National Protestan"t and Jewish Groups To Study PopeJohn/s Social. Encyclical
The ANCHOR Aft Anchor of the Soul, 8twt cmt! Flrm-ST. PAUL
Fall River,
M<i2lSiS.,
Vo!. 6, No. 4 ©
Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962
•
1962 The Anchor
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Pre-CoM~cil
Committee Enters Third Session
VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Central Preparatory Commission for the coming ecumenical council opened its third series of meetings here with discussions on the moral order. Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Dean of the College of Cardinals, presided over the Seper of Zagreb in communistopening meeting Monday as ruled Yugoslavia was also at the openmg meeting. the delegate of His Holiness First on the agenda at the Pope John XXIII. Present meeting was the question of were 57 prelates, including 35 cardinals. North American CardinaIs attending were Aloisius Cardmal Muench of the Vatican Administrative staff; Albert Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chieago; James Cardinal McGuigan, Archbishop of Toronto, and Paul Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal. Archbishop F,ranjo
moral order. Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, Secretary of the Sacred Congregatiqn of the Holy Office, led the discussion since the matter is being considered by the Preparatory Commission on Theology, over which he presides. Neither the discussions nor Tum to Page Eighteen
CHICAGO (NC)-National Protestant and Jewsh groups are joining with Catholics to promote study of His Holiness Pope John XXIII's social encyclical Mater et Magistra. The board of the National Council of Churches of Christ has purchased 10,000 copies of the encyclical for distribution to U. S. Protestant leaders: The American Jewish Committee in a statement expressed hope for cooperation with Catholics and Protestants in a "joint study" of the encyclical's recommenda-' tions. These developments were dis_ closed here at a meeting' of the ,board of directors of the National Catholic Social Action Conference. The directors of the Catholic group mef ,to map plans for the observance in 1962, as an "encyclical year" devoted to study of Mater et Magistra, whose English title is "Christianity and Social Progress." Gratification The board expressed "gratification" at steps taken by Protestant and Jewish groups to "lay the groundwork for intergroup cooperation with Catholics in all matters pertaining to the civic welfare of local, national and international communities." It was reported that the Catholic Social Action Conference's executive committee is making plans to clear the way for joint conferences and panel discussions at which Catholics, ProtesTurn to Page Eighteen
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C@mmunity A«:U'D@1n ~e~~ W oy T(!) fcg,lrot Smut MOUNT VERNON (NC) -Illinois law against obscenity is intended primarily to defend children rather
than adults, according to Michael J. Howlett, Illinois Auditor of Public Accounts. 'Addressing the Mount Vernon 'Business and Professional Women's ClUb, Howlett stressed community action, not censorship, is \b the best way to attack smut. "We oppose censorship," said Howlett. "The U. S. constitution limits censorship by the First WASHINGTON (NC)-The growth of the Church's Amendment,' restricting any 't 0 t b . , abridgment of freed,om of speecl1 annuaI U m y cave 0 servance 18 'manifestly the work or of the press. Vf~ support the of Divine Providence," a priest said here. Father Samuel 'laws against obscenity. It is Cummings, S.A., of Garrison, N.Y., cited the d'evelopment' against the law to import obof the annual observance scene publications, or to sell In 1907 he began to promote obscene literature. ' in the opening ceremonies of the annual octave of ,prayer for "Here in Illinois a new section the Unity Octave at the Na- religious unity. "Catholics as of the Criminal Code, made eftional Shrine of the Immac· Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page Eighteen alate Conception. The Chair of Unity Octave is an annual worldwide prayer movement for r~ligious unity, held from Jan. 18 to 25. Father Cummings in his ser,Sister Barbara' Mar y' , Taunton and 'holds a B'.S. degree mon recalled the "amazing" S.U.S.C., has been notified from St. John's' University, story of the octave's founder, Brooklyn, N, Y. She was apFather Paul James Francis, S. A. by' Rev. Wil,liam G. Guindon, Born in Maryland in 1863, S.J., Director of Summer Father Paul became an Episco- Institute of Physics, Boston Col. palian minister in 1885. In 1898 lege, that she has been appointed to participate in the Summer In. he founded the Society of the Atonement as an Episcopalian stitute of Physics under a grant religious community in Garrison, from the National Science FounN.Y. dation. The grant provides full ···,······__ stipend and allowances for tuiv-----tion and expenses. Sister is the former Barbara Ellen Scully of Sacred Heart Parish, Taunton. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Scully of 8 Bow Street in that city. This is the fourth such grant that Sister has been awarded. In June 1961 Sister received a Master's Degree from Harvard University where she had spent the year on an NSF grant for the study of mathematics. This grant was extended to include an additional eight weeks Summer course at Harvard.
