimis a co'nege'intheEuropean the Janiculum Hillonlya halt- priesthood has beensingled .' .:, . ' I Turn to Page'Eighteen

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Page 1: 10.08.59

",

, ORDINARY MAKES AD LIMINA VISIT: The Most Rever~ndBishopis shown after his private audience' with the Holy Father last Wednesday.Left to right, Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of ·theDiocese, the Holy Father; the Bishop, and !\ir. Joseph -P .. De'laney,sOnof Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney of 424 Linden Street, :Fall River, a. . .. ~

student at the North American College. The Holy Father ...expressed hisdeep affection 'for the faithful of the Diocese and his thanks for thewonderful Spiri(ual Bouquet and Peter's Pence offering. He sent his

. blessing to the clergy, religiou~' and faiifful of the Diocese, and specialblessings to all working for. the Attleboro Regional High School.

BISHOP'!'! OFFICB

An Anchor of the So~l, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL

tives, abortion and sterilza­tion.

Apart from the shocking ladtof morality Catholics and man;(others see reflected in the Stan.·ford propos,als, there are othe.rserious faults with the reCOIn·.mendations.

Many feel, for example, thatthe report fails to mirror faith.· .fully the complexity and man.1apparent contradictions corn.·mon to population studies. Needoes it deal with the politicll-Lliability many think a govern­ment-promoted birth control

Turn to Page Eichteen

World's, Problem UnderproductionRather Than Overpopulation

WASHINGTON (NC)-That morally and political1~

disastrous argument of solving poverty by eliminating tllepoor has been recommended to the Senate Foreign RelationsCommittee by the influential Stanford Research Instituttl.The' MEmJo Park, C·alif., in­stitute, one of several agen­cies working with the com­mittee on a study of factorsthat may affect U, S. foreignpolicy, was asked to relate whatit sees as the potential impactof nonm.ilitary scientific devel-opments." .

The best the group could doiniildicating what it sees asthe most promising answer sci­ence has' to meet the, challengeof an increasing world popula­tion was' to' echo. the Hne ofthe professional birth. control­lers: greater. us.e of contracep-

. A training session for the Special Gifts·'.workers for Attleboro's Bishop FeehanRegional High School heard praise from the Holy. Father and the announcement of a$25,000 and a $10,000. gift even before their phase of the drive begins. In a letter sent byBishopConrtolly from Rome' to Rev. William D. Thomson, episcopal chairman of the$l,225,000 drive for the·· 'I

school,'theBis~optoldofthe Century' of 'Growth MarksHoly. Father's mterest when ." .informed o{ the project and ""orth Amer.·c n Collegeth.e cordial and special blessing .~ asent .bY the Pontif~ to those ROME (NC) _ The North American College's firstworkmg to. assure Its success. h d d' .' "Et I C't .. th t k .The Bishop spoke of the school ~n r~ yea~s .are, m a.n. erna I y a rec ons Into the.Holy Father. at his private mI11emums, lIke an evenmg gone. But the college that hasaJdience with the Pope held on train~d well over a thousand young Americans for theth~ third' of the month. . priesthood has been singled .' .: , .

The Special GiftS phase of the t f ' ~ th' t' t b' tli . run PontIfIcal Gregorian Unf..Dr.ivl;! will open on Sunday in ou rom e s ~r ~ e versity.all: 12 parishes that the new encouragement' gIven It by 'Today's college plant is suaschool will.serve. , the popes. The North Amer- . spanking new, a showplace on

Robert V. McGowan a chair- icim is aco'nege 'in the European the Janiculum Hill only a halt­m:lU of the campaign a'nnounced sense not the American:' It is mile from ·St. Peter's Basilica. ItRat: the meeting that Mr. Barney pr:im~rily. a ~eSi.dence, and its faculty is stable, its sources CIfDoyle, publicity chairman of students go to .class at the Jesuit- .Turn to Page Fivethe drive, and a member of St.Mary's Parish in North Attle­boro, hasdo,nated $25,000 in'honor of his wife, Mary BaldygaDoyIe, for the altar in the chapelof Bishop Feehan High. Mr,. and

Turn to Page' Eighteen

Announce Initial Donations'For Attleboro High School

Catholic YouthSee. RemediesIn Religion

WASHINGTON (NC) ­More than half of the U. S.governors have issued proc­lamations for National Cath­olic Youth Week, Oct. 25 to Nov.

. 1, the founder of the observancesaid. . .

Msgr. Joseph E, Schieder,director of the Youth Depart­ment of the National CatholicWelfare Conference, said he hashigh hopes that the remaining

TUfn to Page Eighteen

PRICE lOc'$4.00 per Year.

Thursday, Oct. 8, 195~

TheANCHOR

"A great and evident door lies open, and strongforces oppose." , 1st Corinthians 16:9

October 15, 19Q9Dearly Beloved in Christ,-

These are words of a great missionary,-St. Paul theApostle. He labored in the face of bitter opposition. Hesuffered persecution of the worst sort. But he perseveredbecause he was conscious of the hunger men have alwayshad for the true Faith. And he knew, too, that he' did notwork alone, but the Spirit of God was in ·and with him.

So too the missionary of our time. War and want havebrought· distress to many hearts' and homes. Many reachout for a,better and surer way of life than the· one renewingthe passions and evils of the jungle, which seems. soapparent to-day. So they open the door wide to the ministersof peace and justice, and those that hold aloft the be,aconof faith and hope in Christ. ,

.But strong' forces oppose. They stir up enmities andsuspicions. They talk hypocritically of free.dQm the while

TUfn to Pace TWG

I)IOCESE OF F~J,J, RIVER}'ALL RIVER. l\lAssACUU~lJo:rTs

Fall River, Mas~.

V I 3 N 41' 8eeond CI... Mail PrlviJe..e.0., O. 'Authorl.ed .t V.II Rber. Ma...

Bishop Connolly Requests.Generous ·Mission Support

,,

Page 2: 10.08.59

JEFFREY' E.S~LLIVAN

550 LOCuR St.Fall River. Mass.

OS 2-2391Rose E. Sullivan

Jeffrey E. Sullivan

Puneral BOtne

DONNELLYPAINTINGSERVICE

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OS 9-6072MICHAEL J.' McMAHON

licensed Funeral D'irectorRegistered Embalmer

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AUBERoTINEFuneral HomeIhlen Aubertine Brough

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CHARLES F. VARGAS254 ROCKDALE AVENUI.NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

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. I

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. BOYS WANTED for thePriesthood. and'BrotherhOOd.Lack of funds NO Impedl.mente

C9nfi,"mation:.Schedule

Oct. U-Sunday-2:00 P.M. S1. Stanislaus, Fall

, River. .' ,4:00 P.M. Our Lady 01. the

Angels, Fall ~iver.

'Legion of 'DecencyThe following films are to be

add~d to the lists in thejr respee- 'tive class'ifications: .

-- Unobjectionable for' generalpatronage: Warrior and theSlave Girl. . .

Unobjectionable for aduItscCareer.. Objectionable in part for alkGirls' Town (s.uggestive costum­ing and' 'ijituations); Inside the

--Mafia (exce~s.ive brutality; sug-g~stive costiuning)~ -.

. ,,'~t-ri~~~••-~.rr~·

Bishop of Fan River~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese.ofFall River-Thurs., Oct. 8,1959' ':

FORTY· 'HOURSDEVOTION

Oct. ll-St. Roch, Fall River.. St.' John of God, Somerset.

.Oct. 18---,St. Hedwig, N e 'Y, Bedford.Our Lady of the Immac­

ulate Con c e p t ion,Taunton.

Oct. l~La Salette, ~ a 8 tBrewster.

Oct. 25-5t. Peter, Province­town.

... St. Michael, Fall 1Uver.St. Patrick, Somerset.

Propaga'tion of the .Faith Colle.ction,,' Continued from Page One

2

THR ANCHOR'S«ond-elass mail privileges authorized

at Fan River, Mass. Published evel'llThursday at 410 Highland Avenue, FallRiver. Mass., by the Catholic Press of theDiocese 01 Fall River. Subscription pricebJ' .mall, postl!ald 14.00 per Jear. ,."

Hold~ng Tercentenary ObservanceOf Canadian Catholic -Hierarchy '_

QUEBEC (NC) - The 300th Alfredo Cardinal Ottavianianniversary of the establishment. Pro-Secretary of the Sacredof ,.the ,Catholic hierarchy in Congregation of the Holy Office,Canada is being observed from will be papallegate'to the cere­Oct. 5 to 9, by religious and . monies.civil ceremonies in which highdignitaries of Church and State.will take part.

Over 65 Canadian bishops, aswell'as a number of bishops fromthe United States, France andBelgium, are expected to gatherin Quebec for the observance.

Ceremonies will commemoratethe appointment in 1659 ofBishop Francois, de Laval deMontmo~ency as Vicar .Apostolicof New F~ance, witb,headquar-

· ters at Quebec. Quebec thus be­came the mother See of much Ofpresent-day. North "America..

-Asks Khrushche~

ProposaIs Test,For S.incerity

they debase men.to a state of abjection. They profess to be ' LIMBURG (NC)-Sovfelin the forefron.t of science, while ~hey abuse it 'and seek to Pre m i e r Nikita 'Khru·sft,.·make it an instrument for world domination. They declare . chev's proposals for world-thems~lvesfriends of the downtrodden, and prove the i~sin- wide 4isarmament should no4lcerity and deceit .of their words, by the havoc and waste be rejected outright but shouldand destruction of life and liberty they bring along with be put to a test to see whethel"

they are sincere or simp.them. The riders of the Apocalypse are tame in comparison. propaganda, a German Catho~

And it is not only the advocates of a'so-called heaven . Bishop has said.on earth that aceomplish this ,evil, but many .devious, '. ~uxiljary B ish 0 p Wa~therpower-minded,. ruthless exponents of materialism' and . Kampe of Limburg stressed thatsecularism, or even blind nationalism,· that,have brought· abolition of the police-state. sys­tem of the communist-ruledsorrow and despair to a distracted world. '. 'countries is a precondition for

Every follower of Christ has the' call to be an apostle, diSarmament. He said that iIshowing forth the truth by the manner of.his life, ana. the the communist regimes were '-h t h h f II b t

\,i, M h b abide by the principles of free-ones concern e as or a a ou u-tm. any ave ecome\ DELEGATE CALLS ON PRESIDEN.T: The Apo,stotic. ' dom, self-determination' and

a source of blessings and peace to their neighbors. But the Delegate to. the United States, Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, . individual human rights,aMmissionary priest, or sister, or brother extends .the reach formally met President Eisenhower at the White House, for conflicts could be solved and allof brotherhood to take in everyone that' may be lifted out . the first time. They later chatted informally for 25 min- weapons scrapped.of shadow into light,' out of despondency into'faith in hi!D- . utes in the Chief Executive's office. NC Photo. ! Bishop Kampe emphasized.theself, in humankind" but, -more important, to knowledge and possibility ex is t s that MaoKhrushchev, knowing that alove of the living God: . ' Urges United Nations Cooperate third world war would be .sui-

These are the scientists.who do not live in ivory towers.. W C ' h L A eide for all nations, is demand-" These are the healers who go' out to the multitude needing ith hurc _in 'at.in meri~a ing disarmament so that com-

a physician. These are the teachers who get down .to the DENVER (NC) -; The United tellectual life draw upon their munism might be spread later,Ed ' S . I . t "t 1 d 1" on by means of secret police

level of all that would learn the lessons of peace and brother- Nations ucatlonal, OCla ancien spll'l ua an re IglOUS " forces.hood. Over the centuries they have never ceased to build. and Cultural . Organization heritage."

(UNESCO) should cooperate· ·Mr. " Grace· cited UNESCO's P t R· HOur own dear land owes 'a tremendous debt to the valiant 'more closely with the Church in collaboration' with Accion Cul- uer 4)' Icans onormen who left' all comforts of home and family to come here Latin America to coul1teract tural'Popular of Colombia as a . St. Vincent de Paulfrom France and Spain, from Germany, Austria, Ireland communism's "massive cultural' classic example of' fruitful co- SAN JUAN,' (NC) - Bishopand England, to set deeply and firmly the foundations that and intellectual offensive" there, operation between the UN body James P. Davis of San Juaa

- J, Peter Grace, president. of the and a Church ,organization..' opened diocesan observances atuphold our whole demOCratic and spcial system.," w. R. Grace steamship liIie, said·"I~ is a fact," he 'said, '''that . the 300th anniversary year of

We can: never repay those th~tsacrificed themselves in an, ;lddress to the United the communist world; particu-" the death of St. Vincent de Paul.in the distant past. But we can sustain and give courage States National Commission for larlySoviet Russia and "Red by offering Pontifical Mass •· to those that work to-day against tremendous odds; in the UNESCO. Chin!!, are today 'mounting- a St. Vincent de Paul Church.face of brutal persecution. We can and should support the Mr. Grace, a well known Cath- maSsi~e c~lt\iral ~nd intell.ectual Bishop James E. McMan~

. olic layman, pointed out that "a offenSive In Latin America to C:SS.R. of San Juan Puertoconstancy of missionaries that carryon theI'r errands' of '. 'th' l't' 1 d ' ,program, of ,education and cul- galD ell'''o I Ica en s. . Rico's other diocese, officiated

·mercy at the fringe of the .iron curtain,--of those that min-, ture in Latin America. which Christian TraditiCMl at ceremonies in San Juan open-ister to physical and spiritual needs in Africa, Oceanica~ and failed to work with and take '"But the~ -have no spiritual . ing the tercentenary obsen-'even in 'our own hemisphere North as well as South,' advantage of the rich traditions message to present to ,these ances t~ere.America. . ,~. ." , , ,of Latin' America'~ spiritual life people and we have. The" Latin St. V1l'~cent ~e Paul, foun~eI'

. . would be an arrId and barren Americans. are co-inheritors of· the V1Dcent~an Fathers, ~ied· I urge you to be generous In your prayers and In your ,program indeed." . . with us of the western Christian on Sept. 27, 166~. VincedtIaDllalms, on Sunday next! when the collection will be taken up" Religious Heritage, tradition. If we will live by' have b~n working in Puertofor the work of Propagating the Faith. The needs are great. .Emphasizing that UNESCO', that code there can be no Rico for the past 86 ye~rs. IIIThe. whole world looks to us for men 'and women to see the. must adapt itself to Latin Amer- stronger bond." '1955. they were formed mt~ •open door of opportunity 'to spelld and be spent for the cause : icans' religi~us t~aditio~s, he Referring to the birth control pro~m~ of . the comm~~lt)l,

f Ch . t d h b stated' "Their ancient uDlversi- ,propaganda which, he said, some which .:mcludes the Domlm~8IlorIS , an uman etter~ent, even though a:nd despite' . ties a,;e' based on religious foun- "international agencies 'are trying Repub~lc as well as Puerto Rico.t~e strong forces that are raIsed hatefully,-but In the long dations and their culture'and in- . to circulate in Latin America,run, futilely, against them. '- . ' M,r. Grace called attention to the

Invoking God's,Blessings on you an, and with heartfelt " Mass' Ordo 'potentilll food producing capa-thanks for all you do to give courage ,to our missionaries ~ FRIDAY-St. J 0 h n Leonard,' l;>ilities of underdeveloped areasand hope to the afflicte!l, I remain Confessor. Double White. Mass in Peru, Chile and, Brazil.

Proper; .Second ColleCt Ss.· '. "With the application of scien-Faithfully' yours in Chiist . Denis, Bishop, Rusticus and tific advances," he 'declared,

~leutherius,Martyrs; Common "these lands alone can, withinPreface., the span of· people now living,'

SATURDAY - Mass of the produce·fo.od in such abundanceBlessed Virgin for Saturday., that current talk of over-pOpuIa­Simple. White. Mass Proper; tion will, seem sheer folly. In-Gloria;' Second Collect St. fact, it is my belief that Latin 135 Franklin Street

. Francis Borgia, Confessor; America's., healthy population fall River OSborne 2·1911Preface of Blessed Virgin. growth, coupled with advances

SuNDAY-'!'he Maternity of the in the science of land use, itBlessed Virgin Mary and XXI truly a key to the survival of the

; Sunday After Pentecost. Dou- West."ble of II Class. White. MassProper; Gloria; Second Collect

. of Sunday; Creed; Preface 01.'Blessed Virgin.

MONDAY-Mass of the previousSunday.· Simple. Green. MasSProper; No Gioria; CommonPreface.

TUESDAY· - St. Edward Kingand Confessor. Simple. White:Mass Proper; Gloria; CommonPreface. ' ..-

WEDNESDAY-St. Callistus 1,Pope and Martyr. Double. Red.Mass Proper; Gloria; CommonPreface.

THURSDAY-St. Teresa, Virgin.Double. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Common PrefaCe.

(' I~-

Page 3: 10.08.59

\

3

,

TI'ME

TO INSTALL

Kof'C SocialBishop Cassidy C 0 u n c i 1, ".,

Knights of Columbus. will holda potluck supper and dance Sat­urday night,' ·Oct. 10 at K of CHome, Swansea. Mrs. ManuelSilvestre ':u.d Mrs. Arthur Mon­teiro are co-chairmen,

Coast Than Any Other Fuel

rectly to the hea.ti~g· unit twithou

shoveling or stooge. ,GAS responds

instantly with-floor-to-ceiilng warmth.

'GAS heat is sq Clean that it makes

Fall house Cleaning virtua.lly a .thing

of· the past.

New Bedford' LegionPrepare~ Book List '

New Bedford members of theLegion of Mary have issuedthe Fall edition of their pe­riodical, Worthwhile ·Books.Listing 20 current Catholic vol­umes, it includes novels, biog­raphies, mysteries, histories andspiritual reading. .

Copies of the list are obtain­able at all branches of the NewBedford public library ana maybe obtafned by mail from theLegion of :'Iary at 233 CountyStreet.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFan River-Thurs., Oct. 8, 1959

Mons·ignor Gilligan Suggests GoalsFor Catholics in !:-egal ~rofession

ST. PAUL (NC)-The Catholiclawyer should be the "protector yer should try to induce localof the w!=!ak, public teacher and and state bar associations tothe leaven to help restore civil re~ommend to the state legjsla­law to its parent root,," a' ture, a bill that. would impo~e .a

. preacher at a Red Mass here coolmg-off perIod before a dl-decllired. vorce action starts.

M F . J G'll'g To help restore civil law tosgr.· ranClS . 1 1 an, a·ts 1 h 'd "'t t

Fall River native, pastor of St. 1 proper 9 ace, e ·sal , 1 musMark's church and former moral b~ talked about among lawyers;

. ,discussed among lawyers and.theo~ogy professor at St. Paul s written about in legal publica-Semmary here, deplored the t." ."1 t fd' t'" IOns.arges ream 0 lVorce ac Ions He la' d th t "thill civil courts which "is weak- ,exp me a e pro-

, f 'I l'f d 'h t' " fesSlOn offers 'every lawyer ~meenmg amI y 1 e an .. e na IOn. t 't' to t t th. '. oppor um les pro ec e

To the congr.egatlOn of law- friendless" since "honor andyers, jurists and public officials reverence" has been accordedgathered for the 11th annual to the legal profession becauseRed Mass at st. Thomas .College, it produced men who establishedhe said: "This is made possible reputations as protectors of theonly by the actions of. men.' It weak,can be restricted. The finger of Th' 1 ." bl' t h

t' . , , e awyer IS a pu IC eac -

accusa IOn IS prlmarlly upon the e" h .d h h "I bl'e t b t 't' I th 1 1', e sal , w en e a ors

c In, u 1 IS a so on e aw- not only to instruct but strivesyer and the court, for they con- to mold ubI' p'n'o . tht 'b t t th '1" P lC 0 lin m erl u e 0 e eVl . , interest of public good and

A lawyer might decline a di:.. toward the elimination of publicvorce case, the Monsignor said. injustices,"but better still, he might try to .reconcile the parties. This would Education Courseconstitute "a patriotic' service to Set at Sto'neh.·11the nation and if' successfurwould give a consolation that At 'the request 'of several reli­no monetary factor can ·supply.... gious communities of women,.he added. Stonehill College will offer a'

In cases where' a reconcili~- three credit course on teacher'tion is impossible and property and school organization. Firstrights are involved, Msgr. Gilli-. class meeting and registratioQgan said, it is' permissible to will be held' Friday afternoon,restore to civil law but only witlt Oct; 16 at 3;15 in Holy Cross. Hall.the understanding ·that a civil Dr, John P. Sullivan. who willstatus has been changed. teach the course, has had 30

years' experience as teacher,Protectors 01, Weak headmaster, supervisor and ad-

. Msgr. Gilligan suggested that ministrative head~besides discouraging specific di-' . Topics to be treated includevorce actions, the Catholic law~ determination of educational

policies and their implicationsfor sch091 organization and man­agement; "lace of school in s0­

ciety; orgarization of the schoolunit; school managem,e.nt as itpertains to teachers and stu_dents; rela'~ion of the school ands.chool personnel to the com­munity.

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CAMPANILE: The mag­J}ificent bell-tower of the Na­tional Shrine of the Immacu­late' Conception in Washing­ton is the gift of the Knightsof Columbus. NC Photo. .

Says Modern JuristsNote Natural Law. NEW YORK (NC) - The

world today is "witnessing adefi'nite revival of the naturallaw theory," according to FatherRobert W. Gleason, S,J. He says"our modern jurists are begin­ning to see natural law, not asthe sworn enemy of positive law;but as its only ultimate justifica:.tion."

Father Gleason, head of the- theology department at Fordham

University, told the New YorkGuild of Catholic Lawyers."modern jurists are beginningto see that ~he natural law, insound Catholic tradition, wasnever intended as a substitute'for positive law, but only as itsfoundation. Natural law is topositive law as roots are to atree."

Announce CemeterySunday Observance

DES PLAINES (NC) - TheNational Catholic CemeteryConference has ask e d that"Cemet~ry Sunday" be observedby all Catholics on the Sunday

. preceding or following the'feastof All SOUls, Nov, 1.

In a statement issued from itsnational office here in Illinois,the conference urged parishpriests to bring to the attentionof the faithful the Church'steaching on Christian burial andcemeterjes..

'The conference is ciI:culatingits 1959 model sermon, "TheOther Sacred Place," and itsparish bulletin,' "Altars to Eter­nity," to all of its members andto the bishops of the U. S. touse as they wish.

Shrine will. withstand the rav­ages of time as well as theCathedral of St. Mark. in Ven­ice, built in 1063 and SantaSophia in Constantinople,builtin 532, sInce they all follow iden­tical structural principles."

.Since the first plans weredrawn in the 1920s, and theCrypt was laid out and the foun­dations installed, no major modi­fications to the original designscould have been made without .seriously upsetting the capacityof the footings which had beendesigned for certain maximumfuture loads, Mr. Kennedy said.·Nevertheless, over the course ofthe years new studies havebrought about ·certain changes,modifications and refinements to

,the super-structure. The impos­ing building is, therefore, theresult of many years of study.

Aids Carry OnMr. Maginnis did not live to

see the fruition of his work. Hedied in 1955 at the age of 88;The .project has been carriedforward by Eugene F. Kennedy,Sherburne J: Watts, Harry H.Quarmy and Hampton F.· Shirer,a,ll of whom worked closely withMr. Maginl)is for many years.

\

.Carillon-Type BellsAt 'National Shrine

WASHINGTON (NC)-A setof carillonic bells of the mostadvanced design will soon be in-'stalled at the ,National Shrine of.the Immaculate: Conception here.The shrine is to be solemnlydedicated on November 20.

'I;'he Electro-Mechanical bellswill be placed in the stonecupola atop the dome of theshrine. The dome, situated atthe meeting point of the nave~nd the transept of' the hugechurch, dominates much of theskyline of the national capital.

The campanile, or bell tower,of the shrine, called the Knights'Tower in honor of the Knightsof Columbus, who donated one

.million dollars for its construc­tion, will eventually house a setof cast bells. The tower is stillunder construction.

The carillon-type bells weregiven to the National Shrine bythe late Cardinal Samuel Stritchof Chicago.

BROTHER GERARD

New Bedford ManFormosa Bound

Brother Gerard Lemieux,C.S,V., who. left Sunday forFormosa from Montreal. washonored a t a departure cere­mony by his home parish, St..Theresa's, New Bedford.

The first such event in thehistory of the parish, the cere­mony included High Mass. theblessing and presenting of 'acrucifix to Brother Lemieux andthe renewal by the missionaryof his consecration and vows.

A dinner for 100 relatives andfriends followed, at which Rev.William Collard, pastor of St.Theresa's,' spoke on behalf ofthe parish, Broher' Lemiux isthe son of Mr, and Mrs, Antonio

_Lemieux, 2287 Acushnet Ave­Due.

Shrine in Nation's CapitalIs Uniq~e Says Arc'hitect

The National Shrine of The Immaculate Conceptionwhich will be dedicated in Washington on Friday, Nov. 20,is "unique." While its design may owe allegiance to atraditional style of architecture, it is "reminiscent of noother build,ing in the...world."This opinion has been ex-'pressed by Eugene F. Ken­nedy Jr. of the firm ofMaginnis and Walsh and Ken­nedy of Boston, architects of the 'Shrine in the nation's capitalcity.