Un.ety Olf?Jtave O,bservo'n'ce Prayers T 0, Begin Tod'oy
GUILD FOR DEAF: Rev. James A. McCarthy, spiritual director for deaf of Diocese, shows members of Cath': olic Guild for De'af new, Holy Name School, Fall River. Left to right with Father McCarthy, Leo Courchaine, St. Roch's parish, Fall River; Raymond Holmberg, St. Ann's, Raynham; John R. Hurley, St. James, New Bedford.
Seminarian To Be Ordained For La Salette Missioners ,Rev. Mr. Gilles M. Genest, M.S., of La Salette Seminary in Attleboro, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Genest of Man. chester, N.H., will be ordained to the Priesthood Friday, February second, by the Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River. He spent one year of intensive 'Father Genest entered the religious training at the La SalLa Salette Minor Seminary , ette Novitiate in Center Harbor, in Enfield, N.H., in 1949, N. H., where in 1956, he pro· prior to his two-year stay at the La Salefte Seminary College De_ partment at Cape Cod in East Brewster, Mass.
'Science Grant for Holy Union Nun
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Sister Barbara Mary is a grad~ unate of St. Mary's Hillh Schoo!
pointed to the mathematics department at the Academy of the Sacred Hearts last September. Sister teaches an advanced math course to seniors and will offer them an introductory course in physics for the second semester. The new physics laboratory at the Academy is in the process of being equipped and the complete course in physics will be offered to seniors in September. Sister Barbara Mary is one of three Holy Union nuns at present doing graduate study on special grants. Sister William Maria has an Assistantship in the Department of Psychology at Fordham University where'she is working for her Master's Degree under the Chairman of the Department, Rev. William C. Bier, S.J. Sister is a graduate of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, and received her A.B. degree from Seton Hill. Sister Therese Anna has a T~aching Fellowship in the Department of History at Boston College where she is a candidate for the Doctoral Degree in history. Sister is likewise a gradUate of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, and received her A.B. Degree from Manhattan College and her M.A. from Boston College. She was formerly Principal at St. Mary's High S~hool, Taunton.
nounced his first vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. He then resumed his studies at the La Salette Major Seminary in Attleboro, where he has spent the last six years of his studies. The ordination ,will be held at five o'clock in the evening at St. Mary's Cathedral in Fall River. The Bishop will also ordain six deacons for the diocesan priesthood at that time. Father Genest will offer his first Solemn High Mass Feb. 4 at St. Augustin's Church in Manchester, N. H. The sermon will be given by the Rev. Robert Vachon, M.S:, professor of philosophy at the seminary in Attleboro.
REV.~GENEST"M.&
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Pope John' Helps' DisGsterr Victims Rn Tw@ Nations
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 18, 1962 :','
Bishop D~lfIl«2lgjhy AM@~~ Pr®~@t®$ At Formosa MUS§Qon Dedic@it'oorG Bishop Frederick A. Donaghy, M.M., New Bedford native, was among prelates present at the dedication of the Church of tlie Holy Spirit, t-uilt by aborigine tribesmen in the Shangri-La setting of a remote mountain 'valley nea~ Taichung, Formosa. The new church, built by 300 Catholics of the Bunun tribe under direction of Maryknoll Father Robert F. Baudhuin, of Sturgeon Bay, Wis., stands as a monument to man's efforts to conquer nature. The village of BU-kai, where the new church' is located, is surrounded by steep mountains and thick forests. There are no roads into the village, and much of the area has never been visited by white men. , Bishop Donaghy Father Baudhuin's mission efforts were culminated last month when, the Prefect of Taichung, Monsignor William F. Kupfer, M.M., of Flushing, N. Y., journeyed into the mountains o~ Bukai to bless and dedicate the new church, accompanied by Bishop Donaghy and 14 other Formosa Maryknollers. It took two and a half hours
Mass Or-do FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria; Second Collect SS. Marius, Martha, Audifax and Abachus, Martyrs; Third Collect St. Canute, King and Martyr; no Creed; Common Preface.' . SATURDAY-SS. Fabian, Pope and Sebastian, Martyrs. III ,Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. SUNDAY-III Sunday After Epiphany. II Class.. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-55. Vincent and Anastasius, Martyrs. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - 51. Raymond', of Pennafort, Confessor. III Class, White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Emerentiana, Virgin aI:\d Martyr; no Creed; Common Preface., ' WEDNESDAY - 51. Timothy, Bishop and Martyr. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY-Conversion of St. Paul, Apostle, III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect (under one conclu:. sion) St. Peter, Apostle; 'no Creed; Preface of Apostles.
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The following films are to be added to the lists in 'their res'p~ctive Classifications: ' Unobjectionable for general patronage: La Belle Americaine; Underwater City. Unobjectionable for Adults: Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse; Tender Is the Night: Objectionable in part for all: Lover Come Back (vulgar treatmentof marriage; glamorization of promiscuity, general suggestiveoess). Condemned: Five Day Lover
for the group to' climb along winding, precipitous foot paths to reach the secluded village. As they entered Bu-ka:. under a triumphal archway of bamboo and evergreens, almost all the. residents turned out to greet them with a barragp. of fireworks. It was last year that out, of gratitude to Father Baudhuin for ministering to them for the past five years, the Bununs decided to build a permanent chapel The men of the village carried hand-cut slates and stones on their backs from distant quarries up over the mountains to Bu-kai. Aborigine lBlospitality Friends of Father Baudhuin in Wisconsin sent funds to buy cement and other building materials unobtainable in the mountains. After months of hard work the villagers erected an attractive' 60 by 25 foot stone church complete with benches and kneelers. Plans for the future include a permanent one-room rectory for the Wisconsin missioner. At present he stays with an aborig-, ine family wpen he comes to offer Mass and minister the sacraments. Holy Spirit Church is the lOth mission out-station Father Baudhuin has 'established since his arrival in the mountains in 1956. He and his curate, Father Joseph A. Kimmerling, M.M., of Ozone Park, N. Y., split the large sprawling mountain' parish in half, each taking five missions.
C8'ooc~®@ !?U'o®st
Heads ~M[fe~nJ WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr. William J. Quinn of Chicago: active among Spanish-speaking U. S. Catholics, has been named codirector of the National Catholic Welfare Conference's Latin America Bureau. . The Monsignor, executive secretary of the U. S. Bishops' Com'mitte'e for Migrant Workers and a widely known lecturer, will have joint responsibility with Father John J. Considine, M.M., director, in conducting the bureau's business. ' Msgr. Quinn's appointment was announced in a statement by Richar,d C;lrdinal Cushing, Archbisl,1op .of Boston,' chairman of the U. S. Episcopal Committee for Latin America,' following agreement to the.Chicago priest's new assignm'ent by 'Albert' Car'dinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago. .,
VATICAN CITY (NC)Pope John has expressed his sorrow over natural disasterBJ that have taken thousands
TWO DELEGATES ELEVATED: An unprecedented double consecration took place in Holy Name Cathedral in Nairobi, Kenya, as Laurean Cardinal Ruganibwa, center, Bishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika, conferred the episcopate on two Apostolic Delegates, Archbishop-elect Guido Del Mestri, left, Apostolic Delegate to East Africa, and Archbishopelect Felice Pirozzi, Apostolic Delegate to Madagascar. NC Photo.
'fwo members of President Kennedy's family will be addressing groups in this Diocese in the near future. Edward M. Kennedy, brother of the chief executive, ,will speak t9 members, and friends of New, Bedford Catholic Women's Club at 8 Friday night, Jan. 19' in Keith Junior High School auditorium. His mother, Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, will, speak under the auspices of the Friends of St. Anne's, Hospital, Fall River, Sunday, Feb. 4, in the auditorium of the hospital's school of ,nursing., , Both Edward Kennedy and his
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The Worthwhile Books project of Our Lady of PurgatoryPraesidium, Legion of Mary, reported that under the supervision of Rev. Albert F. Shovelton 'of St. James Parish, New Bedford; 1500 copies were mimeographed and distributed. ' Th e -copIes . 'were' d'ISt rI'b Ut e d as follows: New Bedford Public
Library, 600 copies; Fall River Public Library; 100; Taunton (immoral theme, indecent treat- "Public Library, '100;. Millicent ment);. L'Avventura ,(theme is: Library of Fairhaven, 150. . morally ambiguous, treatment is suggestive and pornographic). Twenty-five copies were also sent to the libraries of Holy Family High School, Bishop Stang High, and Mt. St. Mary's FORTY HOURS Academy. DEVOTION Special mailings· were ,also Jan. 21-0ur ,Lady of Mount mailed to individuals wno maniCarmel, New Bedford. fested by letter their interest in St Patrick, Wareham. the project. Auxiliary members Jan. 28-St. Anthony,' Taun;. are also included on the list of ton. recipients and are distributed Sacred Heart, Fall River. during visitation. Bishop Stang Convent, . The newest list contains the North Dartmouth. following titles: The Ikon; The Feb. 4--Holy Name, New Other Face; Offbeai Sp~itu,ality; Bedford. ' Miracles on Tap; The Poor Old St. Joseph, Fall River. Liberal Arts; The Power of Jesus Mary Convent, Fall Prayer; Come Down, Zacchaeus. River. Feb.ll-0ur Lady of Fatima, Swansea. ' ~Ii'il,,«iy' :~@"' ~y~nlW, ,Catholic Memorial Home, ·VATICA~CITY. (NC)"';Pope Fall River. John has' appointed Archbishop ,THE II.NCHOR Luigi' Punzolo as Apostolic InSeco~d Claaa Postage Paid at Fun River. ternuncio ·to Syria. -:- the 'first M...... Publiabed eve." l'hunclalr at no' papal envoy since Syria broke Hlgbland Avenue. Fall River. Maaa., by the Cathelle Prela of the Dioc_ of away from the t)'nited Arab ReFall River. Subserlpiton price b:r mau. public 1astSeptembel'.· .. """tpaiol ".00 per :reu.