Designs for the NationalShrine were begun shortly after.World War 1. The Shrine isprincipally. the work of CharlesD. Maginnis Sr., who was notedfor his sympathetic understand­ing of the Romanesque-Byzan­tine style of architecture. Itwas his thorough grasp of this'style that permitted him to de­sign in its spirit and, at the sametime, avoid the slavish copyingof any existing ancient building..

Final DecisionMany different .schemes and

possibilities were explored be­fore the present design was evenroughly established. Some of theearliest schemes were conceivedin the classic idiom in 'view of·the prevalence' of this architec­t",ral tradition in the 'nation'scapital. .None of these, however,elearly expressed the religiousor spiritual quality desired forthe Shrine to the Blessed Vil'ginMary.

. A modified Romanesque- .Byzantine style finally. ~as de­eided upon, which. seemed tohave the desired spiritual qual­Ity and, at the same ti~e, har­monized with the architectureof Washington. Moreover, itpermitted the exterior shell tobe built at one time and the in­terior to be completed at an­other.

As It SeemsA building dedicated to so

lofty a purpose should be"scrupulously honest iIi. its de­sign and construction," Mr. Ken­nedy asserted. Everything in .theNational Shrine is what it seemsto be, he added.

"The vaults and arches arean purposeful, and th~ir in­herent thrusts are buttressed bythe masonry walls and piers,"Mr. Kennedy explained. "The'great vaults and domes not only'SUppOl·t themselves, but also theroofs above, and each depends'for stability upon the blocks ofmasonry of which the domes andvaults are constructed."

Some ChangesIt can be anticipated "with'

reasonable certainty." the archi­teCt said, "that the National

Page 4: 10.08.59

7,

ii

"'1'I'tour (Choice

it: I.1:~c!)R' ,I

ILesser {quanli'i... ,:,'at ""g. -low !pri""';I'

:Su.p:reme ,rPon'ti'tfLa~uds tDi.o:cesan,SYno.d '''alue,s ,.;V~mICA!N ,ClITW (NC)'-'

::RQpe John 'has 'hailed 'the'';convo!cingwf,diocesan 'sy:nodaas :sole!lln affin~a'tions ,01.."the unchangeable ,v.alue (of l'&­

vealedtr-uth ,and I,of :pontifical,teaching as 'the sure norm' <Iitruth'and'of'cettainty". The Pope 'sam <that lthe 'sy,nod

was ;a '~joy'ful :r-esponse, ·not·i1l'wordsblit :in 'Beeds, ito thosepeople who are in the habit (olclaimingitha't'spiritual and moralvalues ,are lbecoming .darkenedand \who 'pessimistically n-!frainfrom contIiibliting 'to lthe wor.Ia'.impllovemerit:"

~.

Sure Guidance ,..

-' "Your gesture confirms andstrengthens ,d i sc,j:pl.i,ne :and,whenever there ;is ,need, lit re­establishes order which •sometimes 'weakened by crnistalli­en .habits," ,he ,added.

"In this .way .there 1s broughtinto ,play ,a ,stz:ong tplan <ofmm:alconsolidatiOn, demanding .fromeach ,one ,and bom <all ,together~ ,

.cleJ;gyl8Ild Jfaithful, ·clanity iCl.,idea~, .& ,resolute ,will :and sure.'guidance. , .Ai

<Orraer lana !Sfl!eritty - ",,"

"%, 'synoo 'also "JIleans 'ferv.ol'for 'Ilew 'ana 'fruitftilactivitielJin 'all ffields 'of Catholic 'life (frOIDthe ',pariSh~ -'the 'care 'of "Yoca­tions;'from<the 'schoollto'Clfth01icAction! from the ,pr-ess to socialaction; {from :charitatile 'actiouto -leisurely 'recreation...

All this ,is .the .magnificent.aHirmationcifthe .Catholic'world ,ana ,of 'its ,alWaYs reneweile'ffott :10 ,give lthose ;answers:anclthose 'deciSionS .w.hich .alone ,CaD

return ,or(ler ,ani:! .security '.,pri!llent .~~ ,society:"

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\

that ourcollege.;ttrainetl !gids:got .embarrassed.when 'we :askeilfor 'an (e~plamition, ,They 'havetwo main lUmgets: ..!Religion land'capitalism;"

The

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'S'AVINGIIS CONVENIENT'Weqpened our account:by mciil ana mdke 'pay­'merlts \by ilmiil.

-Roing 'the [hartiest>kind lof ..jobs',willingly ,anii,well. mheY:l;IDpear'·to ibe Ithe iPace:'setters"

-'-'IRussian lliving"'st8nd31rds,a-re :lower ,tthan ::Spain~s. '11hey'W'amlt ~ami\:i lnfe,erd consumer,gooiis, rbut tthey :show ~a ~Spar.tan

ileiiication lin ':their '.willingness'to.ilo\wWtout."1Fhis!isrnot:alpoint,of \weaknessw.i:ith ttheJll., <as $omethirik,;It~s(Qne,of:thEHr>strengths:"

-'-'~St.lI!.;ouis,tthemrilyCCatholicchurch, 'is attenaea :-mainly 'byPoles. It was the ,one place to'which my {guide 'Would 'not :8C­

'coJllpanY me."-'-"'AI1tPWestern cartoons are

,heav.y lon ,:;lHIre, anC:!. 'so ·cFuiie

ll!J;rges tM:i9he~ Wagesf.or ~Ouban Workers

'HAVANA (NC)--rA .group 'ofCuban priests has cailed for the

,eStablishment of.a family 'wageand. has urged workers' to .ac­

.quire a.·sharelin the/managementof the ffirms they,wotk for.

'.The .recommendations \were, ~

maiieat Ithe £seeonii 'Social$tudy ,\\Week ffor 'the'CleFgy, sponsoredby the 'Young Christian Workers/organization and presided over<by IAuxiliar.y ~BishopiEveJioDiazy Cia of Havana. •

, ".'

$A:N lERANCISC0 •.~NC) ,­'T~ade .is .notthe ,path Ito .peace'with 'Soviet~Russia..But ;mOFe'American 'tourists could ',be., This was' the iIlJpression .at­.t~ney ~anli .businessman Jose):lhL. Alioto kbrought (back tfrom Ihisrecent ,kip .to 'Moscow. ':Withother .local .business -leader-s, \theCatholic l1ayman ~spent :,seven'daYs .in .the 'Soviet ~capitaJ, :and'sevel:al ,hours ,in ',conver-sationwith Soviet economics chief;'Anastas ;MikQy.an, ;their ,host.

Said ~ .~. Alioto' ".We .must.maintain communication with ..8

. regime ,tluit controls·sO .many'oLthe ,wor1d~s.people';:Ifwe'havecommunication, there's 11 chanceof 'keeping the cold war colii.Ana above all there's thepossi­'bility .of reaching the 'Russian"people."

, Hope for 'Peace"mhere1s .wheJ:e .our .hope .for .

peace lies. From ',what 'I ,~wand heard in Mosc;ow. 'the 'Rus­sians are still COJllplEHely 'in ·.the.dark 'about what's "going 'on linthe free' worlCl'." ,

·"Our Iprofessional.guides 'were'young ',Women, .around '{l0, <aU (of(them "JIlother-s{of three ;and 'four-':,yeaN6ld children. TheY/d (beenthorougHly ttrained, spoke 'Eng-iish',weU, knew.al~the,party-line

answer-s 'for 'our questions:"AlHbut'one:'Fhey hemmediand

·haweii w'hen .1'fsked 'about theirchildren. Turned 'out the y.oung­sters Iwere .in ,'state .nurseries,with mamm'a allowed 'one wisit.per \week."

"'Natasha,' I<asked one,"oon't .you think~you'kno·" more aboutraising your chilii tthan Khrush­chev' does? In America, children

,are .the . parents' ,responsibilit>y.'.Wotiliin't,yourrather' have it Ithat,way, itoO?' ~

Touchell tHorne ["'She':mUlrlIHeii ,s:o m e trh,j'lllg {

labout· sacrffices for~the state,lButit llacked ~conviction. I thirik.rrtouched :home."

'Mr, ~lioto<offered 'these qjther(comments ,on ,the Soviet.scene:

~Dori~t underestimate 'whatilRussian \women are(corltIiibuting,to .the "working force.' They!re .t

,...:;ltIE ,~aH0R

'0ct. <8, "l9~9

Lufhe,ran :Pfilsto rAdm~ire's [Pdles''L If [F '·th, ·oye ~o_ [ '0:1 :,

'SPRINGFl®lID :(NC)The blood of niodern,Poland'smartyrs -has ,nourished thepeople's' :,Ohnisthin .faith, aLutheran :minister :told this con-gregation there lin l0hio. ,

lRev. JK. JM. lGlaesner, ·,who­toured 'Poland ,aqd ~Soviet ,Rus-

. sia in the past Summer, saiii:thatdespite JNazi .and Communistmass 'atrocities, '''ever.y man,woman and lchild .goes 'tochurch."~nd:on '~everyreasonable'fac-'

simile of.n wall" :the 'Lutheranpastor said he lfound :a ,crucifix,with candles .and ·flowers.

·On closer inspection he dis­covered 'bulletmaFks ,on· one 'ofthe walls, "maybe":three or fourhundred." , A .young man ,toldhim: ".This ,is .where ,our 'moth­ers,andfathers:and brothers andsisters ,and 'our ·children ,wereshot to death by the Nazis,"

"The fury of'destruction whichI saw tin 'Polana is ,beyond' com­prehension;" said Pastor Glaes-

~~uttthe,akOcities:dftthe:-NaZiS, . -HON.OR tlT;ALItAN LLE<A'DERS 'i.<m' .(~'ORGEmOWN: At:~ \spe¢ial ,~oi1V6ca:tion inbe \added, set tthestage 1for' - Geoligeto.wm 'Uni.versity, tWashington,;an IhonorRJ;\Y ili>octor of ~Laws deg~~:;was comeueU~somethingthatIwas,' even '.'Illudb ,on Italian 'Prime ·Minister ~ntoriio $tmrii "ano .ItaHan $oreignMiriister (Giuse.ppe ;BelJa.wo:~tthan;~l~lthe:~ssaults:Oftth~Left ~to ,tight ·are .Mariilo 'Brosio; maly~s fAnibassailor ito ·the United$tateB:; iAu:chbisho;pNaZi 'army~the llmposihon ~fjf , , '. 'A. "J' ,""" J" 't It 'thO 'T·T "t ':.:I '8t '~, l\&: "8 'rM mAJI" fA' ~hReii,tyrannyfolloviingtthe Ro~ 'E,gdho :Vag~ozzl, h'POStO,lC ':a;e ilga e. 0 l e \u,meu., a&e,s, .n:.rr., ~gnl" ,-T., 'r~' a, ,:fiTC-·dam~agreement. ,bl-shQp .'BatI:Iok iA. \OillQyJe 1of WashIngton !'ana lEatlher fE,award B. Bunn, :S.1J., 'PreSident,

:8utijugathni thy meils NC pBhoto. '·'t'After .all Ithe tUestruction"

''''ftet:all the [pity ;anli ,horror.antlterrorism tthat ·were ~brought

. down (upon tthese ,people" ,cametheir subjugation lby 'the ,Gom­

-munists, Dr,:Glaesner,·saii:i."lI "wouldn't "wish 'You ,to '~go

bito\the rhome 'ofcany ,Role ttoi:iay,because,you,'woultllleave lheant­broken; II'wouliin~t ,wish ,any (Elf' ,you \to -seethe rhungry childl'enon lthe <streets (of 'Roland; tIwouldri!t 'wish ,any (of 'you1to(63tthe :garbage ·they tha.ve ··to -eat, .or<e~n Ito see it;" ~tbe lLutheranpastor .said..

·Amember ,of 4l ,group of 19Americans' 'who ttOUired tRussia,ana 'Roland, Dr. ,Glaesner 'saidhe \visiteii <plaees lin }Polanii .thatsinee tha.ve lbeen :aeclared "tdfflimits" tto,ltouJ:ists. -

!96 'Rer (Cent .Catholic, ""lDe,spite 'the (Campaign tof ltheSoviet Union," lhe ~told his con­gregation, "you cart't keep thepeople <out {of Ithe 'churches .rinPoland. They now have decided .that the only' way they can show,their resistance to the Soviet'movement in their country· is by.gOing to church. Ninety-six, perIlent of the pe'ople in Poland:areRoman Catholic; .the other fourper cent ;are .either 'I:.utheran ,or'Reformed:" \ q ,

'''The people would line. up;outside the .church anii wait for

. the next 'Mass to begin," theminister declared, "It wouldthrill your heart ·to ·see thesetlowntroddenpeople, withscarcely enough clothes on their;backs, ,waiting .in .line ,to get intollhurch .to 'wol'shjp 'the God tthat.the Reds 'say does not exist."

[Mark? Serv'ice,IBy Jesuits

CHAPEL "POINT, (NC):More than: 300 i contiilUous years(of 'service tby :the \Jesuit 'Fathers,in southern Maryland ·were com­Imemorated in'Q· ceremony ,at the(parish said to Ibe1the,oldest;con­ttinuously active ;.paJ:iSh ;in ahelU. S.

,A Manylana lSt&te .historical.--­1mar.ker was erected .at 'St. .Ig::1Datius church, ~founi:ied in 'f641(by Father 'Andrew 'White,:8.J,.,!the "Apostle of Maryland." The(church has 'haa 'a resident 'pas­itor since .1662.

The marker 'was unveiled :byWather A. Robert Thoman, S.J.,·~pastor of St. Ignatius' parish'since 1953. .

Father Michael J. ,Farrell,lTepresen.ting 'the WasHington;archdiocese, at 'the ceremony,>said in an address: "The spir­litual ,accomplishments of the.'Jesuits' in 'southern Maryland ~lfor more than three centuries;are unique and unsurpassed inIAmerican Church history, and afgreat source of inspiration ;forlall American Catholics."

~.,

J

Page 5: 10.08.59

5

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Dedicate~LargestHouse: of: Cl1arity

VANCOUVER, (NC) - Thethird a-nd what is believed to bethe largest house of charity onthe North American .continenthas' been dedicated in' Vancouv­·er.

Brother "e Paul, founder oftHe' F'ranciscan.Tertiaries' housesof' charity, in Minneapolis, Minn.,and' Spokane;, Wash. said thenew, home will, provide 25,000square' feet of fioor space, 110beds, two dining' halls and achapel.

A recreation room' and private1 quarters for the' Brothers will

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Missal Puts, Mon.I'n' Outer Sp'oce

LINCOLN, (NC) - Mrs. Joha'Scott said that the other dayshe was on her way to the'church goods store to buy herhusband a missal.

A non-Catholic friend joinedher, and asked what she was'going to buy.

"I'm going to buy a, missalfor my husband."

THe other party wisecracked,with' a smile: Uk missile! You-'mean you're ,hoping t!>: send· him'info outer space."

Mrs. Scott said, she couldn'tresist answering yes;

ElectricalContractors

2'5~OD:O: Me,n M'archIn H'OIY1N'ame Parade

PONCE' (NC)-Thousands ofmen paraded through the mainstreets in the closing event ofthe 16th national Holy NameSociety convention in PuertoRico:

BIsHop James E. McManus,C.SS:R, of' Ponce presided atthe convention Mass andpreached'the sermon at St. Marythe Q'ueen's Church. BishopJames P: Davis of San Juan wasunable to atten!!' because of" ill­ness;

Tlie t~o-hour parade started'at. the Catholic University;' andended, at tne church. An esti­mated,25;000 Catholic men, from90' HNS units participated..

OLDEST GOLDEN CROSS,: Regarded as' the oldest.golden cross extant, this sixth1.century treasure on exhibitin the'Vatican was the' gift of' By·zantine Emperor Justin' II::to Queen Radegunda of the Franks when she retired; to a,convent.' Encrusted. with, precious; jewels,. mostly' of ancient,square cut, it stands about a foothigh~ NC Photo.

Cathe:lic Youth,We-ek GainsB:le'ssing' of Holy Father,

His Holiness Pope John XXIII has given his apostolieblessing to organizers and directors of the 1959 NationalCatholic Youth Week andt all Catholic youths taking part,in the observance. The' Pope has called on U.S. Catholic

young people to participate' 'Theme of the observance- is"enthusiasticaUy and, zeal- "Spiritualize Youth _ Vitalizeously" in the Youth. Week, Nations!'which will be obser.ved· this - Noting, this theme, the Holyyear from Sunday, Oct; 25> to Father stated he "cannot butSunday, Nov: 1. approve so praiseworthy' a

pro,gram,'" adding:Pope' John made- his Y'outhWeek comments in a special "Only when man is at pea'ce

with himself and in himselfmessage'to' ArcHbishop' Leo' Binzof'Dubuque, episcopal' chainnan can he hope to pacify! and, re­of; the Youth Department, Na- vitalize the world;; and· that in­tional Catholic Welfare' Confer- terior personal peace the worldence; whic,h' sponsors the' wee!k cannot give; but' only the' Ptince

of Peace, by whose' grace' many:'This' year marks> the' ninth may/ live' a'; rich, intense' and,

annual National Catholic Youth fruitful- spiritual life;'"Week. It. will be observed in allarchdioceses' and dioceses. in theUnited' Slates. and in U. S: terri­tories; and~ throughout tHe woddin areas where U. S: armedforces are; stationed.

Prelate Urges; StudyOf Catholic- Press

BILOXI (NC)-Setting, asidea period once a week in Catholicschools for readIng and discus­sion of the' Catholic' press' hasbeen proposed' by· Bishop AlbertIv.Zuroweste of1BeIlevme; Ill:

"Ih' this way~ a' child' wouldl>ecome acquainted with theCatholic press and' acquire thehabit of' reading g~od litera-

. ture:" said' the IllInois prelate,episcopal chainnan' of' the PressDepartment, of the NationalCatholic' Welfare Conference:

Bishop Zurowes~e!s, proposalcame during apar.t oran address,in, which he urged emphasis, onUie. positive. approach to, theproblem of questionable litera­ture.

It.is·not enough,to protest off­color reading material, he s~id,

but "our educators_ must' trainyouth. and we. of' the press mustencourage them, to read goodnewspapers, magazines, articlesand: faction that will. assist themin tiie pursuit; of· tlie good, thebeautiful and tlie virtuous.,,---

building turned into barracksfor the French arplY. It wastaken over by Visitat,ion nuns in1814, and then by French sol­diers again-this time defending·the pope-in 1848. Renovated forthe Americans, it was designedfor a capacity of 160 students.

After World, War I, the rostershot up close to 200:, Building,sites in Rome were well nigh!impossible to comelDY; but. Pius.XI bought 25 acres. of: land: on.the Janiculum-usingmart of'an',unprecedented $1,500;000 credit;arranged' throughl New· Yorkba'nlters--and 'offered half>' of,the' site:to the Alnericans. :

New Quarters.Plans were' drafted immedt­

ately for construction ofthe newquamers for the American na"tional seminary; Bu\:' the depres­sion' intel'vened. Then cameWorld .War II.. When Italy en­tered the war in 1940, the- stu.,dents returned, nome' and. the

, college' was. closed completely,.The building was a home for

Italian. refugee' children afterthe wal', and' the':college was not-reopen'ed until' tHe' Eai~' of 19481Plans to, erect.. tlie! new' quarterson the JaniculUm, were madedefinite the same y;ear,and.. drewfrom Pope Pius xn 8 letter, tothe American Hierarchy express­ing his "warmest. commendation'"andl "padicu.lar. joy." Pius XII

. himself came' to, Rome.. froin his,Summer' home in Castelgandolfo.to dedicate the. new $3,500,000­building on October 14; 1953;Completion of the plant, hesa,id, represented'the lighting of'"a' stronger flame' Ofi hope> fOltthe' Church; in' the) Unifed States,and the world."

Rresent atl the 1953';dedicationwere hundreds, of. alumni: of, thecollege, including. three' of' themajor contributors) to. the' newbuilding - Cardinals, Samuel .Stritch of Chicago and EdwardMooney of Detroit~ both ofwhom died in 1958, and HisEminence F 1" a 0. cis CardinalSpell.lrlan, Archbishop, of New'­York, who is taking part'in Uiecentenary celebration.

The Nonth Amer.ican Collegeis the only one of the two'-scorenational. and regional seminariesand' l\'ouses of: studies whoserectnr- is a bisHop: He' is Arch­bishop. Martin J(.OlConnor, for­mel' Auxiliary Bishop of' Scran­ton' who: was. named. rector inNovember, 1946, and whom HisH'oliness Pope' John XXIIIraised to~the'rank;of'ArchbishopUUs. September; just. before' thecentennial celebration;

While the big college: on. theJaniculum Hill is. the focal pointof the American.. seminarian'slife in Rome, the old. house on"HUmility Slreef.' remains an'American training: ground. In'19118;.in recognition for the half­million dollar postwar renova'­tion, of the. Drop.erty' and' or theAmerican Church's generosityto the needy overseas, Pius XII.gave permanent title to the oldbuilding to the American Hier-,archy. Since tHe completion ofthe new building, it has. servedas a residence for Americanpriests taking gl'aduate studiesin Rome.

Augustinians Choose .Superior' General

ROME (NC) - A 50-year.:::01d,Spanish authOl::itY on Ara~

philosophy 'and: language, liasbeen elected new superior gen­eral' of: the Augustinian Fathers..

Chosen to head the Bennitsof. St. Augustine was Father Lu­ciano Rubio, O:S:A. He waselected by...8, general chapter ofWe' 700:"y.ear-old' community,which is devoted to education­ali, missionary a.?d parochial

cwork.

American Augustinians taking,part in the. election included'Fathers James B: Gallagher,O.S:A., and James A. DonnelIon,O.S.A.; of the Province of St­Thomas of Villanova, and Fa­tilel'S Francis ,G. Cavanaugh,O~S:A., and John L. Seary.,O.S'A., of the communit¥!. Chi,­·.-go pruvince.

Continued', from. Page Onerevenue apparently secure, andit appears destined to build ao.ever greater tradition of 'supply;..tng, the' American Church withpriests' imbued' with the Romanspirit. '

But often.during'the first hun..dred' years it· was in jeopardy,>.The' college' was one of the- petproiects of Pope 'Plus IX, and; it'was he wl\o'bougfit and provided··tl\e'. college's first" headquarters;lit. was. on December, 7, 1859;, theeve' of; the' feast. of: the; Iinmacu;·

,late' Conceptionl-the- title> under.whiah- Mary ,hadi 6een~designatediPatroness- of' the' United; States,only! 1'3, years earlier-that- 1CJ,Americans sfudying for thepriesthood, in Rome marched,down. the Via' dell'Umilta indOwntown ROme to take posses...siom They were,already w~aring

the ganb that has made the,American, seminarian in Romeeasily; distinguishable ever since

.-black cassocks. trimmed withblue;. white collars, and broadred sashes at their' waists.

Auspicious OpeningThe college opening was aus­

picious. PiuS-. IX, himself visited.the' building the following, JaO'.29: and> offered',Mass there. It,wasthe feast of: St. Francis de Sales,wlio, had also, celebrated Massthere. The first decade,. however,was. an uncertain one. The .CivilWar drew ofLto armsman~boy;s

.who, mighthav:e. studied for the

.priesthood" and. at times there, was: even a question mark as. towl\ethen the "Uilited" Stateswould. survive. .

Tlien- came 1870, and the faUofi Rome. The Italian governmenttl\niatened: seizure'ot'such eccle'-

, .iastical property' from the be..ginning; In January, the highestcourt. of the kingdom ruled thatthe' government was entitled, toseize' the property. CardinalJohn· Mccr:loskey" Archbishop, ofNew York, and, the first Amer­ican' cardinal,wrote to Presidi'mtChester A. Arthur requesting'him to "ask the King of Italy' fora .stay of proceedings, if it be

, not possible fUl'thermore to- ex­empt, the institution as virtuallyAmedcan property' from' the op­eration of :he'law." As a· result,the- Secretary, of State called! onthe' American, minister to Italy,William. Waldorf Astor,' to inter­vene. Mr. Astor's appeal savedthe college; it was exempted\

In "recognition of its success,and. in time for its.25th anniver­sary; that. Decemben, Pope LeoXIII raised, the.. institution to. therank; of pontificaL college onOctober 25j 1884.

Golden TubiJee,On DecemBer, 8; 1909,. the

gplden jubilee.' of' the college,St: Plus X received; alumni' andstudents of: the' North' Americanin. a, special: audience: Thesainted Pontiff told tHe Amer­icans tHar lie could find' nowords to' express "tlie good thatthis seminary has done, is doing,and will do for your nation.'"

The college' had lean yearsduring World War I, but wasable to stay' afloat; World' WarII, however, forced' its completeclosure. It was not reopenedun:til 1948.

The old building on "HumilityStreet" had been bmlt as a con­ven\: for Dominican nuns at theopening' of the 17th- century. 'Dbenuns were ousted, during: theNa'poleonic occupation, and! the

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Page 6: 10.08.59

"

Weekly Calendar:Of FeastDays~

Hoiy Father Praises:Benedictine Order

ROME, (NC) - Pope JohnXXIII praised the BenedictiOnOrder for its 'contribution, toEuropean civilization and forremaining faithful' to the idealtlof St. Benedict. .

,The Pope spoke at, St. A..selm~s abbey here where he Wallgreeted by ,the newly elected

"Benedictine Abbot Primate Ben­DO Gut, O.S.B., who has betmabbot of the independent abbeyof Maria Einsiendeln, Switze..land.' . \ ,

In his talk at St. Anselm"the Pope recalled the Benedic­tine Order's principal activiti~

--study, education, prea~h.i,ft'and mission work - and urgedits members to strengthen uni4~'.within their confederation coD­stantly and to retain a ser~

and calm ,:pirit. , . ,He' urged the monks to tab

advantage of the good aspecta •of modern' life but 'always ...remain loyal to their ancieDttraditions.

TODAY - St. Bridget ofSweden, Widow. She was a,m'ember of the Swedish royal·family born in 1034. She marriedPrince Ulpho of Sweden andthey had eight children. Man;Fyears later she and her husbandseparated by mutual consent. Hejoined, the Cistercians. and shefounded' the community of st.,Saviour in the Abbey of Wastei..

TOMORROW-St. John Leon­ard, Confessor. The founder ofthe Congregation of Clerks Reg:'ular' of the Mother of God, hewas born in the 16th century illLuni, Tuscany. He coo'peratedwith St. Philip Neri, St. Joseph

, '. Calasancius and other famousholy men of the time' in restol'­ing ¢hurch discipline ,and con­verting sinners. He is lookedupon as one of the founders 01.the Roman College of the Prop­aganda for Foreign Missions. Hedied at the age of 60 in 1609.and 'was canonized in the tweD­tieth century.,

SATURDAY-St. Francis B.~'gia, Confessor. Son of, .the DU,k.of Gandia,. a Grandee of Spain,he was born I in 1510. Whileserving at +he court of EmperorCharles V, he determined upOlla religious vocation and enteredthe Society of.Jesus. He deciineda Cardinalate and became thethird General of the Jesuits. Hedied at Ferrara in 1572, fatigued

, from a mission he had been senton by the Pope to enlist 'aid 01.

· Christian princes when th.,TUrks' menaced Christendom.He was C'anol)ized in 1671.

. '

• • •

-...What is the mea,ning of

"ex,claustration"?Exclaustratlon is the permis­

sion ,granted to a 'professedreligious, for a very grave rea­son, to live in the world tem- .porarily while still retainingthe obligation of the vow.s. Oneto whom this permission' isgranted is not allowed to wearthe religious garb. ,tJil

Education PrincipalProblem in Africa

DAKAR (NC) -.:. The centrat'problem in almost all the Afri­can, countries' below the &..d1araois education, an American JellUitexpert on education says;

Father' Neil G. McCluskey,S.J., associate editor of America, 'national Catholic weekly reviewpubiished in New York, Jlladethe statement on his arrival in 'Senegal for a three-month studyof education in equatorial and,southern Africa.

I

· . SUNDAY - Maternity of the,Blessed Virgin Mary. This feaStcommemorates ,the d i v i n emotherhood of MarYi her dig­nity as Mother of God and herspiritual TTlotherhood of men. Kwas observed first in Portugal,Brazil and Algeria. It is thepatronal feast of the Trinitarians.Polan'd celebrates the day as theF:east of Mary, Quee'1 ",<, poland.,MONDAY-'-SS. Evagrius, Pri..

'ci~n and Companions. Martyra.The date of their martyrdom ~

., unknown, but. they probabl'y· were put to death in Syria. .

TUESDAY - St. Edward OfEngland; King-Confessor. Unex­

'. pectedly' raised' to the throne. ofEl1g1and at the' age of 40, he

· ruled ·for 24 years.' During th.,time ,the country prospered.

· ruined ,churches were rebuilt,the weak lived in security, and

· for years afterward men spoke· 01. the "laws of the good St. Ed­

ward." He.1ied in 1066 and b.remains' were enshrined in WeA-

What Is attrition! minster A,bbey. . 'ATTRITION is another way of" WESDNESDAY':"-St. Callist.

saying imperfect contrition. Per- I, Pope-Martyr. A Roman' ~feet contrition, as you know, is biI1h, he succeeded St. Zeph)l'­a sorrow for sin because it is 'an, rinus. as Pope in 217. His five­offense against God who is so' year pontificate was marked bygood so lovable'in Himself. 1m.., moderating rigors of penitentialperfect contrition or attrition is' discipline; repression of' thea sorrow for sin springing from Patripassians, Sabellians anda less" sublime motive: becaw;e other heretiCs,a'nd the fixing Ofsin is so hateful in itself; or be- the Ember' :!:lay fasts. During allcause by sin we can be punished anti-Christian riot in' 222 he wa.for eternity in hell. Attrition is thrown headlong from the .win.,.sufficient for forgiveness of dow of a high building andsins in the Sacrament of Pen- . killed.. He 'was buried in 'tI~

'ance (or in Baptism' when re~ Catacombs.,ceived by an adult guilty ofactual sin).

What is the attitude 01 theChurch $owards plastie sur­gery?If there is no, particular risk

involved, plastic surgery .isallowed, even though there beno other reason than merelyimproving our appearance; Weare not allowed to risk our 'livesor even an equivalent good for

· vain reasons. ,Should, there bereal danger inVolved then the

· end result must be examined inlight' of the means taken to ac-

,complish it. A' proportionatevalue must be established before,such 'an' operation should beallowed. In particu~arly gravecases, the advice ,of a confess9r

· should be sought.

•• •

"QlJESTIONS....'ANSWERS

"Real'iJr Counterfeit?

By Rev, James A, ·McCarthyI "r ..

Holy NameChureh-Fall itiverWas Christ the family name other exampies in: the pages of

of Jesus? World History. 'In short, after all the preced-'

ing, Jesus had no family nameas we know it today, nor.did anyof his contemporaries.,,

, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 8, 1959~,' '.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVERPublished we~kly by The CQtholic Press of theDioces~of Fall River

410' Highland AvenueFall 'River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151

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

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER. Rev. Danielf. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll

, MANAGING EDITOR .'Hugh J. Golde..

6'Against Great Odds'- .; , ", It is 'no secret that thinking .Jllen throughout the worldregard South America as the target of stepped-up com­munist activity. In, the poverty of the many there as con..,trasted with the great wealth of the few, communist .ideasof class struggle and the 'economic 'betterment of theworkingman will find many eager ears. .

From the very beginning of his p~n'tificate, Pope Johnhas been making the faithful aware of these dangers- jn themission lands of the world. He has consistently pointed"outin letters and- in addresses that the missions are a riChsoil in whiCh.Christianity may be planted.or from which willspring a dangerous harvest. And the sowers of COInIllunismare never idle. .

As alw'ays when, confronted by a terrible danger, the'Chu'rch, turns to Mary. In his latest and third encyclicalletter, Pope John asks that the Rosary be said with renewedprayerfulness by the faithful and -that one of the intentions,be for the mission countries. Such a powerful prayer as OurLady's Rosary should be directed with p'owerful intentions.And the work of the Church in mil?sion lands and especiallyin South America is a powerful work against powerful odds. ..Just the'kind of project that ()ui:- L~dy excells at.

In a Year's' TimeOne year ago, tomorrow,. Pope Pius XII died. ' \ ,He'was hailed all during his pontificate and at his deat~ ."

as a '~pii'itual leader of great holiness and unparalleledinsight into modern problems and their causes and cure~ ~~ ,

, spOke with authority on an astounding range of, topicsland applied principles to cases wit~ -perspicacity and

scholarship. , . ' ,The passage of a year has not di~medthat judg:ement,

of him. '. .., , ' ' ,'.Just after his elevation to the Chair of Peter, Pope

John stated that Pope Pius was of a stature that' one seesin Doctors of'the Churc}l-men of holiness and .learning"whose works are guides for Hying happily in this worldand attaining to the life of Heaven. For Pope Pius never 'lost sight of the t~o great focal points of life-God and the,individtlal on his journey to God. Complex that journey, No. Christ is the English trans­might be, but Pius never hesitated to. point out ,the' sure lation of the- Latin '''':Christus"

'which was derived from theway and to unweave some of the complicated problems that , Greek "Christos". It means "thecould rise up to confuse men. anointed one". To refer to one

God blessed His Church in the choice of Pius, and .He as "anointed" indicated "that theeontinues to guide His people through the sure hand of person had, been designated for

. h t P J h . • particular task. We have aanother "pastoral Pope." For that IS w..a ope, 0 n, In.' ,remnant of: this today, in the)lis earliest papal address, pointed out the' Pope to, b~ 'Church in our sacramental SYS­

neither a diplomatic Pope nor any other kind of Pope, but, ~m; principally in the sacra­limply. "the Pope," the Father of ·the faithful, the pastor m,ents of Confirmation and Holyof souls with the world for his parish." . ' . Orders. " .

, Outside of the, Sacraments,Perhaps that 5s the great appeal bo~h Pope JoJ1'n.~P9 ,there, are other instances of

Pius before him have had f9r, men of.. all nati,ons and every ; anointing with oil in our presentcreed-in ·the midst of so much. organization \ these . day' civilization, notably inPontiffs have reminded men that the.iridividmil is still arid \ co'!ntries where roya.lty still

f G d' I d 'A' 'd th . d' 'd '1 ,.exIsts. At ,the coronatIOn of '.~ways the target 0 0, s ove an grace. !l, ,e Ill. IVI ua., king or que'en, an important part.]8 the concern of the ~upreme Pastor~the,Fathe.r ,f!l of th~ ceremony is the anointingChristendom. . i . of the ruler;usually by a reli-

Let the Community Speak' ' ~il~~:b~t~ign~;rY'En;i~~~' Qu=:

The chief of police, of . Tiverton has mall'C 'everaJ. .. anomted by, th~ Arc~blshop 01., b t d' . th t th t h .. , t . , ...J Canterbury., statements a ou rIVe-In,· ea ers ,a ave pu mto wor-us 'l> The name Jesus means Saviour

. 'the suspicions and ,thoughts of many persons... " "and,it was'for the salvation of'The chief is quoted as saying that .th~' drive:-ins are . the w6rld that he .was' , the

places for teenagers to hold ·"loving parties and beer ,anointed one.partiesH' Family names are of compara-

. f h '1" f Ti ~' h ' t k <J th tively recent origin. People were~o 0 t e COU~CI men 0 • venon ave a e!l up e known by their first names and

questIon oft censorshIp, ~f the pIctures often shown at these by their, occupation, place of'outdoor theaters. abode, lineage,- perfections or

It is to be presumed ,that these men know what is imperfectio?s, etc. As examplesgoing on and that--to their credit--they are concerned over of .0ccupatIons: Cooper would

, . . . ' " indICate a barrelmaker; Fullerthe moral health of theIr commumty. It IS good' to see was' the nlan who worked on

_ such concern in men holding offices of responsibility in a pottery; Smith could refer to aeommunity. ...... silversmith, coppersmith, black-

The owners of all drive-in theaters should pay attention smith.. etc.-hence the prevalenceto th I 't' t f h 'bl P bI'· of thIS name.

ff' ~ legI Idma

d·etconbcedrn 0 , sutc h,resI>°b!lsl : PII~rsonst"t u

t" lC Our prime exam'ple of place

o lCla s an IS ur e paren save een ca mg a en Ion of abode-Jesus was called theto some of the pictures shown and some of the "goings-on" 'Nazarene because, he lived inin these outdoor theaters. But the lure of the dollar seems Nazareth; Mary Magdalene was

,too' great, and only strong public pressure can bring~out from .'~agd~~a. ~erman names'a change ' , contammg von and French

. '. ' , ,names with "de" usually areOutspoken complamts must be' made-long and loud' followed by the locality of the

and without ceasing-before some of the drive-ins change individual's forebears.tlI~ir tactics. As it is ,now-.:....many of these are a sad .In regards to lineage, we havereflection on, their owners and the taste of acomriIunity 'the biblical' reference: Simon,that allows them to function 'without protest. bar Jona (l?imon son of, Jona);

, and Jesus was referred to as "son. of David". The Nordic races

have the suffix-son and-totter,v.g: Ericson would be the son ofEric, Ericstoter would be thedaughter of Eric. The Irish andScots have 'their Mc, Mac and 0'suffixes, v.g. McCarthy meansson of t::arth. (Incidentally,Blarney 'Castle, home of theBlarney stone, is really officiallythe Castle of Carth, but' pleasetake no inference as far as this 'column's editor is con~~rned).

Regarding c1).aracteristics of,the individual we have Richard

", the lionhearted; Kevin the bold,Henry 'the Conqueror, Alex-,ander the Great and innumerable

,

. \

.."

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Page 7: 10.08.59

"Save With Safety"

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Jesuit DeploresCatholic NeglectOf Little People

SAN ANTONIO (NC)­An authority on labor-man­agement relations blamedCatholics and other Chris­tians for being negligent of the"little people" and 'attributedsuch negligence to present worldtensions.

The "little people," said FatherL. J. Twomey, S.J., director 01.the institute 'of industrial rela­tions at Loyola University, NewOrleans, are found particularlyin the small countries in the FarEast and in Africa. He spoke toa convention of the ArchdiocesanCouncil of Catholic Youth.

"We Catholics have forgottenthat God belonged to the littlepeople," Father Twomey said."These people are now reacting.They are reacting because na­tions which claim to be Chris­tians want to destroy and ex­ploit them.".

He said that the same thinewas happening in this country,where Negroes are "our littlepeople.". Even some priests andnuns have acted as if God mad. ­the world only for white people,the Jesuit said.

"We continue to exploit theNegro religio~sly, economically,educationally and culturally. Dowe really believe that all mea.are created equal?" he asked.

Father Twomey said therealso are the "little people" whocame from other countries ­such as braceros-to labor underintolerable conditions and forvery low wages.

"And this is happening amongus people '",ho claim to be goodChristians," he charged.

"The older generation hasfailed you young men andwomen. It is up to you to goamong the little 'people - youknow who they are in your ow.environm~nt-andhelp them."

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structed a tower next' to St.Peter's basilica to house threelarge bells. By the ninth century,every church in the Frankishdominions had at least one bell.It was r~garded as essentialequipment for every church.

Some of these bells took tre­mendous proportions. A bellweighing twenty-seven tons,made from captured French can­nons, can still be found in theCathedraL of Cologne.

The Church, throughout thecenturies, has enriched the con­secration of these bells with oneof her most impressive ceremon­ials. A specially constructed plat­form, decorated with £lowers,supports the bell to be conse-crated by the bishop. .

The ceremony is popularly re­ferred to as the "baptism of thebell". It is not a sacrament. Yetthis sacramental does have cer-

'tain similarities with haptism.The high point of the blessingis the washing of the bell withblessC!d water after whic;h it .isanointed with Oil of the Sickand Holy Chrism.

CampanileSince the thirteenth century

the campaniles or bell-towers. often support a great number of

beUS. In order to distinguishthem it became customary toname each one. This custom stillprevails. Each church bell is ded­icated to a saint. The patronsaint o.f the church, Our BlessedMother, the archangel Gabrieland St. Peter are the most pop­uuU- names inscribed on churchbells.

The church bells symbolizethe voice of Our Lord calling usto adore our Heavenly' Fatherby' offering with Him andthrough Him the sacrifice of theMass.

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-He pointed to· the .increasinghelp they are getting from in­dustry.' "Business is notoriously.hard-headed," the Bishop said."It does not· throw good moneyafter bad. If it is now persuadedthat· it should. support, privatecolleges, we may be sure thatthere is a solid judgment behind

. that decision that private col­leges provide service to Amer­ica."

Ceylon Prelate Hits'Birth Control Plan

COLOMBO (NC) -A CeylonArchbishop has indicated Cath­(mCS going to government healthinstitutions are being "inveigled"into resorting to birth controL .. Archbishop Thomas B. Cooray,'

O.M.I., of Colombo has called forUrgent measures to preserve theintegrity of the Catholic familyhi Ceylon. He said' the "anti-God,anti-religious . and anti-social"campaign for birth con~ol ...challenging this integritT. .

I.

Prelate Says Private Colleges HaveRight to Share in State Funds. . . .

NEWARK (NC)-Where state those students who fall to meet"funds are used to support higher them.

ed':lcati~~, private college.s and If state colleges were' the onlyumversltles s~~uld s~are In the existing colleges, they wouldprogram, Auxll18ry Bishop Wal- "easily fall victim to pressuresterW. Curtis of Newark ~ld ?OO of mass education and collegealumni of Seton ~all Umv~rslty. standards universally would' be

Although he did not directly I '" h . 'd. . . . t· d tower, e sal ..mentiQn It, observers pom e ou '

that . Bishop Curtis' remarks Bishop Curtis declared thatwould apply to a proposed state theri.eed lor private colleges andbond issue of $66;8 million to universities is being recognizedexpand facilities at Rutgers·Uni:. more and more today.versity and the state teachericolleges. A state-Wide' refer:en­dum' on the bond iSSUe will beheld in the Nov. 3 general elec:'tion.

The: bond issue has' the' strongl)acking of the administration ofGov.' Robert B. Meyner of New.1e'rsey. The referendum was 'au­thorized by the State Legisla­ture, which also passed' a' schol­arship bill under 'which state';;financed scholarships for thefirst time can be used at .privateas well as public schools.

Poor EconomyBishop Curtis 'said it "is poor

political economy and unfaircompetition" to "support certainschools by tax money and thusenable the state schools to affordat least lower fees to attractstu'dents."

Bishop Curtis urged his audi:­ence "to think out this matter·of state support of higher edu­cation, so that unfail' programsof state support may not placeprivate colleges in an economic­ally impossible position throughthe misuse of taxes." . '

He pointed out that the currentpolicy of giving as much edu­cation as possible to as manypeople as possible has created amass movement to college cam­puses, This, hc;! said, lias raisedthe problem of creating specialcourses to fit all tastes, includ­ing those of the dabbler as wellas of the serious student.

But on the other hand, theBishop ,said, private schools can,­establish and enforce high aca­demic standards, and elimina~

Church BeUs Sym.bolize Voiee of GodCalling All Faithful to Worship

By Rev. Roland Bousquet .St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford

The "Good News" of our salvation was first announced to Our Blessed Mother by theArchangel Gabriel. This heavenly messenger revealed to Mary that she would be theMother of the Redeemer. Our church bells seem to continue the archangels' mission~ EachSunday, they remind us to receive thebenefi ts of Our Lord's sacrifice by attending Mass..The first bells used to call.the faithful to the sacredfunctions made their appear­ance SoOD after the end ofthe Roman persecutions. Theywere a far cry from the giganticbells gracing our large citychurches.

The first missionaries whospread the Gospel in NorthernEurope gathered their congre­gationsby ringing a small hand­bell. The tolling of· the bellmeant one thing to the inhab­itants of these small villages.The missionary was among themonce again to celebrate ·Mass, toadminister the sacraments andto preach the Word of God. :The .most famous of.,theSe b~ll:s was :used bySt. Ratrick. It· is pre­served, today..In the' Museumof the Royal Irish' Academy inD'ublin.

. Bell Tower - .The hand-bell; however, be­

came inadequate to meet· theneeds of the' growing ChristianpopuIation.The various parishessoon extenc'ed over large areas.Larger instruments were neces­sary' to call the faithful to thereligious functions. .

Pope Stephen II, in 757, con"

ANNIVERSARIES: Cath...olics of England are mark.:.ing the 800th anniversary' ofthe death o~ Pope AdriaJiIV, upper photo, the onlyEnglishman ever to becomePope. In The Netherlands,Catholics observe the 5,OOt;hanniversary of the onlyDutch pontiff, Pope AdrianVI, lower photo. NC Photo.

Peace Head See'Berlin 'Impa~se '.In Red Talks

LOS ANGELES (NC)No .true pea c e can be·achieved by delivering monfpeople into Soviet captivity,"the president of the CatholicAssociation for InternationalPeace has warned.

Harry W. Flannery, CAIP.head, also affirmed that peaCecan not be built by concedingto Russia the permanent cap-.tivity of satellite nations. "Standfirm" is Mr. Flannery's recom­mendation In regard' to foreignpolicy and the Berlin questionin particular.

Reds Dangerous"I don't know where we are

going to make concessions/' he,he said, "I see no point in it. Wehave made them since World·War II without results." Discuss­ing Nikita Khrushchev hewarned: .:,

"He is a dangerous man. When'he speaks disarmament he means':our disarmament. I think peopleknow enough about communism:.now not to be misled. .

Mr. Flannery said he sees ncichance of a solution in Berlin."unless the Russians decide toreient." He added tl~at the Berlinissue is' a phony crisis createdby the Russians. "They bring. itup, relent, and then theY'r~

heroes," he observed. "I can't,.see how we can get our troopsout of Berlin. This would be theworst thing we could do." ..

Captive NationsMr. Flannery said it would be·

unjust to abandon West Ber­liners to the Soviets. He added.that of all the West Germans,'people of Berlin best know the.'nature of communism as he con..;tended "we have falled in out·past responsibilities with regardto the captive nations." .:

He said the West has failedto see the enforcement of the'provisions--such as free ele~tions in these nations--signedwith the Soviets during World.War'II.

The U. S.labor movement halDO . intention' ()f taking part intrade and cultural exchanges .with the Soviets by sendingdelegations to the Soviet Unionor inviting Russian labor. reP~sentatives to. this country, hedeclared. '

To,do so, he said, would "give,recognition and dignity~' to Rus­sian unions. "They aren't free'trade unions," the AFL-CIOofficial explained. "We'd betalking only to representative.of. the ,Russian state." .

Page 8: 10.08.59

'.'

.. :',:' :

Pere .Merquetfe:'Subject of 'Play:

Pere Marquette, famous, Jes~itexplorer and missionary, will, bethe subject 'of'a 'radio play to bepresented 'at' 6:30 Sunday night,Oct. 11 by the Catholic Theater

· Guild of New Bedford.

The script, 'by Manuel Almada,details the West of the 17th celi-

· tury and' describes the life ofPere Marquette, patterned afterthat of St, Francis Xavier. The

· presentation is directed byChristopher Best, with FlorenceMello at the organ. .

,,'

. l~. ' ..

~ . : ;

.His Nose

',Is Shiny!

",

. ~.

'os 8-5286 ~,RMS..A QuJih; .Af.dk,

.·PEN~V F.QR P~NNY.YPUR BE$T. FOOD_eUV.

",;':¥ou:toowin·ra'diate-gooclhealth on~ you make Guimond.." 'For~s ,'A Quality' Milk.' ci ,:regu'la~part 'of youri, dJet~ , .

GUi'~o.~dFarms. iA QuaHty~ milk is I.oaded with:~h~ calcium,v)ta.mi~s ,and minerals 'sO necessary, for strong, ~ealthy'bodies. Try Guimond Far~s .at your door or" at Qur store's.

~ .' ...._. w

. ,',' .

"...' .THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fo"·~River....",Jhurs.••Oct 8. ,1.959,;

: . ......: . ". . . .,.: ..... ': ".' : .: .- .: : .'\' ':.'..'-,. . "~'~', ,.~:. '.

Even Gals on SolomonsUse Peroxide Bohle

SACRAMEN':'O (NC) - Gen­tlemen must prefer blondes,even in the Solomon Islands,according to Sister Mary .HuiHumila, C.S.J:

The nun related that native;'women on the Island of Buka inthe Solomons, frequently resortto bottles of peroxide ·.to givea golden quality to their nor-

HEADS RETREATANTS: mally black, bUShy hair. In theirMiss Clementine M. Stein of .. ,eyes, ihis is a matk of beauty. 'Bremen ,Ind.· is the new . Sister Humili'a, who has beenpreside~t 'of ' the' National doing mi~sionary work the last,. ","', 11 years m the Solomons f for. the'Laywomen s Retreat Move- Sisters of St, Joseph of Orangejmente ·NC Photo.» visitina in the u~· So ;:1: .

, . -- .......,.

8

paint, C~·rpehlry,..Acc~ssor.ies' .·Can Make Old'-Kitchens New ,,~

By Alice Bo,ughCa~ilI .If YQu're one of those lucky 'gals with a ,brand :new,. ,

house, .or if you've had the good fortune of a recent up­dating job, you probably have one of those wonderful ultra,ultra kitchens with' built-in ovens, garbage disposals, dish-washers and· loads of cabinet ', ,a.n attractive flower arrangementspace. If so,' chances are you : which· will later decorate, ihewon't be"interested in what dining, table.we have to say here. But Seems as if some old kitchensmaybe you're in the category of ' were deliberately planned to be Taunton Council Namesa wife with a: good case of unhandy and unbeautiful. Re- Five C,ommitt¢e. Headskitchen blues.' , member those clumsy sinks' thatIt's not t h 'e.. ' were often too low and tied up Committee heads were namedplanning Ii n d ~ precious cabinet I space?, You at the first Fall meeting of the

might replace such a 'sink with Taunton Council of Catholieeooking meals , ' , Women. ,They' wI'11 be respollsl'bl'e• a new double unit toge~her withthat's getting' f" d b' h b- for pr'o]'ec"- fOl."·the c.omin"you . down,' Ws ' ormlcacounters an lrc ca .... ..the kitchen it- ' : inets. '. year. ,llelf - a room . Built-in ovens and counter 'top Included are Mrs.' Edwardthat is often the. ' - .toves take little space. Don't Castle" .youth cOmmittee; Mrs.Ilegh~cted. part ,overlook'a ventHaiing fan,ahove . Joaquim Bernardino, spiritual

, 01 a honie be;- . the range to whisk odors away. development; Mrs. John Kelly.,, cause it: is not By' arranging cabinets beiow. the. Family and parent' ed~cation. :part 0 f the ,sink for yo~r bakin:; needs slid" , ' . . '.' ,. . Also Miss Nellie Leary, orga_"grand. t 0 ~ J;" . ing pull-out shelves are wonrler- AT WO~EN S RETREAT:; Pausmg to pray at the ization and development· MrLwhen guests are shown througb . ful) you can prepare· a.whole. shrine of .Our Lady while attending Our Lad~ of G-ood Coun- -: Alfred Leonard, district 'cha'i....tb.e hou~. . .' ' .... ,meal without all those stePII one sel ,retreat for laywomen at Cathedral Camp are, left to man for the Bishop's Ball.

Id . ne.·edsm. a . 'poorly Planned' .Many of WI whq have an 0 , right, Mrs. Walter F. Glowaki, Nantucket; Mrs. Arthur'F.

· poorIy - planned kitchen haye kitchen. . f M'" EI" .b 'th C h N th Jesus Mary Alumnae .·come to'think'of its a's s<tm~th.i9g Peninsula Tab..'" Buckley, New ,Bed ord; ISS lZa:"~,, " . avanag, or' ~ :to gripe,~bout but to put ~p with. For that-.family eat spot,' a A~tlebor(), and ~rs.,Lawrenc~;r.Scanlon;.East Tau~ton. : To Hear Speaker .

:~;:o~~~:.e~~i~~eU~~~:;~:J.:-~ :;;:~su~~/a~: ~:,.e:ra~& li~~~, Senator' Declares W6ri1eriCan' Make, fa~e:r~:~~~::r~ni~c~~~:;If,every m~al me.ans a .hil~e to three people. It can also Serve " Alumnae Association will be

let it re'ady, 'perhaps you. thiI)k as a space to line up plate meals ImportantJ,Pol itico1'·'.CQrl:tributions'. held foliowing 8:30 Mass Sunday· your kitchen is too big. But the en route to 'the dining room. la . . .morning, Oct. 18 in the conveRt· fa'ul't I'S I'n lack' of' planning, n.ot . ' . WATERLOO (NC)~"It is no officials in the United States hal ,

a very small kitchen one do-it- ' , ," , f '1 chapel,Fall River." >-,sl'ze, If you pla.n your k.itchen ' longer possible for women to been disgrace u.

HI - yourself man built .an'. "eating '" I ~., Tickets are available frollll, 'with worksaving in mind and shelf" between the kitchen door .ayoid . politics; ol',' ,to iso ate . ,"Women. who are. themselvel

decorate it to. ina,ke 'your wor,k . themselves from 'public issues morally',: r.esp'on~ible and polit-" Mrs. Concorde Lachance, chair-. ., . and a ,window. Breakf.ast. fO,.r,_ a,nd public problEirris," U. S. Sen-' "l man; Miss inimche Lambert, cO-fun, you'll have the-kitchen you' t ed d ed ically aware could make a ,sig- ". wo w.as prepar. an ,serv 18. ator Eugene J: McCarthy of Min- . , chairman, and committee mem-

lo.ng.for., 1 tim th t t kes to tell nificant contribution to Amer-. ' . 'G B 't '.A'vold Kltehenit'- ess. ~ a~ I a ., nesota has told Dubuque' Arch- ican life by assuming a special. bers. Rev.'" erard Olsver, cur-

... in thIS tmy kItchen.. '. diocesan Council' of Catholic . 'ate at Notre Dame Church, FallThe average homemaker 'Another thing he planned that Women ,resppnsibility. for raising· 'the' River, w.ill speak. . .

· 8pends the best part of her work- . we like very much: he installed· _moral lev·el. of govern'ment aDd .' I .

. ing day iiI the kitchen so it a sliding rod' in one cupboard "The growing importance of politi~i,ntheUnited States. '.' SoCiety Plans Flying: - .mould be revitalized, if needed, sect~on, on which rod the pots the home 'as a political forum,;- "It is;. not enough merely.to spare her the miseries of-. and' pans were hung, All his due to mass 'communications undertake to perfect our own in-' Pilgrimage to Lourqes '~itchenitis." 'The problem may . wife does is to pull out the rod . media-has in' turn '. fostered a dividual" lives. Neither. is it BALTIMORE (NC) _ PlaM .be "no eat spot," "too many and she easily finds "the))8R more' important .roleand a enough t6 Perfect the institution· have been announced fora ,8y­doors/' "no storage space," or, a she's 'looking for -all within, IJ:'eater:measure ,of i~fluence for . of the family alone. Over arid' ing pilgrimage to Lourdes la't,Nom that is "just too 'smalL" . arm'l reach of the stove. the wo~en voters of: our coun;' , ' h' ," in Octo'ber, to be' ,'sp'oris,'ored bY. . , . above t is, it is essential to per- J

If mother' has to tote three ' To perk up 'your kitcheii,'. "try," the lowa'w9men heard ,the feet soCial 'institu'tions' such ae the Reparation SocietY"of ~meals to. the dining ~oom, she')l maybe you'll need to paint cab- : ;'SenatoJ; 'say. ", . ' (" Immaculate Head' of Mary. 'bless the' day 'a few feet are inets. If the .kitchen . is sman ' ' .....', , the neighborhood, the. ·businessadded from here imd there to c'abinets shouid - be' painted' 'th~ :~. ,'milere

d.is ~t' thltl' cbe°un~ , a

larid' ~rofession.~l community, The 'Reparation Society'ol the

popu ar ISPOSI Ion 0 cymca Immacu'late .Heart of Mary' waa::e f~:ify,r~a~~Chae:dea:a:~~ ts:m~llc:o~or a~ the wauS toJi~' ': about "politics,' and 'government. "leisure time activities; the means' founded' in '1946 to promote de­entertaining \ lae I u~on. 0 ,mo~,s~a~ . . 'There is 00' disputing the fact of. commUl;lic/!-tion and. political votion to the Immaculate Head'-Maybt! like many other fam- . rlge, S e~ Clan al m, anyI . ,that the conduct of some public, institutions.- Of Mary., '. co or. eml-g oss or g oss ename I

Dies, you have a kItchen that is considered 'best' for kitchen.8~ves you a h~d time. Most ?ld as it may be washed easily, andkItchens contrIve II: never-endmg will not show finger marks.cOurse of travel to· scattered .Th . . ' .."T 'f '.ere are many gay accell.!!O:-w?rk centers. hey con use you i ries that· will brighten' yourWIth a maze of doors-those' . " ., " '", kItchen.. Camster sets are now'robbers of precIous wall space. . 'd th f' hWhat a relief. to have cabinets 80 vane ey, can urms. awhere' there 'are' d06rs! ' complete color sc~eme and p~g-

. , . board walls permIt you ~ hang~eIl-eng~neered placement, of copper 'pots or ceramic ~kiDg

eabl.n~ts WIll cut out fumbhng ware on hooks.for the pan you ,need, give you 'lots cif counter room. A pass- Pope B,I'ess,es, Marriagethrough from your 'kitc.hen toyour' dining ,rom' saves many Of Friend's Daughtersteps and .often can be cut VATICAN CITY, (NC)-Popethrough a cabinet .above the. John ,XXIII has. carried out acounter top. When not in lise, promise to' an old friend' by ,this open, space {can 'be used for" 'officiating at the marriage, OIl ;, . his friend's daughter.' ,

In a' private ceremony.: ill tIM .Vatican's' Pauline chapel, .the'.

"Pope blessed'. the . marriage .•Countess Albalisa, Roncalli di,

·Montor-'io· to· ,Count .Eugenio.Faina. .His holiness' alsO celc!-"

. brated the' nuptial Mass.' .' .\~.

Ill, 19p3: the ,Pope,·~heD,,·.ArCb-\bishop' Roncalll, .beeame', Patri"':' ..arch of :Venice and promised hisold friend and 'distantreiative, .:

''''Count Guido Roncalli 'd'iMon'-" .........lOrio; iha~ he' wouldbl~ss the:'.marriage 01. the Count's :daugb-ter. '

Page 9: 10.08.59

9

New Bedford

,Member oIl'ed....De....lIlsuranoe Corporatloll

Compl~

BANKINGS~RVICE

for Bristol County

-Bristol CountyTrust Compan',

TAUNTON, MASS.

THE lANK ONTAUNTON GREEN

Slovak WomenElect Officers

ATLANTIC CITY, (NC) _Mrs. Helen Kocan of Whiting,Ind. was reelected supreme pres- 'ident at the 27th national FirstCatholic Slovak Ladies Unionconvention here. She has head­ed the organization since 1933.

It was reported at the con­vention that 1,400 new mem­bers had been enrolled withi.the past year. ,

In a message to the conven­tion; U. S. Sen. Frank J. Lausch.of Ohio, recalled that the Cath­olic women's organization wufounded in 1892 in Cleveland by12 women. Reports at the con­vention disclosed there are noW'88,794 members of the organi­zation, .which has assets of $27.,.778,234.

The organization will open amodern home for the aged atBeachwood, near Cleveland, latein November, the conventiOll"was told. The ,delegates votedto distribute $10,000 to educa­tional. andcharitableorganiza­tions and also $1,000 each to theSlovak League of America andthe Slovak Catholic FederatioRof, America to be used in behalfof' efforts" to liberate Slovakia'from communism.

THE ANCHOR­,Oc~;, 8, 1959

Tel. WY 6·8271

GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc.Successors to DAVID DUFF & SON

, "

640 Pleasant Street

.COME IN '7', SEE and D~IVE

,'THE '59 FORDS.,.~ ,World', MOstleautifully Proportioned

,,' at

,FORD-MOTOR SALES COMPANY

FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS

1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Man.

SHELL "Premium" Heating OilsF~mous Reading HARD ,COAL • ~~n~

NEW, ENGLAND COKE '~V"::.~~~DADSON Oil BURNERS ~~ HELL I~~

24-Hour 011 Burner Service " ~ It :b...~.~ .~~Charcoal Briquek ~'~~

Bag Coal - Charcoal ~....,,~... " ....,,-.;:

NE¥fENGLANDCLAMBAKE

Every Sunday - $2.95including - A Live Lobster

THECASA BLANCA,

Coggshall Bridge, Fair~aven

The study being made. by thestate department of education i.Iconcentrated on about ;JO publicschool districts in which budgetshave been voted dowll at leastonce this year:

uQurstudY . of such districtslast year and the preliminarystudy this year did not indicate 'a relationship .between budgetdefeats and the proportion ofstudents attending non-publicIChools," he said.

The study win investigate anumber of factors that it 'nthought might have a bearing OD.

the defeats. In July the depart­ment detailed. some common'characteristics it had found iaareas where budgets were de­feated. TheY' were said to bemostly suburban, to have large'numbers of school-age children,to behighiy-taxed and some-

.times beset by local controver­ai~ unrelated to school matters.

the reasons, for the budget de- , •feats. The purpose, he added, . Locate Catholic Schoolwas to make an objective survey' On Former Soviet Siteof all relevant factors iD. the

WASHINGTON (NC) - A:. hope the'findings will be helpful Catholic high school located .:

to those, districts and the state ' a 'te d b th So .....SI once owne y e v_

in. assuring "the sound develop- Union will be dedicated on Suo.ment of education." day, Nov. 1.

Presiding at the dedication ofthe new St. John's CollegeHigilSchool will be Archbishop Egi­dio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegateto the United States, and Arch­bishop Patrick A. O'Boyle atWashington.

During World War D the sit.of the new two million dollalr!!Chool was occupied by a schoolconducted by -the Soviet UniOlafor children of Soviet personnelaerving in WashingtolL,

132 Rockdale Ave.New Bedtord

WY 5·7947

"For Your ProtectionBuy From

PERFECTION"

PERFECTION, OIL

Gene'sLobster Shack'

TRY OUR SEA FOOD PLATEFORo 98c '

146 Huttles~n Ave. Route 6Near Fairhaven Drive-IJ;l'

WYman 6·5127Liv~ and Boiled LOBSTERS

,L E, M lEU XPWM~ ;. HEA~IN~, INC.·\~.;' ~ DomeaUc

.': . & Indulitrilll,I· _.:..-. '_ .. Sales:;~ andOil Burnears" ,_ '. Serviee

WY 2-94471283 ACUSHNET Ava.

NEW IEDFORD

North Attleboro Wome~Plan Fail Schedule

Th,e Catholic Women's ClubOf North Attleboro opens itsFall season at 6:30 tonight witha banquet at Lafayette House,Foxboro. Miss Margaret' Lahey,'Fall River;. will speak on "Ex­ceptional ·Children."

Mrs_ Thomas Hoey and MissJennie Angus are co-chairmen.

_ Also planned for October isan entertainment at the, HotelHixon on Thursday afternoon,the 15th. A Christmas sale willbe held Thursday, Nov. 19, alBoat -the Hotel Hixon.

Study ,Fails to Link BLidgefDefeatsWith Private School Enroll ments

ALBANY (NC) - State-spon- ,90red studies into the contribut­

.ing circumstances of defeats bysome communities of their pub­lic school budgets do not indicatea relatiQnship b'etween the de­feats and the proportio,n of stu­dents in non-public schools.

This was made known b,­James E. Allen Jr., Commissionerof Education, who said the resulthe .announced is from studie. ,made last year and from a pre­llmit,"ary study this year of pub':'lie school districts where budge"were ,voted down.

The studies, he said, were un­dertaken to insure proper devel­opment of education ia NewYork state.

Mr. Allen said the actioataken was not motivated by any"particular assumptions" 88 to

2,300 SEE OPERA: Staged within the sanctuary ofHoly ,Cross Cathedral,' Boston, Pizzetti's opera "Murder inthe- Cathedral'" was presented under the sponsorship Of

" Richard Cardinal Cushing. The Archbishop of Boston meetsPlinio Clabassi who played the part of. Archbishop ThomasBecket and Frank Forest, general manager' of the EmpireState Music Festival, ,Inc. NC Photo.

Texas, K ofC PlansPilgri"1age to, Shrine

SAN ANTONIO; (NC) - Thefourth annual pilgrimage fromSan Antonio to the Shrine ofOur Lady of Guadalupe in Mex­ico City is being arr!lnged bythe sponsors, Knights of Colum­bus, General Assembly fourthDegree .and Council 786 here.Auxiliary Bishop Stephen A.Leven of San Antonio, who has

'made the pilgrimage each year,will be among the. pilgrims.

The pilgrims. will v,isit vari­ous places of interest, in andaround Mexico City, and willattend Mass and visit the fam­ous Shrine of Our Lady ofGuadalupe, which honors OurLady who appeared to an In­dian, . Juan Diego, on Dec. 8,1531 and on two successive oc­casions, to ask that a temple bebuilt ill her honoD.

Religious Program IsOn 54 Stations Now

ST. LOUIS (NC) - Less thana year after its start, a five...minute daily radio program,"Moments with the Sacre~

Heart," is carried on. 54 radioitations throughout the nation:

This was announced by Fa­ther Eugene P. Murphy, S.J.~director of the Sacred Heartbroadcasting oganization, whichalso produr:es a weekly 15-mili"'ute television program and daily15-minute 'adio 'programs.

'The "Moments with the Sacred 'Heart" began October 22, 1958..Programs 'in the series' consist

, of .- brief, talksop a religioustopic by members of a board ofpriests from all over tite UnitedStates.

Male Quartet Will SingAt, Fall. River Meeting

'The Cavaliers male quartetwill entertain at the Tuesdaynight, Octo,ber 13, meetirig of the

'Fall River Catholic Women's'Club, scheduled for a at Sacred.Heart auditorium.

Their program. will includeclassic' and' popular. selectio'nsunder the direction' of EarlWeidner. Miss Barbara' Dunnand Miss Elizabeth Shay arehospitality chairmen for the eve­ning.

stuffed with sweet potatoes,jello salad, and pineapple up­side-down cake. A quarter;'century later, we dare not servethis menu very often.

Purely 'Coincidental. As to the rest of the contentsof that guest column-any, re­semblance to a person, living ordead, is purely coincidental. Justchalk it uJil to authorship by aman who has the God-given giftof seeing only the best in thosehe loves.

It does, however, bring to thefore a column-subject long "Con­templated but hitherto post~

poned: What to Say When YouReceive a Compliment.

There is the automatic, "Anii90 do' you," when the commentis that one look!! well. Thiswould hardly apply in the pres-

, ent instance, for cooking is notthe strong point of the guestcolumnist.

Then there is the self-con­scious and awkwardly cop, "Oh,no, that's not true," which putsthe complimenter on ,the spotand makes him wish he hadn'tspoken up in the firSt p'ace.. And the utterly candid re­

sponse our Tommy used to makewhen he was small: !'You lookmighty liimd!!ome in that newsuit, .Tommy," we'd say. "Yes,sir!'" he would puff out his chestand strut, ~'I think 90, too!"

None of. these provides ~adequate .nswer to my guestcolumnist and his fulsome', ifever~enthusiastic praise. _

AU I' can offer is a humblygrateful, "Thank you-for every-thing." .

ALICIA. MA.lUE SVLLlV~

Mattapoisett Girl EntersDaughters of St. Paul

Alicia Marie Sullivan, a mem_ber of St. Anttiony's par~h troddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. DanielSUl1ivali, Ma~ Street, Mattal)Oi­eett, has en,tered the Daughtersof 51. Paul, S,isters of the Cath­olic Press, in Jamaica Plain.: A gradua~e of Fairhaven ~igh

School, Miss' Sullivan also 'at-'tended Confraternity ofChr.is­ttan Doctrine ciasses atSt. An-

Neophyte Now.: Fin~s C~oking.

Relatively Sim'ple, Chore,", .. By Mary Tinley Daly .

Now, two weeks and one column later, I see that substi­tute colunin, genero~sly written by the Head of the House,80 that I'd be free of deadline dold,rums during a sizzlingSummer session. Had I seen it before publication, therewould. have been a d~finite

"kill"-a newspaper expres­lion meaning "don't pri~t

this", which has nothing todo with homicide.

El;iitorial comment precedingaid col umn:"'She (t hat'sM.T.D.) , wouldblush if sheknew the con­tent" sent myeyes scurryingdown the lines.Whatever hadthe Head of the~ouse said?

(N9te to edi­tor: You were,.ight. The blushburned rig h tthrough the sunta~ acquired ~.• carefree, columnless vaca-tion.) , '

Matter of fact, prior to time­Off, 'the column was turned ove~-tossed over'-':in abandonment"to anyone who would catch it.I was tiredl ,.

The Head Qf the House, ever­Ileady at the typewriter, pick~

tIP the challenge."I just tapped off 650..words

and mailed ·'em in," he assured.IRe nonchalantly while' 1 waspacking. "Forget it and let's getlOing. Got the bathing suits in?"

Like ObitHome again and.ready for au':'

tu~n duties, I read that column,encomnia totally undeserved..Why, it was like reading one'.OIIIVn obitual'7' notice!

"A cook on a par with tbetreat Eseoffier of Paris."

Me?Apologift to M. Eacoffier.Per h a r a mY disillusioned

husband thinks all those· cakesand pies originate in our ,ownkitche~, the soups are concOcted.with thriftily saved s~raps, en­hanced by herbs known to· hisspouse alone, the, h?t ~olls a.rethe products of hours of yea.watcQing, Kneading and shapinCbefore l?*ing.••

A neophyte in the kitchen,the Head of the House does,n'trealize that my cooking has be­eome better largely bY enlist­ment of the scientific knoy.'-howiD this free enterprise country.Anybody who can open pack­ages, read, and mix can cook.

Possibly his exalted opinion ofthe table set at our houSe now':'.days iii' !=olored by subconsciouarecollection of the early, dayswhen my' cu~nary ability waslirDited to baked ham, apple.

'I'III·J J; t I J f!.l f.L11 ) rl' ~II,I J I'll rl,l' I·t~.rt III Lt..!.t r rl! II ~.I! I II'~ III n' J I i • f

;,J.. , •• i Ji; t,::' JjPl

Page 10: 10.08.59

'.

, ,10 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FanRiver,...Thurs.;·Oct.,8; 1959.. ... ~, . '~.. ~. .- .. . '.. ,. . .. )" .,.<:.

. Daniel J. Sullivan, Grand Knight, Miss Ann Murphy, 33 Bucklin Street,Mansfield Council' No. '420, K of C-~'As, President; North' Attleboro Catholicgrand· knight ·of Mansfield Council N~.· . Woman's' Club-"The' announcement of420, Knights of Columbus, I was happy to thebuilding'of"thenew 'Bishop Feeha'niearn that plans are 'now underway for a .. High School fulfills'a dream that, manyCatholic regional high: school in Attle- ' of, us have cherished :for more than 50boro. I Illan to ·have my children attend years. I well remember how eloquentlythis school,. and many. members of our our late beloved pastor, Monsignor. Mc-

·Council have told me they are looking Gee, spoke of the, need' of a· Catholic· 'forward.to enrolling their childrenJn the high school in.our area to complete the

school." . work of our parochial ·schools. There is. "The Bishop Feehan High School can no question' that our area will benefitI.erve as a great source in the develop- from this new school, and it is. the real-ment of vocations in our Diocese." izatioh o~ a wonderful drea!O."

Mrs. James' Wi ,Maddock,. 267 SouthMain Street, President,' Mansfield Cath"olic Woman'sClub-"I:am exceptionallypleased, .as the mother' of,. five children,. 0

, at the coming of the new Catholic highschool to our area. I am· delighted thatit will be a coeducational school, so thatthe girls as well as the boys will have theopportunity for a Catholic education. Inow have three boys at the DominicanAcademy in Plainville, and am planningto send then:). t'o our new ,school w~enthey enter high school. This school is ananswer to a Catholic mother's prayer." .

Mrs. Homer L. Simmons, /34 SouthWorcester Street, Chartley, President,Norton Catholic Woman's Club-"The'announcement that a regional Catholichigh school will be erected in Attleboro:is welcomed ne·ws. It is ·something whichhas been,· sorely needed for a long time.The children of this area are now as­sured of sound .religious instruction at atime in their lives when it is most im­portant. As a former teacher, in boththe' public and parochial schools, I can'.appreciate·the advantages afforded pupil.in a Catholic high school." ,

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Lawyer Stresses Serious . Notre Dame Relieves Indiana Judge Bids Zoning BoardFr. J. J. Cavanaugh R k Beth 10 p 0 h

Eff.e·c·ts' of Bro'ken Hom'es ' NOTRE DAME (NC)-Father . evo e anon a 0 Ie arasJohn J. Cavanaugh, C.S.C., has INDIANAPOLIS (NC)":-Cath- Luke's parish, Judge Bell said,

'SAN' FRANCISCO (NC) ~ Urgently needed in the, • been granted an indefinite leave olics have won their fight to 10- was a "discriminatory applica-. of absence from ,his post as di- cate a new parish in suburban tion" of,the town's zoning ordi-:

eourts today are more 'qualified domestic relations specialists rector of tlie Notre Dame Foun-' Meridian 'Hills.' . nance and, ·in effect, a violationwho are convinced that the break-up of a home has eternal . dation and head of the Univer':' Superior Court Judge Walter of th~ Federal and Indiana Staterep·ercussions. .The opinion has. been expressed by J. Steve sity's $66,600,000 program. He is Bell' has ordered the to'Wn's Constitutions.Williams, a Catholic lawyer' 't~ 'd'. k - 'h' h' '1' t. suffering from a chronic vascular Board of Zoning Appeals' to re- In his decision Judge Bell re-

· -- 'd' "0- "rt' . ' '. .' . f'o rm away, IS uml lao Ion, ailment.' .. ,voke' its ban on the construc-' peaied a statement made' in con-an COU,_ ',COmmISSIOner. o. and there begins .. a fascina,ting J h . 1 C S . . ne.ction, w.ith the' 1953 Hebrew'th S . C t f S' . Father .0 n H.,.Wi son,. . .C.; tion, of an' $850,000 parish plant·

_. e uperIO;r.. our 0: an friendship with any pigeon he has 'been named ,acting director on a 'tract owned 'by the Arch-" Temple case that "the presence,Bernardino. -Mr. Williams ,. ~~~?s.wh.O ~iIl'u~de~stal},d', him.. of .the FOundation,:·the :univer- dioceSe 'of : i:n4ian'ai>~lis."'since of a ch,urcli anywhere in Meridi­spends mosf of his waking hours :; ~,ex~,t~mg h.e s_a full fledged, 'sity's'fund-raisin"g organization.: ' ~948:,~rhe "Boai<l was/giVen 30' .an . lUlls, will· ordinari~y serv~liStening .to domestic' problems a<!ulter-er. B~t, he 'didn't· s,tar.t, '. ,T~e university .,has also. an- : daYs·to·' :approve - the> building' the public convenience' and wel-

:" , trotted into the ,'courts by ,oyt: th!s ",w~y,",He jusL:tr~e~::~o nounced:"appointment~of .. :Father.' .pian:s br'fjl~' for 'Ii-' rieW 'tr!aj:: " .. ,: j~,re.'" .';' .. '. . .... ".. :estranged couples. He'·is 'firmly,·: escape~n apPareqtlY intolerable., . Thomas' J. O'Donnell".. C.S:C~ 'to .:, ',':' :'. "':.' :. , " ,,:,.;.": - ,'. '.. , -- This is.sO,he added, "becauseconvinced that both 'ttie cour.ts, ' home,situat.ion.~··o ;",. 'a' newly created',ahlrrini'liais~n' ,,':'-'.he·~~se. was tak~n:t~ S~'"' a churchser-ves·.every·acknowl~where meri' of the law are' in a : Th~~tl~ird ,big reasp~ sQ marii . post; He will travel widely''in'his .pen~rC.ou~t.bYA~~hblsh?-pPau~ "edged facet of .the 'power'o(

, hurry ahd disinier~iJt'ed;';and:.the':' ~ivorce!! ',·ar¢<;, o~~.:.~h~ .~co~rt. 'newassignmertt; meetiQg,at.reg.'·· (::,. ~c.h~~t~:.of Jndla~ap~lis ~ft~~ .' government to preserve its safe-:,. homes, where' selfishness is al"; Menda.,t,ogay, ~ccordmg,:to. Mr; ..,'ular ,intervals with ,Notre<Dame's ' lh.e :/;<?111!1~, boar,d oJ t!'Ie.)~xclu\;, .. ty 'and,'Yellbeing-;-i.e, the pUb~

lowed to rule, 'are ·th blame for' .. Williams, ~sthat '~~Y0!lp.gpeople" 175, local: 'alumni"clIibs 'in this"" siy,~ ~!!~iQ.e!lH!lI...sl,1b,yr~ ,r~efus,!,!~. ~ic health, safety,. morals ',and, the mounting mimberof divorces, are. not".t~~gPt:·respoQsibility. i.n. country" and" abroadt" , ' •~ :l.~,s.~ ¥E!b.J:'l,l,~X:*.;.t'?, allpw l?ops!r~<:-: . t.he. general -.welfare.. The con~

:~ in this country. .f·.· the-home." The.·~xample 9f·tl1elt . . '. ',' ;".:'.' '.' : -.' .' ·1.j.J~; tl~Il;~9f..._b}l!1~1~ngs fQl"... the.. p~rl~h,,-. science of all civilized societyi 'Why do so many families come parents: ~s. .. selfish. Tbe father. Vince.n tici"s t9 ·:Staft; .y.bicJ1:i,~·,t<?'1?~: call~d~St. ~u~e'.s; ., dic~tes that wherever the souls,. :' 11oto 'court? Mi". Williams" names and..m~ther,: c.has~. ~ro~c?<i ill:,'. S· .• . , ..• ', 'M'.. '. : •._- ..., In, ;~i~: ,decision· 'Judge' Bell 9-£ mc~ are found. the house of'( .. , three reasons: '. stead of, spendmg tlmewlth ·th.e .. ,.e,~ln~ry I~:,., J9m.I" ".', cited,; the 'fact 'that" zoning, per" ...God belongs."... : 1) ,Economic pressure. . ki~s. . . ~: t :' ; l·.HA~~. (NC~ ---:.Pla,n,s .t~r .~~. ·;,inissiond~ad been· granted earli- , .

· ~ 2) 'The changing role of men ~'Pa':wa~ts a .hunting rifll;! an4 ~~~maJors~~ma~y.an4~n a~;: ,er -f6r.:H~l,constructioriof aHe';' ~and women,in t.lle.home.. .' ?fa ,wants. a new mangle and ,tQ ~l~~on,tc> t~e r"ec,en~~y ,c.~mJ?le~e4·; b~eW;t~ple' imi;I,twoProte'starit, 3) . The' .. irresponsibility· of ,heck with ·he,family. ,Too many puno: s~ml~,ary. i,n th: I>}(~cese ,churches 'withiri the towri's' cor';'young people eg,tering'marriage chil<iren have, los~ resp~ct, for <?f M.laml h~ve. been ~nl1011nc~~ , . p<>rate l~mits: (Permission. for~oday. ' .. ' .. - ".,. . theIr pare'nts.. Toooften parents b! I::l1s~op .Cole!J1an, F. C~rroll. the Hebrew temple as, a't ,first, ; Flight to Drink " fail ~o: t~a~h t?e~i; childrell of. tbe An mVlta~l<?n to. buIld and . denied, .but the ban was later, By economic pressure sacrifices and the trials that . staff the maJor semmary on an revoked'upon'a'court order.) '.

Wl'lll'ams' sal'd' he "mdans .:-rthre· Mom, or Dad ·may. be. going 80,..acre tract west of Boynton D . . l' . f' 'th t f 'S"

" through." , Beach in Palm Beach County ema 0 e reques 0 ..~onthiomonth. discouragement has ,been accepted by the 'Con- -at not being able to meet 'bl'lls', Follow Bad Example '. gregation of' the .Mission of St.the overspending for luxuries· no Mr. 'Williams insists that the.Vincent de. Paul,populariy'onereally needs; the yammering domestic relations courts prove knowIi.as Vincentian Fathers..and nagging·that most often ac~' that, children must have love,':companies the 'inability to pro-: affection, aAd firm discipline..'vide all that the Jones' have '''The child Dll,iSt be given stand­down the street and the flight to ards-and he must see the par­drink "or .adultery when the ents living up to standards too,'"bickering gets' too much to bear." he said.' '... As for tlie changing roles of "When two young people who

men and women; Mr. Williams have never learned at home thatsays the courts are full of fath- they must think of others besidesers who 'have' abdicated their -thems,'elves get marr.'ied, whatresponsibilities for. managing can you expeCt but a perpetlHi-'family affairs' to the mother 'or tion of a 'selfish house arid even:".who hav:e refused to accept 'the tual 4isintegratio~? .• ~,,'price of being, boss: control and ":Yet, for all the misery ·and''·responsibility; ,- sorrow of the divorce c'ourts ,you'

"Once' the wife 'begins to work ' should see how the c~ildren act;'outside the' home she is tempted they, are forgiving and, full of

,to think the old man is some- charity, putting their·parents· to.thing less than desirable" as a 'shame. They 'want'you ·toove'r­provider, so she begins to-needle look, the parents faults and, help,

·him and his self-respect goes out them, but 1'00 often humlm pridethe window while he goes otit'the 'and a ,hasty court com'bine .to:door," he said., break up' the home forever. n _ •.

"What often happens is. that . He added: "Today we urgently'the aggressive working woman ne~d. more 'qualified marriage

: becomes no longer the delicate counsellors and, Catholic 'social· femi~ineperson to be loved, and' workers· who 'are' trained along

:' \: / . the . ego~deflated: .male ··shrinks: thes·& lines but who ov'ercome'from interest in her." , self - conscious .professionalism·

"To prove to himseU 'that he and bring ,-understandingoo and:can .still light a fire in a wom- patience to cases of 'familiesiin

, ~. an~s' :eyesh.e, hikes off' to a, bar" trouble.", .' , . , , '. ' ,-'

Page 11: 10.08.59

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 8, 1959 11.

Mrs. Harold. Davey, 100 Tyler Street,President, Attleboro Catholic Woman'sClub-"Naturally, we in the Attleborosare doubly proud and pleased that· theproposed Catholic regional high'school isto 'be located in our .midst and we reelthis is another great step forward inbringing Catholic education to our youngpeople. ;1

"It will be a credit not only, to our.church and our Diocese' but also to ourcommunity. We will all be looking for­ward to its opening and I personally sinceI have a daughter now in second grade."

Mrs. Thomas Charron, 160 ElmwoodStreet, Regent, Benedict. Circle. No. 61,Daughters' of Isabella, North Attleboro­"The new Catholic regional high schoolfor thil Attleboro area is a most·wonder­ful idea.

"I personally am very happy becauseI have a son who will be entering highschool next year and if the school isready, it will be very convenient for himand our worries about his commutingto a Catholic high school will be over.

"The children will be under the guid­ance of nuns dedicated to God."

Mrs. Alfred 3. McNally, 30 TanagerRoad, Regent of Alcazaba Circle, D of I,Attleboro-"Having a Catholic re'gionalhigh school in this area is ideal.

"Spiritual guidance, as well as a' goodscholastic program, is very important forteenagers.

"My son Gerald is a graduate of La­Salle Academy and Boston Cpllege. I amhappy he received a Catholic education.

"I have four· grandchildren. Althoughthe oldest is only in kindergarten, weare looking forward to a Catholic highschool education for them:."

Roger M.. Sarazin, 92 Spruce Stre~"

Grand Knight, Thomas P. McDonoughCouncil No. 330, K of C, North Attle~

boro-"The new Catholic regional highschool will provide the necessary religi­ous training that every child needs.Proper guidance is most importantthrough the difficult years of adolescenceand combined with family efforts, it willsupply the young mind with educationunder the will of God. I have an eight­year-old' son whose scholastic trainingwill be obtained in the regional highschool."

never before has belief in Godbeen attacked all over the worldas today.

The outdoor Mass at which hespoke extemporaneously markedthe el').d of a pilgrimage duringwhich an estimated 100,000 per'"sons visited a shrine to Our Ladyof Perpetual Help o'n the groundsof .the Mount" St, Macrina'.mother' house' ,of. tQe EasternRite Sisters of ·St. BasU the.Great. .

Delegate Says Prayer and CharityOnly'Way to Unite Christianity

UNIONTOWN (NC) - TheApostolic Delegate to the U. S.has tQld thousands of ByzantineRite Catholics that only with theaid of prayer and charity canefforts to reunify 'Christianitysucceed. .

; ~rchbishop. Egidio Vagnozzispoke at a Pontifical Divine'Lit­urgy '(Mass) which' climaxed' a12-day 'pilgrimage 'of' .J:astern

."Rite',' Catholics. Church unity;'"said ,:the .Archbishop,is needed·today more thaD' ever,' "be·cause·

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Government·sources indicate, 563 persons lost· their lives and

3,268 were. missing 'or . injured.A I m 0 s t 30;000 houses. werewrecked. and 5,000 bOats .de­stroyed and· a, total of. 780,000persons affected by the storm.' '.

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Editor ·RefutesChargesPapers Aided Hitler

CHICAGO (NC)-A former co-editor of a Berlin Cath­olic nE:!wspaper has labeled as "untrue" charges made by aCatholic university sociologist that Germany's Catholicclergy and press supported Hitler's war efforts in the 'periodup to 1941. The denial came and Freising; the sermons in thefrom Hein.z Kuehn, a post- . Munenster cathedral by Bishopwar' editor of Pettusblaat· (later. Cardinal Clemens August(St.. Peter~s .paper) , ~ffi~ial, von Galen ,denouncing Gestapo

.Catholic newspaper of the;Berli!1, 'Jllethoos; a.nd. ~he 1938 pastoral,diocese, who came to the u; S.-in letters hythe hierarchy oppOsing1951 and is now in the'public government: treatnlent'-of :the

. inform'at'l'on bur'eau of the' Amer'- ,. Jev;.;s and 6th~rdvil and moral P J h A' , .ope ,'0 n .pproves'ican Dental 'Association' here. " matters.· "

·'The charge had been made by Catbolic.Hieriuchy, ArmeniCl " Archbishop 'T:':'f; ~ Y: :T: :T: ~ .~'~ :T: ~ :T: :T:':T: :T: T-4Gordon C. Zahn;'associate.pro- ·As,for 'cooperation 'on the ,. '- VATICAN CITY (NC)-':"Pope .. ..: ~,~ d&:> dlIh dlIhdllh dlIh,.dlIh. dIlh dlIh dI1h 'dlIh ~ dlIh. dlIh~".lessor' of sociology' at Loyola ~ parish-priest'-level;· Mr. 'Kuehn· ' John has confirmed .the'election" ~.~. .., Look. what you,: c~'an do 'with a ~1University' here 'who read a" said ·the Americim' 'de"nazifica-: of' Father' George< Layek as ...-:: E;"

paper. at -the re~entmeetlngof tion,·board;highest U. S. 3uthor- Archbishop of Aleppo, for the ,~ . HOM,E :..tliti American Catholic Sociologi~ .' ity·· in Germany~" immediately ',Arm·enians. ., ~ ~ I

cal Society convention at Mun... · after the war, "ruled that"less" :'.'ArchbishOp·Layek was elected' ",-=' 'IM'" p' R"'O'"V" E' ~'jE~.T· LOA.....·' . :-4delein' College. '. ' :, . ' tha.n one-fourth of one p,er cent by" members'of the· Armeni'liri' ~., '. . ..'. IYl .~. .~'. ~ I

Mr. Zahn charged that his re- of theCath.olic. clergy coH~bo,:, Rite hierarchy . in . accordance ...:'" :..Search showed that the German, rated or sy,mpathized' with. the . with thEitraditioris of the 'Orien- • ~ ~ tCatholic hierar~hy.·and" the' nazis." ". . ' ,.J:' tal Church: "His election, . hOW'""': :.."Catholic" press" which the' . Mr. ~uehn said that Hitler in" eVei:-.. did not beeo.me \lalid until ~ ~ lnazis did not s~ppress, rallied' official ,communications always approyed oy' the Po·pe. . , ...: :..Catholic support for llitler and referred to -the Catholic hier-' He' su'cceeds Archbishop Louis ~ . -'.~Jrabandoned their roles as 'instruc-' archy as "traitors." . Batlinlan; who is now AuxilJary ...: ~ .-tors and ~uides. , In regard to. the Ca.t.holic press, to Gregorio Pietro xv Cardinal . ~ ~

Oversimplification Mr. Kuehn said that In the Ber:- 'Agagiimian, Patriarch of 'CiHcia ...: ~In an interview with' the New ljn diocese alone, there were 16 of the Armenians. .~ ~

World Chicago archidoces3{l, publications that could be/called"': e:!'paper,' Mr. KUehn said the so- Catholic, plus the official di- ~ e;4ciologist- oversimplified a' com- ocesan newspaper. BOYHAVE~ ....:. ~ I

plex situation, ,distorted facts and "All wit~out. exception h~d to , West Newbury, ·Mass. ,~ ~generalized in a form not per- cease pubhcabon under Hitler,' Conducted by .~ • ~ Imissible. some sooner, some later. By 1807 Brothers of Charity 1959 '-a ~

The former German editor '1941, none of the 16 'was in exi~t- . . ....:. eo. ,cited instances of German ence," he said. / P~ivate Boarding School . ~ ~.

bishops individually and as a for Boys Grades 5-6·7·8 ....:..:~. Make those needed REPAIR,S ~group attacking nazism. These LA'RRIVEE'S Write. Call or come' for '-a ="'"included the 1933 Advent ser- Information ~ IMPROVE - .REMODEL ~ I

mons' of Cardinal Michael von F'I 'A Tel. HOm~stead 2-4663 ....-: ' • th :..Faulhaber, Archbishop of Munich ying . ~ .. WI an ~ I

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population of Korea now totals W • 5 & H G 5 • .CAT.ERER· .~ ~at- ~,417,079. This is an increase of e give reen tamps ~ ~62,236 over 1958 when Cath- . Corner Rockdale' Avenue COMMUNION ~ Making' necessary repairs NOW will save you from ~ Iolics numbered 354,843. . & l\Iorth Street .~ having to make major repairs LATER ~

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Page 12: 10.08.59

'A.IRHAV~.N, MA$S.·

Ib•.59~

--'-

::' I.

DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUlInvi.. young girts (140ft) .. lobor ...·Chri.,·, viHyot'd ~_ Apostfe of the

Editi_,: It , ladie.·· Mo¥ies 'amt f ..',vision. Witlt 1Itact... _OtIi ...Missionary Ii..... It.... ' Chritt'. Doctrille.Ie aH......rdltl~.of"_. "* ., cr"-,

.'. Few iMormatiotl writt to: ... ..IEY. MOTHElI SUPERIOR .

• ft. PAUL'S, AYE. 8OSTot:"~. MAn.

MacLEAN'S- SEA FOODSUNION WHARf.

Remember that1) The, Holy Father aidS all- missionary' iIOeiettee in all'

mission lands' . . '2) Regathers aid for H.imself~ the Society 'f« the

Propagation of the, Faith 's~ Whenever you give to the Society for the PropagaUOIl I

of the Faith, you give to the Holy Fathee.

~oope~ation in Missionary WorkUr9~

God Love 'you

LOB,STERCHICKEN

Wba~ we, appreci~te ~ost is to see how·dear, to your hean is sPiritual co-operationfor the eauseof the miSsionS. We' lnsistupon this point of major importance! '.

What triumphs would "result 'for .the

Church If it. ws:e, poss.ib!e to. enroll under -Ilk'the_ banner of the miSSion apostol!lte all EhChrist.lans who suffer 1n'holipitals,bi sani- '- i];toriums and in hOsPices; iUt were possible ·[2to make these plaees centers of sPirituality <~

for the miSsionary army; If it were poSsible ' . '~ pe~s~de'the ~fii-m to offer thelr'pain-.ccepiect with love b7the hands of GocI-;-:-tor the' missions! . . ., .'

By Most ..Rev. ·Fulton J. Sheen, D~D.·;:

The Holy Father sPeaks on behalf of his miSsionS:'."God has chosen uS to represent on earib the .Divine Savlo.... ­

and has kindled in our souUhe throb of universal fatherhood ."the~licitude for all churches".' . . '

.Of coUrse; the, progress made lately by the mls'sions is oonsol.;lng, but we must not' forget that cooperation in missionary workhas perhaps never been more urgent and imperative than now. Itis 'enouih to reflect how the picture of the missionary world bas -.ohanged tit' recent yearS.' . . .

" Even. where "the fields are already. white for the harvest",(John 4, 35), and in those 'where the se)'the airead,.· is reapmc.

.how often the suffering .due to lack of .'laborers and of resources. is the alnios&daily lot of the apostle ofChJ:ist!

Why n~t place a. 'statue: ,of Our Lad,. of .Tetevisioo atop 70urT.V. set. 'Iben. as you sit comfortably watching Ute news, 'cast aquick look at ~e statue. That glanee will remind 700 that tariDo~ important news is being reported daily, Ute I'oocl news ofthe GOsPel, by· Bolr F,aUter's MissioDaries to the' pagans of Uteworld: Send 70ur 'sacriflce with $3 with the request for 011a

_. LADY 'OF TELEVISION statue.

l· 1. "':,.t:.-t.-J,." ..:' • I !..

~OD LOVE YOU to A.C.F. for $2 "I am In my seventy-seventh .. ·year and will try to 'make a regular offering, Small though it is, for'

those marty who suffer whom you describe so vividly" ... to J.F. for$I "This' ~ equivalent of my: weekly'desserts'; ... to G.M. 'for $5 "1was reading your, column while I was working overtime: I couldflot go home until I sent you, some litUedonation. Wish -it could be'more"~ .. to J.W-:B. tor $22:85 "Since last I wrote you, I received

. many grea~ .blessings, anll I know that your prayers On my behalfare being anSwered. I am able to walk without pain,"and I have "successfully passed the trial' period ~ my new' Work; I am sure,with your. con~inuous prayers, that I will be' able to keep this up~

• .. to J.F. fol" $60.. "I deserVe no credit or thanks for this as this illan act· ~f restitution for an act of cheating in my p8st lif~. While itisn't much, but it represents the money my sister, J; and I have savedit pays the debt inju~i~,Ihope it also helPs the needy"... to C. andI.W. lor $6 "Please accept this little ·offerlDg fOr' the Missions. -Itisn't much. but it represents the money' my sister J. and I have saved

. from oUr alloWances andbabr-sitting"... to twr's. H.A.B. .for $10 "Ifound this while in a railwBT station this summ~l' and forward lit• you for the Missions"•

MEDALIST: Dr. John L..Madden, chief of staff and .director of surgery at St. .'Clare's Hospital,' New' York:City, is the 26th recipient ofthe annual Catholic 'ActionMedal, given to an outstand~ .ing 'laynial'!'by St. Bomiven..·;ture University: NC Photo.'

Pontiff .Con'trib·utes·To.Typhoon Victims

VATICAN CITY (NC) ':"'HiaHolinesS Pope John XXIII hassent $10,000 to the ,apostolicintern\mciattire in Tokyo' to aidvictims of the typhoon whicbstruck Japan ·on ~ept. 26.

The typhoon, k now ,8. as"Deadly . Vera," left" nearly2,000 dead and mOM tho •,million homelesa.

;THEANCHOR":"'Oiocese of Fall River-Thurs'., Oct. 8, 1959

'/ COLUMBAN SUPERIOR:father Cornelius Boyle has~en appointed 'Regional Su- Pope to Hear Choir,~perior of ·the Columban Fa- .UTRECHT, (NC)- The By...'. zantine Rite Choir of Utrechtthers .in Korea. He narrowly, ,will give a. concert for Pope,~scaped capture' by the· Com- John XXIII on' Oct. 15, it was,munists in June, 1950, when announced here.. The 43-voice

t h N rth K R-.J- -, grolip from.TheNetherlands is'e 0 orean t:wt cap- d' t d b Ukrai' .'t d S . 1. NC .', lrec e y. . man-born D&-.'ure eouPhoto.·, Miroslaw Antonowy~h. .~..~}~,- ~-p':-,~;l·~~$~bl~:~...s.;:t~-A~~~~.:!!~1o:-": ." :h.,~ 4.....) i: .. '~'~_~_~;.~cl-_:~,gji .

Advises 'M'()d'~r~<'Dictators ~Read Pop~''~ius,'VII ,Story

By Most Re\'.. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. 'Bishop of Rim!»

Swaying and· jolting over the rough roads the eoachatrained up the pass of Mont-Cenis;' making the frontier ofItaly and France. There was urgency in every flick of theeoachman's lash laid, on the heaving flanks of the horses.Napoleon had commanded' Where Napoleon blundered,that the prisoner of SaVOll8., and blundered fatally, was inPOPe Pius vn, be 'brought misjudging the character of110 Fontainebleau for a final Gregory Chiaramonti, Pope Piusshow-down between the Eagle VII. One of the gentlest andand' the Dove. Enow-" of this humblest men who ever sat onDonsense; if the ' ". tbe Chair of Peter, this formerHoly Fat her Benedictine monk 'had neverth&meant to per- less a vein of iron.llist ,iii his ma,e" . M¥Qudges Popecourse of with- . Because the Holy Father wasstanding the manifestly delighted with ·'theImperial will Concordat .and willing to go ast be r e ·was a far as possible in order to restoreway of . bring- peace to a troubled world, thetng him to his Eagle concluded ,that he had aknees. Dove in his talons. As his ambi-

I h sid e the' tions grew with the blazing ofmuttered coach . his'star, he made his decision tothe aged Pontiff 'bind the Church hand and footmoaned' in agony. Three years to the service of his House.aL close confinement iil Savona But while he could seize Romebad undermined his con-stitution, and imprison the Pope at Sa- _ Scouts PresentDever robust at best, and they'. vona. he found that he could .notbad been years of constant pres- break the Pontiff's will. It was FineP,ogi'am'"aure, ,with il sOlitary oid man, not ;that Pius VII cared for tem- . .fighting single-handed against· 'poral power hiJ:nself;biit the CINCINNATI (NC) ~the most' powerful dictator' the' Patrimony was not his to' abdi- Scollting . is ·not, a reforDlmodern world had known. , cate,and without the advice of school for potential juvenile

Ever since tht: Holy Father his'Cardinals, scattered by 1m':' delinquents but a. "blue rib­bad dared to· pass sentence of.··· perial decree he refused to· bon program for 'boys of meritexcommunication on those who' budge.' who can meet its standards..··'bad. confiscated the Patrimony . P 'W"thsta d Pr .of St: Peter. disperSed his col-.· .ope Ins essure Father Robert KirUand, To-lege of Cardinals, and broken, As to the ~ints of Napoleon's: ledo area Boy Scout, chaplaiD,faith with the spiritual auton- . pro~ram w~lch touched .more emphasizing the "idealistic" na­omy guaranteed by the Concor-. closely the',' spiritual author~ty ture of the. Scouting, says "It'adat of 1802, it had been a strug.,. and, th~ rights of the HolY 'See, ,not only idealistic but it is aDlie to the death. . the. Dove was magnificently, active program, too, and one that

Now, in 1812; Napoleon's adamant. Tfioughfailing. ·in appeals to boys."tenns were clear. Pius VII must bealt~ and beset by torturing As far as Father Kirtland· isrenounce forever all cI8ims to scruples, be withstood the COD- concerned,. Scouting· offers "the 'temporal sovereignty over the stant pressure. '.' most effective program'.to 'deelPapal States; he must take up , It bi appalling to read the. with the cea of a boy's life'be­reSidence in Paris 'as a sort of story of the Pope'aimpriso.n~tween.homeand schoo!." This is .alorified gr8nd chaplain of the ment;l;1ot a soul who'm.·be coul~, the area, he said, where "theImperial Court; he must recog-' trust was allowed neai' him, and ideals he learns at home and iRnize the Gallican Articles of so ,strict was the surveillance aehool are put to the test... '1682, plainly asserting the sub- that he"was fiJUilly denied Pell ' . Fazz,.Thlnkenjection of the'Vicar of Christ to and·paper. . . '. -the will of a General Council· Through it all he- maintained Father Kirtland aBSertedand he' must accept the Imperiaian admirable calm, even a cer- Scouting is "remarkably 'pronenomination of bishops without tain natural-gaiety which doubt- to fuzzy thinldng," and this ufrio'6irther ado: ' less sustained him in hiS lone- leSs true among Catholics thilll .. 'And, as a last straw, the only linesa.. others." For example, he said.

f:ardinals he would be free to BrokeD M,an there is the theo~" that ScOut::.ciQnsult would be those wbo.had When the summonS to Fon- iog under Catholic auspices isproved themselves first of all tainebleau came, Pius VII was a useful to ,"keep the'kids close'tOlOyal. partisans of the crown. -desperately sick man:' The the ChurCh." .l::There is' no more :instructive gruelling journey over tbe Alps ,While this idea is "not bad In

Itudy of tbe ways of'a 'transgres- brought on uremic poisoning, itself," ~d Father' Kirtland,"it'S!?r than the history. of Napo- .. and at the hospice of Mont- can lead~- a· ghetto. mentality,~n's dealing$ with the Church. Cenis he hovered for two days and to the defensive theory: 'clffollowing the Concordat. There at the' point of death. . w~ 'don't sponsor 'a~oop; son-ie-

. is little doubt that at the moment Yet on he, must go because', one else will.''' He also scored Cut out ~s column, pin yoUr sacrillceto it and mail it to the,his motives . were not entirely. the Emperor willed it. That he the "pietistic ,theory" .that Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society· foreelfisp. or tainted. ~rvived ~he trip was hardly Scouting' in'Catholic units should . the Propagation of the Faith,; 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y..: .He. was persuaded that a re- short of a miracle, but be 'reached . be Cia~ arm of religion, a means' or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,eonciliation of Cburch and State its end a broken man, burning of teaching' boys more about 368 NQ:th Main Street, Fall River, Mass. . . -..ould serve the best interests·of with fever. There Napoleon religiop, or a' program of a~'both, and if his own religious . awaited hiDi. " tolj.c works, junior 'grade." "beliefs were a strange amalgam . It was a scene of ~itigated ' Pointe 'o~i; :Needof skepti~ and superstition,. violence. Insults were flung in "Soouting is not ~n expli~itb-,he was wise enough to s~ that tbe face of the PontiH that he religious ~rganization," Father~.': gesture of friendship toward ". was an ignorant old m'an, unfit' KirUand went on~ Its contribu..~e Church would win him the to rule the Church of God tha(\ tion in this' area is that "it is.~thusias~esl:1pp~>rt()f .111iIli~Pl!...' .!le was an lngrate, unniindful 01.;' way. of' showing that religion~ the faithful, clergy arid laity the' welfare of souls.' •i, must perIJ;leate our "e'ritire life.~ke. . In an agony of· despair the·, 'Boys have the tendency just as.,' . Pope yielded so far as to agr~;:; much as" adults to be secuiaris-

to ,the institution of bishops by' ti·c. ,in their thinking," he said.the Imperial Government, a con":,' "They fali' to retate religion tocession which 'he almost imme-,:' ihe playing field.' the campingdiately repented and rejected. " trip.'" -

. Dove Conq~ers ' Obligation to God. Beyond that he would not go;:'The Eagle had met the Dove and: But with the ideals of Scout­the J;>ove had conquered. 'ing before them, boys recognize, A, year later and the contest';' ."these activities are a' matter of '

was over; Napoleon had abdi~'!' concern' to God and to thecated and Pius VII was on his' Church."

.. b k to R Th' 'Even" the daily ."goo,d, t,urn".way"". ac .o~e.. ere, wi~,,extraordinary. resiliency, he' required: of the Scout, Father

'would reign another'decade de- Kirtland pointed out, helps himvotihg himself ,to the restoration to see that there is an obligation

.of the Church. to do such things because it isIt Is a cautionary story which God's win, and not because of

. might be re6iewed .with profit payor penalty. . 'by others who aspire t6 world;'conquest and who affect to. de':"spise the "legions 01. the Pope.'".' ~. \ - .

Page 13: 10.08.59

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THE ANCHO.R ~Oct. 8, 1959

Delegate NamedFourth PrelateIn Franciscans

TEUTOPOLIS (NC)Archbishop Edigio Vagnozzi,the Apostolic Delegate to the,United States, was affilia­ted with 'the Franciscan OrderFriars Minor in ceremonies iathis Illinois community, closingthe centenary year of the Fran­ciscans in ~he Middle West.

Father ,Pius Barth, O.F.M..head of the Franciscan midwest­ern province of the Sacred Heart,conferred the affiliation on theArchbishop, the Pope's personalrepresentative to the U. S.Church. .

Archbishop Vagnozzi was pre­sented with the Franciscanhabit and breviary to signify,his tie with the community.The Delegate offered a Mass inthis city where, a century ago,nine Franciscans from Germanyestablished the pioneer founda­tion of what is now the' com-munity's midwest province; ~ ,

Today the province is repre­llented in 13 midwestern statesand has some 800 members. It ilalso in' charge of missions inBrazil, Bolivia, Japan arid thePhilippines.

Three members of the U:s.hierarchy have been affiliatedwith the Franciscans. They areTheir Eminences Francis Car­dinal Spellman, Archbishop ofNew York,. and Richard Cardi­nal Cushing, Archbishop ofBoston, and Bishop James L,.,Conriolly of Fall River.

Perfect GamePASSAIC (NC) - Father

Joseph 'Nemshak, curate at St.Mary's church, will never forgethill most recent day off. He hadthe kind of a day all bowlen

. dream about, 11 perfect 300 game.

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of Catholic and Orthodox repre­sentatives.

Second, that leaders of both'groups share the same generousspirit that Pope John himselfhas shown.

"Pope John's recent suggestionthat leaders on both' sides of theEast-West church schism shouldget. together to find ways to re­unite, the Church is a God­inspireq idea," Archbishop Ba-shir said. . ','

Hesa!d the Pope's efforts aD.

behalf 0 of the reunion of. Christ­endom make him '''one. of. the

o greatest and most' Chri~ti_ ­popes of all time."

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ENROUTE TO NEW GUINEA MISSION: Leaving fortheir one-year old mission in New Guin'ea are these membersof the 'Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross. Theya,re, left to right, Father Henry Miller, Father John SmitBrother Paul and Brother Matthew. Father Benn'o Mischke:provincial, is in rear. NC Photo. 0, ,

-' Religion ·Stimulates:. Human ,Knowledge" TURIN (NC)-The stimulUs. giv.~n by religion is.vital to 'the, advanc;:e of human' knowledge,- e s'p eI; i a 11 y because the sci:­." ence~ 'are predominant lin the.' uniy~rsi~ies. of. today, Giovanni

Cardinal ,Montini has d~lared.

The Archbishop of Milan told1,500 'delegates to the 35th na­tional congress of the ItalianCatholic University Federationthat religion is the beacon' that

_ lights mankind's entire store ofknowledge. He said this is be­

'cause 'knowiedgeof 'things de­rives from the Divine Thoughtwhich is reflected in them.

Stressing the need for contactbetween Catholic life and the

'univers'ities, the Milan Cardinalsaid that-the Church is not at allobscurantist: "~She readily intro­duces intellectual and scientiflenlues into Christian spiritualityitself." .

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~orothy C~X

Atomic' E,~er9Y Unit.Sp'..rs Pe~ce Hope ','

VIENNA (NC) -Franziskuic;ardinlll: Koel)ig:)QI~ !lelegates

to discover that you have thesame defects you dislike inothers.

Haven't you had the exper­ience of hearing others talkingabout some defect in anotherand found yourself thinking,"They should talk!". .

Unless you cultivate sincereinsight onto. your own person­ality, you'll probably fall intothe same error. Now is the time ,to 'see to it that- your increasingknowledge of others goes handand hand with an ever deepen-

, ing understanding of yourself.Novelty Wears Off

Although this ear'ly dating ex­perience is not to be considered.

'a direct ::Jreparation for mar-riage, it should' make you better' ,prepared tO,size up the 'qualities: , Syrian 'Orthod~xArchbishop, See,.s'to look for in a future mate. .

As you acquire experience jft, Eastern Churches Joining Folddating, the novelty of' friendly WASHINGTON (NC) A 0association with tJ:1e opposite - n rthodox Christian leadersex gradually wears off, and you 'has declared the Catholic Church and the separated Easternare in a better positmnto view churches will be .reunited. Archbishop Antony Bashir offuture partners, objectively. ,'New York, spiritual leader of all Syrian Antiochan Christian.

Because men and 'women are in North 'America, made them u t ua 11 y complementary - statement in an address atphysically, psychologically, andspiritually-they are' normally . a regional meeting of :'theattracted 'to each other as mas- - 'Syrian Orthodox Youth Or­culine 'and feminine i>ersonal- . ganization. Archbishop Bashirities.Young people sometimes said reunion depends on twoconfuse this general attraction factors:between the sexes with,love. First,' that His Holiness Pope

'. John XXIII ask an Orthodox'- leader, "such as,the Patriar,ch of" Constantinople," .to join him in. ~ss_uing invitations to a meeting

. Find Compatible TraitsHence the first time they ex­

peri~nce it, they may think theyare in love, though' they are,really only being carried awayby. the novelty of intimate. asso­ciation with the other sex.

Dating experience. s h ,0 u I d,show you that th,ere i!l m'oretelove -than U~~s gener'alat.traction.You 'discover tl)attypes of mas­culine and feminine personalitiesdiffer' considerably, '~o . tpat 'inselecting a future mate, youmust find one with the $pecialtraits that are fairly compatible

: with your own.Prepiuation tor Lit~

These Qbservations are notmeant to promote dating .duringhigh school. They' are offered ashelpful suggestions,' w.hen, if.and/ to the extent you date.

Remember, your high schoolyears are the years . when youare preparing for life. They areso important' because much ~

what you will be able to do andto be as an adult will dependupon how well you have madeuse of this time.

Dating should represent' but aminor, secondary, interest 'atpresent. .'Only if it is kept in, itsplace can: it .serve a usefulpurpOse. .

Aviation GuildLONDON (NC) - A Catholk

Aviation Guild for workers lit,London Airport, has been Iletup under the patronage 01: OurLady. It hy the ~pproval et.William Cardinal ,G 0 d f r e JloArchb.iabop 8& Wea~~_ .

Sincere 1Dsi1'~

, If you are sincere, you'H ex­amine your own' attitudes andactions. It may come M a shock

Says Dating" Minorlntere'st·During H.igh 'School Years'

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.Assistanl Professor of Sociology

Sainl Louis University

What do you think about dating 'during high school?rm a junior this year and most of the boys and' girls in myclass go on dates because that's about the only way one cango any pl~ce. Since I intend to go on to college, I've nointention of taking datesseriously now, though Idon't think it's good to cutmyself off from the otherseither. What do you recommend?

I quite agree with you. Datinghas come to beone of the com-

,monest meansavailable forsharing ill so­cial affairs withyour own age­group. Hence,unles you have'other forms 01.entertain­ment or other

',interests t hata b s 0 r 'b your,time and ener­gy, you'll find· dating one of. theeasiest ways of . enjoying 100M

tocial life.Although I Bee little justifica­

tion for more than very occa­sional dating during the firsttwo years, of high- school, thepractice may serve some usefulpurpose in the junio~ and senioryears. However, since dating atthis time il! primarily for enter­tainment, it would show lack ofbalance to allow it to absorbmuch of. your time and energy.

Chiet AimThroughout the highschool

years your chief. aim is to pre­pare yourself. for life. Wouldn'tit be really childish to allowyour desire for entertainmentto' interfere with the achieve­ment of. this important goal?

What purposes can datinglerve at this period? Obviouslyit offers you one 'way-there, ar~others""':" of associating on afriendly basis with a iarge num­ber of people, both' boys and .girls.' .

These contracts can broadenand deepen your knQwledge of.people and of social life. More­over, besides the opportunity toassociate in '8 group where youare one among several others,dating offers yO}! the experienceof dealirig with just' one otheron the basis of·a couple.

You soon learn that this situ­ation calls for conside'rable poiseand balance. You're now appear­ingsocially as a couple, togetherwith other couples, an;d you haveto learn the norms and customs

'that socially regulate your be­baylor under such circumstances.

Experience in AdjustmentMore important, you are, in a

sense, responsible : for eachother's entertainment and be-.havior as a 'couple. What should

" you do?" Where should you go?What can you talk about?

In working out the, answers towch questions, you discover. thatdating can give you experiencein adjusting to other.s, in lear,n­ing cooperation, and in ,sizing upthe character, of: another. '

All friendly., contacts with _~ the,: ~i.rd.• g~n.~I:al ~onf.erence

others tend to accomplish this, of the Intetna.tion~J ~to~icbut since dating involves, only- ..Energy ~gency 0 their meetingyou an-d Yout'paI'tne~, it greaUy.ju~tif.ies ~o '~ope' ,that- lo~e of 'intensifies. the experIence, ~elghbor Will be<;ome 'a bl!81s for

Dating may also 'help you de:.., understanding and' peace .in the'Yelop your own ~rsonalitY.. world. . , . ;When. Y.Ol,1 discover '! traits that .The ~dlnal A,rc~b.lsbop, !"­you dislike in others; .ask your- Vienna told t~e pa.rtl~lp~nts .HI

self honestly whether you. do not the..conference of the .U.N.-affll-bave the·same·defects. ' ,fated ag~ncy, ~'Mankind expects ~

Sometimes we find it so easy ,that a~ ~,~esult of your, work,to discover certain "weaknesses . fear wl1Ldlsappear,and tl,e pos­in others because we have the sibility ,fflr 'peace aJ:l~ ~curity ..same short-comings ourselves. will increase."You know the old saying, "It ,..------------.,takes a thief to catch a thief!"

Page 14: 10.08.59

Golden ,JubileeKANSAS CITY (NC)-Rock­

hurst College here, in Missourihas ,begun the' commemoratioll'of the 50th, anniversary of the·granting of its charter. The col­lege is conducted by the Jesuits.

Italians .Discussf) . • '.

Leisure ProblemPADUA, (NC) - Discussiol18

of increased leisure time as tMresult of automation have beellsponSored :)y ':atholics becausethe "problem is becoming aA'ever increasing one," GiuseppeCardinal. Sirl, ArchbishOp atGenoa, told Italian journalists.

While Ttaly todaY has 1M

great problem in the automatiOllof industry, the Cirdinal said.

· the discussions held during the32nd national Social Week here

· are preparing the groundwork, foi- meeting it when it become­

a reality.Cardinal Siri who has beea

· moderating the discussions illthis northern Italian universitytown said that if' "the SocialWeek, of Italian Catbolics sue-

, ceeds in attracting the attentioaof public ,opinion and of, com­petent people ~o the subject, thestudies will be ready to deter­mine how it will be solved whenthe problem becomes a reality."

WHEN A STRIKE affects )'our food storetl)'00 ma)' suffer a SLIGHT INCONVENJ;ENCE.Without )'our giftS some of our refugee fammetlma)' find It TOTALLY IMPOSSIBLE to obtaillenough food SIMPLY TO LIVE. Twent;r-fiv.doY.ars will help the Hoi)' Father feed lUI eD­tire family for MORE THAN two weeks.

Our SUSPENSE CARD Insures the offering of GregorianMasses for your soul after death. Write for complete informa-Uo~ ,

I .In MARY'S BANK the Interest )'00 receive Is all ;ut of pro­

portion to the deposit )'ou make. THE DEPOSIT - A daD)'prayer for mission vocations and a DOLLAR-A-MONTH for thesupport of mission-minded novices. THE INTEREST .:- FORGOD:, a harvest of souls: FOR YOU: a child's thailks•• nun'. 'prayer, Mar;r's blessings, and God's grace. " ,

A bequest In )'our Win for the NEAR EAST 'MISSIONS wDI'lte • COMFORTING THOUGHT when )'00 prepare to meet God.

. "IT' IS- THEREFORE A HOLY AND A WHOLESOMBTHOUGHT TO 'PRAYFOR THE DEAD." No one has said it~etter than Judas Machabeus. Our missioners will offer Massfor your'deceased relatives 'and friends· and your offerings willmake possible a holy anehl wholesome life for our refugee chil­dren. If 'you send in your Mass' offerings NOW we can arrangeto have the. Masses offered in November, THE MONTH OF THIlHOLY SOULS.

I DON'TWANT.TO

"GIVE ME SOULSI" Thli 18 'theburning dj!sire' of. ~ye.rY n~wiy~ordainedpriest. Thotisan!ls .of ~Quls wlil i~ine-.diately' fulfill the desires of ALEXAN.­DER and THOMAS' if they cab becomeprieSts> in ALWAYE:' in India. Thes.

, two boys need $100 for 'each year oftheir six-year' seminary .course, Cali youthink of a BETTER NOVEMBER. ME­MORIAL' for a'priest· friend-who haidied or for a deceased relative?

~NO ONE EVER ASKED MIl: BEFORE."-was the reactlollof a woman who recently became a CHRYSOSTOM by'her giftto our,DOLLAR-A-MONTH CLUB for the,education of'semina-rians. HAVE YOU- BEEN ASKED? . " . '

CHRIST THE KING (His Feast Is Sunda)', October 25th.) wiDhav~ a more extended Kingdom If )'00 make a stringless giftto M~nsignor ·R)'an te help him lessen the suffering. of 011I'

.Palestinian' refogees. '. . , "

~~r5stffijssions~:,;, , . FR~NCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, P'••ld....: . I

. . MIll" 'ete,.'; Tuoh" Nilt'! sec',i- . " . I. ". . Send all communication, toi . ' , :

, CATHOUC ':NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION480 Lexin~nAve. at46t~ St.' New)'ork17, N: Y.

THIS ANGUISHED CRY .of the six-)'ear old who hasn't IlIlJ'desire to go 'to school will be more than oompensated for b)'

'st I'h ., the DEEP,PRIDE'OF HIS PARENTS4;~ "J,. ' when .)'o~ gifts make available the

.c.. "'d' .. 54,008 neceBS81')' to build and furnish~; ~o • school In DECCHI ZERU In ERI-~ ~ TREA. So VERY MUCH for so com-~ 'A paratlvely LITTLE; .Can )'ou give+ t generousl7· so that the Divine Teach-

er will hear the lDllDY-voioed dire., -"IDEWANNA"1

,A goodly number of Palestinian ,DON'T WANT TO'S". will eive wllJ"

,1ix Holy Fathtn MisWI Ail to "BUT TffiTHTER. THAm" whellfw tht 0ritIItiJI Churrll . SISTER ALINE' and SISTER ViC.'

. '. TORIA are. read)' to te~h In ,Jer....~le~ $150 • )'ear.~ pa)" the expenses of, novlUate for eacll'of them and It. wW' rladdea 111I Hean to know that "SI8*

.. Sa.ld"· what 'HeuI4L.. 0" '-, ,. .•

, POPE VISITS OBSERVATORY: Pope John displayedmach interest in viewing the Vatican's astronomical ob­servatory on the upper floor of the papal summer residencein Castelgandolfo: He was guided on, his tour. by AustralianFather Daniel. O'Connell, S.J., observatory director (nearpope) who explained the various projects under study. NC,Photo. : '

New, Post'i ALBANY· (NC) Father:

.,John J: Murphy, C.S.C;, who:has been' 'associate director of'the Family Rosary Crusade i

. headquarters here for the last •. ~'O years, will take up new dutiea'as provincial .councHor for the.Eastern PJ,"ovince of the Congre­gation of Holy Cross, with head­quarters 'in' Bridgeport. TheFamily Rosary Crusade waafounded' ahd is' ditected by F.- 'ther Patrick Peyton, C.S.c.

I

.': Enlarge SeminaryGLENDALE (NCj-Construc­

tion of' additions, costing' about'$750,000, at the. Glenmary-HomeMissioners seminal')" here' inOhio will get underway" DextSpring., .... ,

Pelikan might have had a pointwhen he wrote that the CatholicChurch lacks "both the 'ideo­logiCal and - the organizationalapparatus" to bridge the gap be-'tween itself and the temporalsociety. '

The fact is, however, that ac­cording to Catholic theology thelaity do participate in the priest­hood.

"By the waters of baptism, asby common right" the late Pope

. Pius XII pointed out in his en­cyclical on the Sacred Liturgy,"Christians are made members

,of the Mystical Body of.. Christ, 'the Priest, and by the 'character;

which is imprinted' on 'theirsouls, they are appointed to giveworship to God. Thus. they par.,.ticipate, according to their con­dition, in the _' priesthood of

. Christ." .' '" ..Social Implications

The social implications of this .Ang·I.•e·ca" n ,C'hu'rc'h'teaching have been spelled out .- .repeatedly not only inofficial. Reports D·ecl.one .,papal documents and in' numer- .ous pastoral Ietiers by individual, . LONDON, (NC)-The Churchbishops and national hierarchies 'of England, Wl1ile it has somebilt also in the writings of pro- , 10 mi-llion confiqned members,fessional as well as "pOpular" has reported that' only' 2,500,000theologians. ., -are Easter l:ominunicants, , that'

.The gist of all these docunients is, fully practicing adherents.is that the laity; as participants· An official publication issuedin the priesthood of Christ, have by. the Church' of England'.an indispensable rO'\9 to play in c: e n t'r a 1 Board of FinanCebridging the gap between -the showed that ·Easter communi­Church and temporal society. . cimts. in '1956 totaled 2,348,35~

An Am:erican theologian; Msgr.: or .only 24 per 'cent of the peo­William O'Connor of the Arch;'; pie who had been confirmed anddiocese of 'New ~ork, pointS'out six per cent of the'general pop-in tqis coimection that the laity ulation. ...are called in'il peculiar' way"to·take the' initiative iii effecting : The number· of marriages sol-.necessary ~cial reforrris~' ., e~nited in the Anglican Church

Such reforms, he says, "if'theY' felI.from583' per 1,000, marri­are to _be effective and lasting. ages in 1910 to 496 in 1957; .whilemust come from below:. they bap~isms ~~. 600 per 1;000 ,wereCannot be imposect. from 'abJv~':' tl!:~ lowest at any' time since

, .,:' ." ".. ,', 1~90. , '..~"" " . •. Dir~ctiv'e Inevitable" -. of' .

:'In view··'9faiI this'itlS,not' Church ,of" -England schoolssl:l~prising hi~t the.. Holy, .see had: 932;988, pupils in ,1957 .orshould have directed.the French 14.7 per cent of the totai schoolbishops---'in ~.letter dat~d July.3. population, w hill e Catho,1icbtl 1 d . schools with 478,833 children

.. ,u _on y rece!1t Y rna e publIc,-..; made' up 7.6 'per cent 'of the to.:­to, wind up;- ·the priest~w.qrkerexperim~nt! and .have, ,laymen tal. ·The Anglican percentage hadtake over the job of bringing fallen·' from 17.2 per .cent "inChrist to the factories and homes . 1950, whereas' the'Catholic' per""of the de-Christianized working' centage had risen from 7;2.·' ,,'

cl;~aeed it was almost, iiteVi-~ Croni~s Godparents"~able that the Church should F" .C ' t .F" d'have iss:ued such' a directive or onver rlensooner or later. . 'BOSTON (NC)-0n their sU-

Apparently Dr. Pelikan sensed' ~er'weddinganniversary, Josephas much when he said, with ref": E. Cronin, American Leagueerence 'to an e~rlier and less de..; president, and Mrs. Cronin actedcisive instruction from the Holy as godparents at .the baptism ofSee, that "the definition of the Mrs~ Hester Hayes, convert wifepriest which the church has in- of John I1ayes, a Boston Catholicheri.ted from its tradition is irre": attorney who serves as counSelconcilable.with the way of.life for 'the Boston American Leagueadopted by the labor priests baseball club.(priest-workers), and the church Mrs. ,Hayes took instructi~nswas right when it pointed thi.I in the Faith from Father Josephout."· Scannell, C,SS.R; Before he' be­

came American League prelli­dent earlier this year, Mr.'Croninwas' general .manager of the~ostonRed Sox.

Immediately after the baptismceremon,y,Richard CardinalCushing, Archbishop of Boston,offered a Mass of thanksgiving'

,in celebration of the _Cronins'~nniv~rsary in the oratory of the~ardinal's, residence in neari)y

. Brighton. Members of the' im':'mediate families were in attend­ance and rec~ived the ,apostolicblessing of Pope John XXiII,which was imparted by the Car- .~inaL1.'

Church Has Means" ,This is' partially tr·ue. But Dr,

. Pelikan should have added, forthe sake of ,theological accuracy,that the Church, in abandoningthe priest-worker experiment, isnot left without an' effectivemeans of bridging the gap be..

· ,: tween itself and the temporal· ':. order. . ",': ,'That means is the apostolic

, w6rJ(: 9f the laity, who, 'to· repeat, .- th~ words of Pope Pius;' XII,,'~'participate, according to their. condition, in the priesthood of

Christ.',!. ." ' .• r .•In; other wordS; the Churchr ::does not lack. "the ideological

. and ,the organizational appara­",'tus" to relate itself to the::tem­

poral 9rder. God willing, 'thelaity of France will' makeAhisabundanUy, clear in the 'not1oodistant future. '. :', '

THE ANCHOR-Di6cese'of'Fall River.....Thurs., Oct. 8,'1959/

DOUGLAS IIfDK;

14

Lay Apostolate Work LinksC.hurch, Tempora'l Order...

. By Msgr. GeorgeG. HigginsDirector. NCWC Social Action Department

A distinguished Lutheran theologian, Dr; JaroslavPelikan of Chicago University's Federated Theological'Faculty, maIntains in a recent book entiled "The Riddle of.

, Roman Catholicism" that. whiI~ the Catholic Church "hasrecognized the need of relat­ing itself to the' vital in­terests of modern _society,0' ~ • it has lacked both theideological and' the organiza­tional apparatus to do so," Toillustrate thisconclusion, Dr.'Pelikan cit e sthe record of.t h' e so - called"priest - work­ers'.' 'of' France'(he calls them"lahor priests").

Tnese. men,he, says,' havemade an ad­mirable effortto b u il dabridge between

.' the church and labor, but "Thedefinition of the priest which thechurch has inherited from itstradition," :1e hastens to 'add" ,','isirreconcilable 'with the way·of­life adopted by the labor priests,'and the church was right· when'it pointed this. out." .' .

,In· summary, he concludes,."'the history of Roman Catholicdealings with modern society,symbolized by the record of thelabor priests (priest-workers) inFrance, illumines the tragedy' of,the Reformation. Roman .Cath­olicism has, had the will to build

.such a bridge, and Protestantismbas had the freedom to build it;but neither has had bOth."

Narrow 'DefinitionSubject to correction, I inter..:

pret this to mean thilt, in :Dr.Pelikan's opinion, the RomanCatholic defiriition of the priest'..hood is so narrow as to maktt ital,lTiost impossible for the Church~tO relate '.tself to the v'ital in~

·terests of modern 'societY"'of;more ·sp·ecificaHY,.to bridge the.~ap between itself' and labor. i":; MorePfecisely, Dr: Pelikan:seems to be saying here that;,·according to Catholic theology;'the laity_,d9" noLparticipate i~.th.e priesthood of Christ, whereas'~e priestho,od" as defined in;'~rotestant theology,'·is. shared,_:~ually by ~ll those Wh9 hav~,-been baptized;.laymen as well as:

, , 'ordained clerics.. .' .'. ~ , i

:: If'this'weretrulythec~se, Dr~': . . .. -'.' • !

,:Ex-Red' Do~glas\. Hyde;StonehiU"Lecturer ,f Dougl~s HYd.e, one time com';munist aildfortner editor en theLondon Daily Worker, will ad':'dress the -st'lde:lt body at Stone";

..... ihill Colleg'e,.' Friday, Oct: 28iunder the. sponsorship ,of theSaxon Society, college-. honor'group, Now a free lance writer:and columnist of the Catholic~Herald in Eng~and" his auto­biography, "I Believe" has beenthe choice of one American andsix EngliSh "ook clubs and, hasbeen translated into seven lan-"guages.

Page 15: 10.08.59

THE, ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-thurs., Oct. S, 1959·

LAY PARTICIPANTS: Parishio.ners at St. Stephen's, Dodgeville,participate almost 100 per cent in giving responses at Sunday Masses.Left, Mrs. Lorraine Livesey, Miss Th~rese Derorcy, Patrick McKinney andLorraine Brochu recite the Confiteor with the celebrating priest. At left

,center, Rev. J. Orner Lussier, pastor, assists parishioners with responses.Right center, Robert Cloutier, lay reader, reads Epistle. Right, a familygroup joins in responses. Left to right, Alcide Caty with daughters Elaine,Lucille and Janice.

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British School ActBenefits Catholics

LONDON (NC) - The newschool year begins ·with the fi­nancial outlook for the Catholicschools' of Engl.and and Walesbetter than it has been for along time. .

Government grants towardthe cost of building arid moder-nizing Ca tho 1i C: - secondaryschools in England and Waleswill be increased by about $61,­600,000 over the next 15 or 20years !Is a result of the newEducation Act, which 'passedthrough its final lltages in Parlia­ment just before the Summerrecess and has now received theroyal assent.

When account is taken of theinterest which the Catholic dio­cese would have had to pay ifthey had borrowed that money,the total saving ·to the Church.may be put at nearer $84,00,0,000.

St~phen"s

,In Lay

ST. MAlty'S,TAUNTON, ,

Library aides are accessioningbooks acquired in a 'recent bookdrive. Nineteen students are 'as­sisting in the job.

.Seniors are beginning a seriesof trips to nursing institutes,schools-and other places of em­ployment to assist them in plan­ning for their futures, whilejuniors and freshmen are takingintelligence and aptitude testsin preparation fOl' future deci­lions.

ceive medals at St. Mary'sCathedral on the feast of Christthe King.

PREVOST HIGH SCHOOL.FALL RIVER

Senior class officers are, forSenior A, Paul Martin, presi­dent; Paul Bolanger, vice pres­ident; Ray Hetu, secretary; BobComtois, treasurer.

Senior B: Roland Levesque,president; Rene TrerI1blay, vicepresident; Ed Caron, secretary;Bob Silva, treasurer.

Paul Martin heads the schoolhonor roll and is president of .the National Honor Society, aswell as a top football playerand active debater.

Speedy ProgressThat was last November, and

.ince that time the laity haveanswered . all of the responsesand recited the Confiteor, Gloria,·Credo, and Pater Noster withthe priest during the four Sun-day Masses.' ,

"The laSt Mass, at 11, is ahigh Mass, and we hope byChristmas to have the wholecongregation singing it,".said thepastor.

In addition, parishioners singhymns in English during the Of­fertory and Communion. The

St. Parish of Attleboro Points Wa,y Asserts Complex

P ... M Hurts Writers. a,rttctpatton at ass NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Amei-" icans are learning to 'read an'd

, _ By Marion' Unsworth '.'soon they will learn to write-The last major directive of the late Pope Pius XIns being carried out actively and/ jf only they' can get rid of •

enthusiastically by clergy and parishioners .of St. Stephen's Qhurch, in the Dodgeville sec- national 'iriferiority complex oa, tion of Attleboro. In accordance with the Pontiff's directive, later issued by the Congre- . the subject. ~f literacy'.

t ·· f S d R't . h' . f St St h ' h b' t" t' . 7 8 9 . d These OpInIOns have been ex-IOn 0 acre I es, parIS lOners 0 .' ep en s. ave een par IClpa mg m '.' an pressed by Father Michael P.10 o'clock l\fasses each Sun. . a~c:I French on the other, as . Kammer S.J. author who has

d f I t I effect is that ot constant partici-, three Masses each Sunday are '.. d 'h f' It f L Iay. or a mos a yea~. m- pation in the sacrifice of the French. . JOIJ?e .t e acu y 0 oyo.

medIately after the Most - .Mass. AI . d f th _ . Umverslty of the, .South, New" . .. so rea y or e congrega Orleans after servIng for five

Reverend BIShop mstructed "We have 80 per cent partici- tion are large cards containing years a; principal of Jesuit Higbpastors iff the Diocese to intro- pation at the first three Masses,. music for the entire Mass. They School Dallasduce lay participation in the and 100 per' cent at the 10 will be put into use when the "Th~re is a 'lot of incompetentMass by having congregations ,?'clock Mass," ~ather said. "It lai!y start singing high Masses. teaching by teachers of Englishrespond to .celebrants,_ Rev. J. IS. really a thrill to sa~ Mass The people ne~ enco~rage- who themselves don't controlOrner LUSSIer, pa~tor .at St. ":'It~ the wh"ole congregation as- ment to ~eep gOIng," said Fa- the language very well," FatherStephen's began tellIng hIS flock Slstmg you. ther LUSSier, "but they are won-Kammer said "One is a nationalof the dir~c~ives and how 'hey There is a lealier for each Mass derful and very willing: They feeling of inferiority by Amer-

. could partiCipate. who stands at the altar rail or ,have done almost all of It them-, icans about the way they talkFour weeks later, led by six walks Up and down the cen~er selves,. and I am very proud of and write they are so self-con­

altar boys who knelt at tlJe al- aisle aiding the congregation bl them." . scious, sd sure that they can'\,tar rail and. a lay leader who the responses.. ''They are form- Pope PlUS ,XII would be proud write well, that instead of writ-read the Epistle and ?ospel of er al!ar. bo~s and know. the pro- 01. them too. ing as they talk they take a dun.the ~ay, t?e congr~gatJon ~taTt- nunClatJon, the pastor added. Increase Size .worried, incoherent style."ed right In, ~~armng Latm as Pamphlets on "The People'. _---'---------..

'they went along. "In three Mass" are placed in every pew, WINNIPEG (NC)--:The Cana-k I ded th dian edition of Our Sunday Visi-wee s we ~o on,ger nee.e 'as are hymn cards. The organist

altar boys, Fattier LUSSier re- is compiling a hymn card which tor has been expanded to 20porta. will have English on one side pages. The national Catholic

newspaper has a weekly circuh~-

tion of m'ore than 55,000. Edi­tors of the publication said itsincreas\!d size ~ould permit· itto carry more national and in­ternational news and more fea­tures.'

Name Senior Officers

Spotlighting O~r SchoolsHOLY FAMILY,NEW BEDFORD

The high school will serve aspresident of Narragansett Debat­ing League this season, withKatherine Kelleher as represen­tative. Msgr. McKeon DebatingClub enrolled 25 new membersto participate in league activities.

Susan Koch, senior. has beennamed a semi-finalist in meritscholarship exami~ations.

BISHOP STANG,NORTH DARTMOUTH

Girl students will wear a uni­form consisting of plaid skirts,matching hats, grey blazers andwhite blouses. Devotion to theInfant of Prague has been inaug­urated as is the custom in schoolsstaffed by the Sisters of NotreDame.

Student Government counsel.,.ors have been elected to repre­sent each freshman homeroom.Plans for an October social areunder way, and rehearsals are inprogress for the November dedi­cation of ~e school at whichCardinal Cushing will be present.

James Gajewski, John Hollandand Anthony Kapaczewski havepassed examinations for AdAltare Dei awards in the BoyScout orianization and w~ll I'e-

Newark PrelateSays Holy NameOfficial Society

NEWARK (NC) - "TheHoly Name Society is the of­ficial ecclesiastical" society'for all Catho'ic men, andmembership in other societiesshould not be considered a sub­stitute for joining the HolyName Society," ArchbishopThomas A. Boland of Newarksays in a pastoral letter read atall churches in the archdioceseSunday as he announced ap­proval of the statewide HNSmembership campaign beingconducted.

The campaign, he said, "hasmy cordial approval and myearnest prayers for completesuccess." The four New JerseySees are cooperating in the two-month drive. '

"We 'cannot overstress thepoint that the Holy Name So­ciety is for every man Who pro­fesses the Faith and w\1o is notashamed or afraid to defend andpractice it," the Archbi~hop said.

He pointed out that~the, so­ciety was founded almost 700years ago "so that Catholic mencould give organized. and publiC:.

'profession of faith in Jesus'Christ as God." .

The society, he declar~, "cal~

upon'its members to give livingexpression of that faith, and toaupport the Church publicly inits never-ending 'crusade to havemankind recognize, accept,' liveand defend what is pleasing tothe Heart of Our Sayior, HisDivinity, His Sacred Name andHis Divine teaching."

Page 16: 10.08.59

16 'THE ANCHOR-Diocese C?f Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 8, 1959

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I'

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,SEEKONK

Newly scheduled' Masses areat 7:15, 8:15" 10 ana l!l in themorning. Four Sisters of Mercyfrom St. Therese's Church, Paw­tucket, headed by Sister M.Evarard, R.S'.M., will be at the'8:15 children's Mass each week 'and will conduct catechismclasses immediately fonowing.ST. ELIZABETH'S,FALL: RIVER

Manuel Silvia heads a com­mittee planning an old-fashionedauction in' .the church hall at7:30 Friday night, Oct. 23. .SACRED HEART,FALL RIVER

A harvest supper will be spon­sored at 6 Thursday night, Oct.29 in the school hall by theW'omen's Guild. Mrs. RaymondConnors, chairman, announcesthat tickets will not be availableat the door, but must be' pur-

, chased p'rior to the event fromguild officers or executive·board'members.

An all-day rummage 'sale willbe held in the school haIl Friday,

'Oct. t6 from 9 to 5. Mrs, HelenSilva, Mrs. Helen Duffy and

'Mrs., Peg Ccmnors; may be, con-:,tacted to- pick. up d,onations. '

Eleven new members joined,, the group at the annual member:'ship tea.

Hours of rummage sale: 9 to ~.

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild programfor the forthcoming year has

,been announced by Mrs. WilliamKing, president. It includes a

,telephone bridge, Wednesday,Nov. 4, a Mass~ for dec,easedmembers at 7 Saturday morning,Nov. 14, and a regular meeting

,Tuesday, Dec. 1 at the CatholicCommunity'- Center, Franklin -Street. ,

Events for 1960 will be aMarch rummage sale and a Maybanquet and installation of newofficers~ A cake sale and sale forthe benefit of the blind are yetto be arranged. -ST. ANTHONY OF THEDESERT, FALL RIVER

Marking the 29th anniversary, of th~ dedication of the church,

a women:'s' organization, theBlessed Mother Guild.'will beinaugurated at '1 Sunday night,'

. Oct. 11. The group; primarilyspiritual, will hold monthly cor­porate Communions and attend.a social meeting, preceded DYdevotiong, to the Blessed Mother.

Mrs. John, A. Monsour, pres­ident, and other' officers will beinstalled! at, Sunday night'sceremonies. Approximately 80members, will be enrolled ,andreceive guifd' badges. Rev~' Nor.:.man Ferris will preach for theoccasion and "parishioners areurged to rec:eive Communion atmorning Masses that day. Thereligious observance will befollowed by a social and openhouse for new memberS.,

ST. MARG'ABE'E'S,BUZZARDS BAY, ONSET- A Cana. Oanfetence will beheld Tuesd'ay; Oct. 13. Duringthe week of: Oet. 12, members ofSt. Margaret Mary ·Guild will 'provide cakes and pies for 'TobeyHospItal; Wareham. The Guildhas alsO' adopted Keln Mi!isionhi. Mississippi and will send ittoys, clothing' and financialassistance.

VISITATION GUILD.EASTHAM

\

Guild members will hold arummage sale Friday and Sat­urday, Oct. 16 and 17 at St. Joanof Arc School, Orleans. A socialis set for 8 ThW"sday evening,Oct; 22 at the home of ¥rS. John,F. Connors" camp Ground Road~

North Eastham, and a ,businessmeeting at' 8 Monday evening.Oct. 26 at t~e home Of Mrs. Rob­ert Hathaway.

ST. FRANCIS XAVIERHYANNIS

Maureen Aylmer has beennamed winner' of a scholarshipawarded by the Women's Guild.She is using it to study nursingat St. Erizabeth's Hospital,

,Brighton.

'MT. CARMEL.,NEW BEDFORD

Parish 'youth will attend- aCommunion breakfast Sunday,Nov. 1 in the school auditorium.Boys and girls from 14 to 20 areeligib~e. John Perry, Holy NameSociety, is chaiJ:man, assisted by

· representatives. of other parishorganizati'on~

SACREDIiEART"NORTH AT'D..EBORO

St. Anne"s Sodality will hold'its annual Christmas' sale Thurs-· day, Nov. 19 iin the church' hall.Mrs. Paul '''aquette is chairman.'The day-long event will includea, noon lunch and a bean supper.

There win be many tables, in­eluding foods, novelties, whIteelephant, jewelry and toys.. Awasher dryer will be"" awardedduring the sale.,

ST. GIlORGE~s.. .WESTPORT.

The Women's Guild will spon­sor a Halloween dance Saturday,Oct. 24 at Stevenson's, NorthDartmouth. Next regular meet­ing is Monday night, Oct. 26.The program. will start with

, rosa ry and benediction in the~ church at 7:30. '

ST. ANTHONiy'S,TAUNTON

The parish is planning a tur­key supper and social at 6:30Saturday :light; Nov. 21. Mrs.Frank G. 3.i'co' is chairman.

New Officers of Holy RosarySodality are Mrs. Peter Nolan,president;' Mrs. Edmund Vieira,vice presid'enll; Miss Henrietta

'Carvalh\>, seaetary; Mrs~ JosephFerreira, treasurer. Twenty-onenew 'members' were inducted atceremonies: Em the· churclL

Cape Rummage Sal~ .

The Pari~h Parade'

....

. - I!ll'

,H:ow Do You Rate0'0: Facts of Fa ith-'.

finast - New Lower

ShorteningPrice,

3·LB'CAN

1.

• 2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

'L

tJI

a.

Who) was' the saint beheaded at the request of Salome?:­(a) St.. James the Less? (b) St.John the Baptist? (c) St. Bar-tholomew? (d) St. Philip?, ,WhichiS'the oldest order of Catholic laymen?:-(a) The KnightsTemplar? (bo) The' Knights of Peter Claver? (e) The Knights ofMalta! Cd}, The Knights of Columbus?The onIy Englishman ever to become Pope (Adrian IV) was:­(li) The Venerable Bede? (c), Cardinal'Wolsey? (e) CardinalNewman? (d) Nicholas Brakespeare?Our lLady revealed herSelf to Bernadette at, Lourdes' as:­(a) 'li'he Virgin of the Poor? (b) The'Immaculate Conception!(c) 'li'he Lady of.the Rosary? Cd) Our Lady of the Scapular?The Ordo is; another name' for:_(a} Sacred MusIc? (b) Theecclesiastical calendar? (c) A Papal encyclical?, (d) A religiousorder?:The smallest sovereign state in the world is:-(a) TheVatican1(b) Monaco? (c) Panama? (d)' Switzerland?' ,Gaspar, Melchior and Balthazar are generally regard~d ashaving been::-(a) The three Magi? (b)' Angels of the OldTestament? (c) The first Christian Martyrs? (d) The criminallcrucified with Christ?Superstition is consldered:-(a) One of the Seven Deadly Sins'!'(b'). A sin against the First Commandment? (c) A harmless.human trait? 'Give yourself J:O marks. for each correct answer on page 18. 'Rating: SO-Excenent. 7fJ:-Very Good;~; 5O--Fair.'

Page 17: 10.08.59

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Riv..-Thurs., Oct. 8, 1'959 17

PRQSP,ECTIVE 'TEACHERS: Men ,and women from all parts 'of,Greater Fall River 'attended the first of a 15-week senesof .lectures -ontechniques of teaching catechism at St. Louis Church. Left,Mrs. BradleyMcI)ermott,seated,ofSt. Joseph"sparish, ,registers, left to ·ijghtM'I's.William H. Connelly, Holy .Name; Mr~ Thomas iT. Fleming, Immaoula'teOoncepiJion; Mrs. 'Vincent IA.· Coady, St. Thomas More'; Miss ])QrisiBeaulieu,

St. Anne's. Center, Sister Marie Charles, of the Mission Helpers of theSacred Heart, addresses group. Right, representatives of St. Michael'sparish, largest group attending c()urs~, listen intently; front row, MarieFarias, J'ames Medeiros; second row, Patricia Carreia., Gerald Silvia, prin­'c-ipalof pariosh ~ligi(i)uS instruction 'School. Seventy-one members of the

. ~aity were present from twenty-one parishes of the distric•.

.•

WM. 'T,. MANN.ING (0.-·WHOLESALEAUTOMOT.IVE

and

lN DUSTRIAILSUPPLIES• GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BAnHlES

• PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS. FALL RIV!R - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

Cathechists Must Combat Lure ,of. Terevi,swnIn. Preciou's Hour ,ft W-eek of InStruction

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Ceylon PremierFo'rmer Teacher

COLOMBO, (NC) - Wijaya­namia Dahanayake, Ceylon".new Prime Minister, is a fonn­erCatholic 'school teacher.

A Buddhist, the Premier be­.gan his career as an instructorat St. Aloysius in Galle. Whileteaching 'he got Into troublewith school autborJtie.s for agi­tating against "British rule.

Hestart.ed :in polities in tbe1930sasanextreme leftist, butlater abandOliled that position.andis now known .an an anti­communist. In !I.956 ne joinedthe 'Sri Lanka Ftreedom partywhich won ;tb.at 'year'!) -electioft<Bod'was ;then :appointed Educa­tion Minister.

Last year 'he led ~ su~

ful-campaign ito ·oust~eftist min­isters from the cabinet.

He "SUcceeds the late PrimeMinister'S. W. R. D. Bandw­,anaike, 'wh"O ''Was assassinatedbya Buddhist monk.

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Consec,rate BaJtimoreCathedral Next Wee.k/

'BALTIMORE lNC) - Conse­cr.ation of the new Cathedral ofMary Our 'Queenwill begin nextTuesday when Auxiliary BishopJerome D. 'Sebastian of Balti­more will consecrate the mainaltar.

'The ceremonies will reach acIimax on Thursday, Nov. 1'5,w.hen Al'chbishopEgidio Vag­nozzi, :Apostolic 'Delegate to theUnited States, will "Offer a Sol­emn Pontifical Ma'Ss in the'Cathedral, 'open'ing a week's cel­ebra'tion for the new 'Cathedral.

Provincia'. A'9Q:inLORETTQ) (NC) -' F-ather

Adrian J. M. Vefgle, T;O.R., hasbeen Teelected for his third con­secutive term as Provincial ofthe Sacred Heart Province ofthe Third Order Regular of St.Franc'is of "Penance.

Seventy-one prospective teachers ,of Christian dootJrine representing 21 Greater FanRi:ver ,parishes found themselv.es ''tumediin't-o ;eager :little fourth graders last Saturdayafternoon 'by 'a slim 'Young "Sister 'from Boston. "SisterM'arie :Charles of t'heMissionHelpers 'of the 'Sacred Heart, initiating a l:5-week 'course in too'hni(Iues far lay teachersof 'Catechism, waved ,~ome ,their ,heads. Woe ·w.arit -8 ,child 10 Anwngthem were the use ofsort of mag"ic wand over .her memorize a: .:iie'flinition 'only after flashcards and ;pocket charts,hearers as she demonstrated 'he !truly \knows 'whatit 'means. which students will be taughthow to -tell 'Bible stories in Many .catechism. an~wers need how to make during the course.• L. • t ,never \be 'meJllOl'lIzed.Sister Marie Charles has beena :manuel' ,calculated to ;grlP i 'he.attention of the day-tlreamiest R~ee Boo'k .:giving similar courses for 12

years. The techniques 'shefour-th :gt:ader. "Sister· ·erPlained 'that there'When,she finisbedxelatingibe were 'no .catedbisms :in tne oeat~\Y ,teaches, 'Were first developed 'by

tbeMission HelperS,thentDials ;of :Sidr.ach, Misach:and days ~f the 'Church, "yet :people adopted 'by the Confraternity of.Abdenago dn ,the fiet:ytfurnaae 'Of li:veil :and died -,for the 'faith." ChrislJianiDoctiinelf!)r nation­'Nabuchodo!1osor" cleveI'ly'and 'Catechisms 'came Mo ,being dur- wide use.. She 'and 'fe"llpw-mem­.painlessly 'weaving into.:the ing the time of the reformation, 'berS of her community travelnarrative basic doctrine concern- she :said, ;wh~ ICatho1ics ,needed thr-ollg,hout tne New Eng'landing the v'iI':tues <of faith, :hope a refeJ:lence book of answers to

area giving 'courses in 'additionand charity, iher 'audience 'came objections 'and questions hurled to doing par!s'hvisitation work.to-with :a start. at \1lhem, "The ca'te<ih:ism is 'still

'They!d dhorused replies to 'Sis- juSt :that," 1sbe emphasized, "a Finds Enthusiasmter',s -questions throughout 'her refeIlenoe .book." "Sister was impressed .by thetalk, 't:aisedhands 'obediently, Mil) r<e iim,pontant, said the enthusiasm shown ''by enrolleesand .acted for all the world like teaoher, is ltheiBible as a text for last Saturday, Particularly note­the fourth ,gJ;aders they 'weIte childl'en, illustD;ttingoy 'her use wOrthy w.as the turnout bymem-making believe :to be. of :a iBibile .stor::Y 'to 'teach doc- bel's' of St. Michael's parish,

,Back to Reality tr.ine. "The !Bible shows us ,how which is .shortly putting intoWh S· t 'd "y God stEWped into ,time and operation a full-fledged parish. .en IS e~, .S8l ,.o~ ,can_p1aoe,,"she .said. school of religion. Twenty-two

grow up mow, ·everyone Jolted 1"1 t 'h ld hild en's from 81. Mlc'hael's will attendb ck h · 'd It lf 'N 11 'Vasses mus o' c l'~d·to dIS a u ;StO , tOh onhgeiir interest, Ibecause teachers have Sister 'Marie Charles's instruc-

Wl e-eye . youngs er~, ~y a so ipitifullyllttleof their .time, tions.to become grown-ups who would av:erredSisterMarie Charles.themselves ilearnhow ito work "y,' h' bli hool hildrenSisterlsmagic. .au, aNe .pu . ,. c .sc ,C

, . one ,h{)Ul' a week, an average ofThe course won ,tbe a snap. 30 ek ,; he al'a "Mul-

M t " " 15 S t d . 'ft we s a .year,:Ss .ee 109 u.qr ; a ~r <lY ,a e~~ ti;plied by eight years, you see

noons at 2 0 clock lO. St. LOU1S how ilitUe ,time they have toChu.rch h~ll, Fal~ Rlver, each lear,n ,the .truths .that may meanse~slOn _wl~l ,conslst 01 t,,:o .50 their ,eternal ,sal:v:ation;"~lOute.ip:l'!lods ,broken by a ,bnef "In one short hour, ,sh.,e empha­mtermlsslon. There -are 1:ext- sized iurther, teachers' mustbook~, two. per student, and com'bat the lure of the televisiont~ere 11 be homeworK, warned shows children are missing bySister. . . '. attendingca'techism, and their

But the :stakes, she 'slud, are dds about 'School andlii~h. The mew teachers will be hay, reamt: l"n'es 'That's why it'sf . th G d lif' h h'l omeac lV .ormmg. : ,0 - e'm t e.'d 1 - important 'to learn up 10 1ia'tedren they mstr~ct, t~~y w~ll ~e teaChing'techniques.so many extenslOns of Chnst 10 '

today!s 1W0rld. Canadian P",ess"We 'don't teach .catechism," . SUDBURY, .(NC) _ .EditOI:s

said the Mission <Helper.. "We 01 English language Catholicdon't teach Sunday school-usu- newspapers :and ;magazines fromally 'classes 'a1'en't 'held on 'Sun- ~wfoundland' to British Col-'day 'at :a1I-and 'when 'they :are umbia will meet here 'today andit's a very~~difficult situation, t{)morrow to ·study. problems~yingto crowd them 'between ooncerned with the CatholicMasses. What we ;teacn are press. 'The' 'Canadian Registerpeople-little people ,with hearts will.be host ,to the .gathering,:arid wills of their ·own. Wcewant heid in conjunction with theto form Christ in' ,them." Social .Life ConferencP which

Sister Marie Chcn'les 'decried 'opens ,tomonrpw'.old-fashioned "memorize the:bodk" 'methods .of teaching cate­chIsm. "We don't want memor- .izedcatechism :answers meaningnothing to children, nor do wewant to stuff a ·measured amountof Catholic information into

Sodo'logy W~nner'NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Father

Joseph H. Fidhter, S.J., chairman,of the Department of Sociologyat Loyola University 'of theSouth, has been named 'the win­ner of the American CatholicSociological Society's annualaward.

Ambassador .SpeakerAt Youth 'Oon'vention

WASHINGTON (oNC) - TheIrish Ambassador to the U.· S.and an Air Force chaplain willgiveml\jor 'addresses ,at rfi'fth na­tional convention of the Nation­al Council of 'Catholic ~outh,Diocesan Sectjon, to 'be heldNov. 12 'to 15 in Kansas 'City,Mo. .

·Msgr. ,Joseph E. 'Schieiier, di­rector ·of ,the 'Youth ,D@artment,National Catholic Welfare Con­ference, announced 'that Am­bassador John J. Hearne .andFather (.Gol..) 'W.miam ,rr. ,ClaSby,chief ,of the professional ,divi­sion of the office of the Chiefof U. S.\ir. 'F-orce ,Chaplains,will speak 'on "Nov. T2.

Some 251000 Catholic '\Youthsare expected to attend :the con­vention in 'Kansas ,City, -whosetheme is "Personal Sanctity­Modern (Challenge," 'Workshopsand panel ,a'nd [business ,gessions.

BishQP John .P. 'Cody <cdKansas City-St. Joseph .will :pre­side at the opening plenary ses­sion.

Gange in tprQyerPleases Jew,s

NEW YORK .(NC) - T!h~

American Jewish Committee ;haspraised His Holiness Pope ..JohnXXIII for taking '~anothersig­

nificant step toward 'improvinginterreligious understanding "bydeletil1g reference to Jews andMoslems from a Catholic prayer.

The 'committee, founded 'to.protect the ;civil land .-religiousrights of ..Tews, said the ,Pope'saction ·set ·".anew standllrd (ofachievement fforreligiolis leadersand educators:'

The Jewish (organiZation ,said.it was referring to a recentdirective 'bY PQpe .J'dhn elimin­ating direct re'ference to Jewsand Moslems !from ·the rAct ofOonsecrati~n of the HumanRace :to the ~Saclled Heart.

:S~nd PrayerThe 'Pope's 'action 'was made

·public in ·mid-September. !t-'wasannounced six months .after .~earlier order of the ,ponti1;f thatthe word "unt>elieV:ing"~usedtodescrioe the Jews-be dllopped

. from the ,prayer for 'the Jewishpeople in the liturgy of GoodFriday. .

The prayer most recentlychanged ,by .the P~e 'was pre­scribed in 1899 by Pope LeoXIII, ·.when 'he <consecra:teii .allmen to the Sacred Heart. It isrecited on 'the 'feast cif 'Chr\st 'theKing, the ,last ~Sunda"y.in(0ctober.

Page 18: 10.08.59

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,..-'-The week, he explained, opens'on the Feast of Christ the King.It has been designated NationalCatholic Youth Communion Sun­day, a day on wh1chall Catholicyouths are urged to receive HolyCqmmunion at Masses in theirparish churches.

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Italian Official LaudsRole ~f Uni~ersities

WASHINGTON. (NC) - Uni­versities 'play ,a basic role 'inpreserving western hiw'-and mor­ali(y, now challenged by a law­less, oppressive concept of life,Italian Prime Minister. AntonioSegni has told a GeorgetownUniversity convocation, ,

'The 68-year-old leader waspr~sented by the Jesuit' univer­sity with an honorary doctor oflaws degree. Mr. Segni, a 'lawprofessor before entering poli­tics, said he sees the c;iuty. ofuniversity professors as that ofpreparing "the younger genera­tions for the challenge of thefuture so that the principlesupon which our millennial civili­zation is based will be preservedand ,handed -down enriched bynew, experience."

"It ,is in this scholarly ardoi,"he said, "whicl. unites the oldand new worlds under the signof mankind's· intellectual andeconomic progress, that I see thesurest ,guarantee that the civili­zation nurtured .by law andmorality will be preserved."

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Theatres Pledge BanOn Condemned Films

ALBUQUERQUE (NC) - Aban on Catholic attendance' at

, two drive-in movie theaters herehas been lifted by ArchbishopEdwin V. Byrne of Santa Fe",N.M. . \

,The bim, was placed on "thetheaters earlier this year becausethey persistently showed filmscondemned by the National Le­gion of Decency.

It was lifted following receipt01 a written statement ,by thepresident of a firm which oper­ates the - theaters that suchfilms would not in the future'"knowingly" be shown at thetheaters.

UnderproductionContinued from Page One

program could be to the United'States, cer:ainly an importantpoint in such a study., FUDliamental

Some also think the reportdoesn't deal squarely with onefundamental. Namely, what isoverpopulation? How is it de-

" fined? Isn't what, we are talkingabout underproduction, ratherthan overpopulation?

, North America's plains were_, overpopulated when the no-

madic Indians roamed them if~"you look at it .the way sdme, people do. Yet, of course these,:',> same plans are' being ~etired: : into soil banks tqday 'because': they produce' too much food.

ChallengeThere is no denying of the

challenge in many parts of the '• world in trying to balance the-: production of' food and other" goods with the number of pe~-, pie. Gaps that exists today wili .;'. widen unless' help is:' 'given, quickly. , .

" But, more stress on the con­;- eept that, the chanenge' is one~.. of underproduCtion, rather than

• overpopulation, might very wellencourage more responsible rec­ommendations and point ,up theviciousness that lies behind theconcept of birth control advo­cates.

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct; 8,195,9" -, " " .. R~gional HighRef,utes D.octr",fneDenyirig' Continued from Page OneMrs. Doyle have seven children.

M' -, R ebelet f S·' five boys and two girls. The, an 5, esponsl • I Y or In oldes(boy is associated with hili

CINCINNATI (NC)-C,om,munist ag'gressors were try- father in' ~he Doyle, CarpetCompany.' " 1 , ':..

ing to take over another segment of Asia, teenage headlines A gift of $10,000 has beenwere spreading terror in New York city, and immorality given by Mr. Joseph E. Fer-merchants were putting printed obscenity into the mails, nandes, Jr., a parishioner of St.and onto newsstands. But in: ' Mary's parish in Norton, in

"the subversive doctrine that we honor of his mother and .father,Cincinnati a psychologi.st 'can,have the benefits of orderly Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Fer-was' telling the American social life without paying for it, nandes, Sr., who also reside in,Psychological- Association through 'certain restraints and ,Norton. The junior ~ernandes,that "no human being should' sacrifices, is too alluring to be chairman of the Special Giftsever be blamed for anything he counteracted by mere reason," Committee,. is founder anddoes." Nevertheless, he' continued, treasurer of Staff Super Market

Dr. Albert Ellis of. New York '''ti:Ie unassailable, brute fact 'is', Associates, a group representingcontended "there is no place for that personality ,disorder is the some 85 stores. He is a specialthe concept of sin in psycho- ,most pervasive and' baffling censultant ,to Rockefeller's Inter-therapy" and even to talk about' problem of our time; and if it national Basic Economy Corpor-sin in, this coimection is "highly should ttirn out that persons so atioIi which operates superpernicious." afflicted regularly display (or markets in ,Latin America and

Dr. Ellis, who described him- rather hide) a life of, too little, Europe.self as "an agnostic," got an rather than too much,' moral re- Parish Chairmenanswer, however, from a Pres- straint and self-discipline, the "The general parish chairmenbyterian psychologist who is a problem would take on an em- for the 12 parishes participatingformer APA president, Dr. O. pirical urgency thatwol,lld re- in the Drive are: Attleboro: St.Hobart Mowrer of the University" quire no fine-spun argument." John's, 'Harry J. Condon; St.of Illinois. / What about people who lead Joseph's, Adelard (Pat) Pelle-

Dr. Mowrer immoral lives but do not. break tier; St. Mary's, John L. Mar-"Is there no such thing," asked down emotionally? Some, ,ac- MASS, AT' McGEE MEMORIAL: The Most Reverend shall.Jr.; S1: ,Stephen's, Richard

Dr. Mowrer, "as moral responsi-, cordil)g to' Dr. Mowrer, have, Bishop' ,celebtates Mass, assisted 'by Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, r· Goyette..bility and social acco,untability neither the conscience nor the a seminarian of, the Diocese, at the altar in, the North " Also serving in the Attleboro

._.•_c,at~,al:l? Is, eV,e.ry, m,ean,or vicious" character to be disturbed' by 'A . C II R' h' h th B' h ~ , , parishes are Holy Ghost, Howard__ ,. ' d' . ' ~,merIcan 0, e.ge! orne, w IC e , IS op gave in m'e'mory

(actIOn) not sm but rather an ex- wrongomg.'C. Bristow and St. Theresa's, Dr.pression of 'ilInes?' Who would ,,-But most,' he, said, ,have mad~ , of ,MoI}sign~r ~atrick McGee; late, b.~love~ pastor of 'St. Lino Tiberi.seriously hOld that' a society' a therapeutic kind of. restitution ,Mary's, Church, ~orth Attleboro, and ~an, all,lmnus, of' the ..Representi,ng the' parishes 'inCould long endure which consist- for wrongdoing ·Some may have ,Colleg:e~ I No. Attleboro are: St. Mary's,ently subscribed to this flaccid been 'caught and' punished, oth- Raymond E. Lambert and,SacreddOctrine?" ers may have, made their peace '~' th' 'I· 'y' 'th W 'k W· 'S '. " HeaFt" Roland Fregault.

Speakirut on "Some Construc- through confession and p!!nimce, ..~a , 0 I~ ',' '9U ,ee ': ',' Ins uPPQrt: Mansfieid, S,t. Mary's, Stephentive Features of the Concept of'. and others, may, have madE?' tip , " Continued from Page One to findings, that ,religion 'is almost J: ,Conroy; North Easton, Im-Sin,!', Dr. Mowrer attacked the' for past wrongdoing by, later' 'goverrtors will take- similar unknown to many of today's m'aculate Conception, EdwardFreudian doctrine that human, lives of integrity and goodness. actions. " teen'-age criminals. Coughlin; . Norton, St. Mary's,bei,ngs become emotionally dis- "In the light of the total situa- ' William V.; Flaherty; Seekonk,turbed "not because of their hav- tion," declared' Dr. ' Mowrer; 'i'I Contrasting the tension caused ,"The yout'hs'themselves," he Mt: Carmel, John Bettencourt.

" se n 'lte t" b t t t' ',by" teen-age crim,e 'i~ various sal'd" "reall'ze' ,I'ts I'nvalu'ableiog , done anything palpably , e 0 a rna Ive U 0 urnwrong; but because .they instead' ,again to the ,old, painful, bl.lt also' parts 'of the country, with the, help, in remedyin'g the, sordid

" lack insight." ' promisil1g possibility that man is "purpose of the atmual week~long cqndit~O!1,existing among a small ,, pree' .' ntl . " t ' ,observance, Msgr. Sc~ieder said percentage. of the;· ' fe'llo'w"And what is this understand- , mme, y a;SOCNlL crea ure-" ' ' ~, , or l' th I . I' h 'h'ld ',that "governors, ·U. S. senators 'yo',u' ths.',', ' ":' '

ing, ',or insight which we so ,n eo oglCa p rase, a c If G d " ar:ui others, of high civic rank

highly prize? It is the discovery 0 0 ... ''have 'found this year's theme,that the patient or client has Parliam,ent ReJ·ects "Spir:itualize Youth - Vitalizebeen, in effect, too good; that Natiops/very attractive'!'he has within ,him irp.pulses, es- Anti-Catholic Billpecially those of lust and hos- ,'NEW DELHI' (NC)-India's ' Religion Unknown,tility, which he has beeri quite Parliament has refused cdnsent ,'He said that this year thereunnecessarily inhibiting. - , for the introduction of 'a co~.;,' 'has' been . "an overwhelming

"But there are how 'wide- munist bill seeking to' outlaw so:" interest" in the youth week. Hespread and iiIdeed' ominous called political activities' by the speculated that much of it is duesigns," added Dr.,.Mowrer, "that' Catholic Church.this logic and the practical stra':' "Parliament's, upper, house,tegies it seems to demand are ill- Rajya, Sabha, voted down a re­found~d, The situation is in fact, quest for permission to move theso grave that •.• we are even bi'lI, which was sponsored. by 'awilling to consider that miscon- ' communist member~ , ,duct may, afte):' a~l, h~ve some-' 'The'draft of the bill states itsthing to do with the matter and attempt is to restrict' the "use'that the doctrines of repression of the Catholic Church for polit,.and insight a,~e more misleading' ical purposes" ~nd the "partici­than, h~lpful. - pation of the ecclesiatical per-

To diSCUSS the problem among sonnel of the Ca'tholic Church iIi.PSychologi~ts is diffi~ult, Dr. political ~ctivity." Comment ipMowrer said, because we have communist newspapers showedy~ry largely abandoned belief in this was meant to include direc­rIght and wrong, virtue and sin.", ' tions by the' hierarchy to 'Cath-

He referred to the "spectacle olie voters at time of elections.of. grown men and women insist­ing ,that,- in effect, they cannottell right from wrong, and thatDO one else can."

Dr. Mowrer confessed that.!..

Page 19: 10.08.59

The Anchor1959 MaiO' leagUe Catholic· All-Stars

By JACK BUTLER

-

19THE ANCHOR­Oct. 8, 1959

. ARTHUR ~. DOUCET

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Open Second CatholicHostel at Oxford '.

OXFORD (NC) - A Cath~tJt'ho~tel . at Oxford Universitywhere white and Negro student.lodge tQgether has been so, sUc­Cessful that a second is no~ ..

· be opened.Father Michael Hollings, new

, chapla~n to· the university·, stu-· cre~ts, said that the prime moverin the original plan was signi­ficantly a white South Africa...Students staying at the firstl)ostel are almost equally .. cH-

· vidl'ld into white and Negro un­dergraduates, mostly from. theBritish Commonwealth. Its suo-

,eess has favorably impressedvisitors and led to the COIlVeJI'­

~n of at least one student, aSwede. "

The first hostel is named Itt­tereontinental House. It is' ru.by an undergraduate grou.called Ad Lucem (To the Ligh~

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· Trapp, one of the Trapp chil­dren. . The day was also hel'12th birthday.

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(week-ends) ..............

GEORGE M. MONTlE

CINCINNATI (NC) - Little"White House Conferences" on It is a matter of belief with Cath­problems of children and youth . olics that the entirety of man'.

th 11 b experience is involVed with hiswill be staged is Fa· ypar- relationship to the Creatc>r..•ish societies and inter-parochialgroupS throughout the Cincin- "We do not see social ex~ri-nati archdiocese. ences, or recreational opportuni-

Purpose of the conference' win ties,'or behavior problems asbe to spell out for the members isolated phenomena. As a result, .of the groups and for the publie we do not attempt to deal within general a ''Catholic philos- any of these experiences in aophyof youth." detached way ~rwith detached

Announcement of the program standards."came from the Archdiocesan "As Catholics," Magr. KramerCommittee for the 1960 White added, "we have a point of viewHouse< Conference on Children in .which the world will' be in­and Youth, to be held nextterested. We have somethingMarch in Washington, D. C. that children: and youth need,

In addition to working out a and if we i,ave kept silent in theclear philosophy of youth, the .'past and so have contributed toarchdiocesan committee expects" .the weakening of youth, it nowthe parish ~onferences to "indi- becomes important for us to con­cate our concern for positive tribute to jhe solution of thecourses of action based on the problems Of the nation's youthmoral and natural law in dealing . 'by expressing, thoughtfully a"ndwith so-called youth problems." respectfully, the -philosophy

which is ours." .Valuable Opportunity

Msgr. A. J. Kramer, chairman _of the archdiocesan committee,pointed out that similar conf-er­ences will take place in all thehigh schools of the archdiocesein October.

"For ~atholics," decliu-edMsgr. Kramer, "the 1960 WhiteHouse Conference offers a par­ticularly valuable opportunity.

NEW OFFICERS: CYO:Youllg Adults at KennedyCenter, New Bedford, have elected Laurent Dghamel, seated,president; and left to right, standing, Marcel La Vesque,vice-president; Theresa Moz:r"is, corresponding secretary.,and "Rita Guilmette, recording ,secretary.

Cincinnati Deleg~tesPrepareNoW.For Youth Conference in March

Alumni Field.' The Little Green,also in a building year, havefoqnd the going rough.

Another leading County clashhas Fairhaven at Attleboro forwhat proposes to be a good testfor coach Bill Madden's' fine,undefeated-unscored upon Jew­eler eleven. Both teams have~all aggressive lines and theoutcome will hinge largeiy onwhich has the initiative on Sat­urday. Blue Co-captain Joe Can­to was a tower of strength inFairhaven's goal line stand Sat­urday, while' tackle Ed Miner isthe lad about ""hom the Attle­boro club rallies. This shouldbe another top-flight game.

Tn-County SchedUleThe only contest of the day OIl

the Tri-County agenda has Som­erset, 1 and 1 on the season, go­ing against Bourne, 1-0-1, in thesecond league contest for both.The defending Class D Raidershit their offensive stride againstBarnstable last week grindingout better than 400 yards on theground. Fullback Joe DiGiammohad a terrific day lugging for205 yards in 20 tries and scoringonce.

This appears to be another test01. offense' against defense inthat Bourne has yet to be scoredupon. Falmouth came close butwas unable to capitalize., EndJoe . Cardoza, quarterback BobCarradiand halfback CharleyTipkins were immense for:a 0 urn e. End Ken Andrade,tackle Norm Benoit and guardGary Anderson were line main­stays for Falmouth.

Coach Mike Gaddis' LawrenceHigh gridders will take a breath­er from Tri-County competitionthis weekend when they will bevisited by the Islanders of Nan­tucket. Yarmouth at Barnstableis another traditional, but non­league tilt, on Saturday's schetl­ule. Moving off the Cape will beProvincetown ~hich treks, toDighton and into the Lion's den.

. Coyle IdleElsewhere in non-league play,

Oliver Ames is at Mansfield ­this is usually a real good one;Canton is 't Taunton, Franklintravels to Case and Stoughton" lsi t s Wareham. MonsignorCoyle High is not scheduled Sat­urday. The Warriors pulled the-cl1estnuts out of the fire againstStoughton in a familiar pattern:Hoye to Fitzsimmons for a T .D.Coyle will be at home to Attle­boro on Oct. 17.

The collegiate substitutionrule is almost certain to be al­tered again next year. The cur­rent system imposes a' terrificbookkeeping burden on gameofficials and student managersalike. The recording of subs re­sults in delay of the game andyet the rule is liberal enough topermit platooning. This is wluitthe larger schools Vvere doinganyway under free substitution.

JllfATlONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUEAntonelli, Giants (19-10) Shaw, White Sox (18-8:)

. pitcherConley, Pbillies (12-7) Mossi, Tigers (17-~

pitcherSanford, Giants (15-12t .:.:._ Ditmar, .Yankees (IS-~

pitcherSawatsld, Phllll (.293) Berra, Y~ees (.28+)

catcherHodge., DodgeN (.278.) " Power, IndillDl (.28~

first baseTaylOr; ~btI (.~ . Bolling, Tigers (~

second base . 'LogaR, Bra~ (.»1)~ Aparicio, White Sox (.2511»

. . . v .' . '. shortstop..' .Cepeda, GIaaU (.Slt) ~ Malzone,RedSox (.~

third base .A~ Brave. (.35&) . ,. Colavito, IndiaM (.2fi.'It

outfieldClemente,' Pirate. (.206) --=--. ~ Yankees (.288t

outfieldBeB,~ (.29It ---- _.__ Minoeo, IndlaDll (.lJOIt

outfieldLopez, White Sox Manager 01. the Yeer

Casa1e, Bed SoK U3-1ij _.,....;. Rookie of tile Yeai'

Attleboro Area Grid 'TeamsThis Year's Powerh"ouses

By Jack KineavySomerset High School Coach

Greater Attleboro domination of footbaTI in South­eastern Mass. continued unabated over the weekend as eachof the three area schools registered impressive second vic­tories. North Attleboro overwhelmed Durfee by a 48-6count; Attleboro shut outTaunton, 20-0 and neighoorMansfield clobbered Frank­lin, 32-6. Add Coyle whichfashioned a late game tie withpowerlu1 Stoughton and you

have the earlyseason s tan d­outs in theseenvirons.

The nascentTr i-CountyConference hasalready experi­enced a majorupset. Unher­alded Case Highof Swansea up­ended Ware­

ham, 8-6,. in the circuit's mainattraction last Saturday. OtherTri-County action found Bourneand Falmouth battling to' ascoreless deadlock, while Som­erset chalked up a comfortable,30-14, victory over Barnstablein a league first for both.

New Bedford SWoDl'

The Fairhaven-Vocational tiltlived up to pre-game expecta­tions with both teams failing tocapitalize on scoring opportuni­ties before setUing for a score­less tie. Dighton launched its'59 campaign on an auspiciousnote, . low-bridging Hanover,22-0. Dartmouth, on the otherhand, showed little in its inaug­ural bowing to Marshfield, 32-0.New Bedford, playing a strongindependent schedule, made ittwo straight with a decisive, 30-0vict~ry over Rindge Tech, atCambridge.

The Crimson go after a tarterthis week when they engage un­beaten Saugus on the latter'shome field. The North Shoreeleven belted Lynn Classical,20'-0, last Saturday. FullbackStan Tenters, 2 T.D.s and 4points-after, paced the Crimsonattack against Rindge, whilehalfbacks Bob Lyonnais and JoePelazar each scored once.

North Attleboro at Vocationalshapes up as the County's No.1 tilt this weekend. Both are un­beaten, though Voke has beentied.' The Trade hasn~t beeRscored upon yet this season butits defense will be hard put tocontain the versatile Rocketeerswho have run up a total of 72points in two outings thus hr.Hard running John Perkoski'registered twice against Durfee,his third and fourth touchdownsof the season: End Jeff :I'ayloralso scored twice on pitches fromquarterback Jerry Dargis. .

Maebado's HighlightThe most electrifying play of

the game was Bob Machado's 85­yard scamper. with a kickoff re­turn late in the fourth qyarter.The Durfee speed mefchantsimply outran all in pursuit. TheHilltoppers hope to get Into thevictory column this week whenthey entertain Dartmouth at

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20 THE ANCHOR'-Oiocese·of 'Fal~ River-Thurs.,Od. 8, .,959' .',,' ,. '.. . .' ' -~ . , .. ·'

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Stang High Students Enjoy,l " _

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