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K®rro~®«fly ~@mD~}f'M®mG:»elf$ 't1'o S~~ak As ~[[@frh~lrs MILAN (NC)-Catholics must F@r New ~®d~@rf'd, f@U ~Bw®r Urrno{i's change their attitUde toward
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of 'lives and caused heavy damage in Peru and Yugoslavia an~ has sent money to victims of the castastrophes. The Holy Father requested Archbishop Romolo Carboni, Apostolic Nuncio to Peru, to convey his sympathy and the assurance of his prayers to Peruvian authorities and the families of victims of a massive mountain slide that buried nine villages in the Andes and killed an estimated 3,000 to 4,000 persons. The Pope also sent a message to Bishop Franjo Franic of Split expressing his deep sorrow at the news of the deaths and damage caused by earthquakes along Yugoslavia's Dalmatian coast. The amount of aid sent to both nations was not made public. Buries Villages The disaster in Peru occurred when some six million tons of ice, rocks, mud and snow fell from the nation's highest peak, Mt. Huascaran, and buried the village of Ranrahirca, killing all but 50 of its 500 inhabitants. The avalanche also buried other vil'" lages, including 'Saccha, Huaraschuco and Uchucoto, in an aren inhabited by some 7,000 people. Yugoslavia's earthquake wall the second within a week also. At least four people were killed, a score injured and hundreds left homeless by the quakes, which caused mountain slides that'sent boulders weighing up to 70 tons crashing. into, villag~~
Also, Dragon in the Kremlin; Pleasure by the Bus Load; The Mystery of God's Love; Conversations with Cassandra; Memoir of Mary Ann; The Tiber Was Silver; And We the People. Fire -on the Ice; The Eagle's Word; I Belong Where I am Needed; Before I Sleep; Blindness:What it i~What it does and how to live with it; PT 109John F. Kennedy in World War II.
.Necrology
mother are donating proceeds from their lectures to the spon-, ' soring organizations. The New:, Bedford group will use· profits, for their' charitable activities and the hospital will apply them towards construction of a, new, pediatrics ward. Foreign Travels ' Mr. Kennedy, assistant district attorney for Suffolk County' is a graduate of Harvard and urli'.. versity of Virginia Law SchooL He has headed drives for variou's charitable foundations in Massachusetts and is president of, the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. found~tio'n. ' ' His foreign travels have i~": cluded service as observer with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee fact-finding missfon to Africa in 1960 and tours ofLatin America in 1959 and 1961. Mrs. Kennedy will speak On her recent stay in Paris du'rin'g the President's state visit there. Musical entertainment will also be featured on the program,,'and a reception in honor of Mrs. Kennedy will follow. ,," Mrs. George R. Bounakes is in charge of the Fall River program and Mrs, William J. Quinlan Jr. heads the New Bedford group making plans for Mr. Kennedy's visit.
New ltiedford !.Blind New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind will meet at 8 tonight at Knights of Columbus
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Rev. Roland J. Masse, 1952, Assistant, Notre Dame, Fall River.
non-Catholics, the Archbishop of Milan said her,e. " "Our spirit,ual attitude toward them must change," Giovanni <:;ardinal Montini wr9te ~ a pastoral letter read in llllchurches of his, archdiocese., '~We must no longer consider them irreducible and foreign enemies; but broth~ ers who have been paiIifuIly de· tached from the life tree of the one and only true church Christ."
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No-Sn'ap Latin"·· Course Begins 14th Season
Rally in Miami To Hear IExi~ed Havana Pre~ate
CHICAGO (NC)-Loyola University's 14th annual "no-snap refresher course" in preseminary Latin will begin on Jan. 31 with Father Laurence E. Henderson, S.J., as director of the program. The course, which is worth 1-5 college credits, combines five college courses in sequence and will be conducted five days per week to May 29. Students taking the program study Latin only, and those who complete the course will have leal'l1ed enough of the language in four months to enter a major seminary in the fall. Father Henderson personally interviews each applicant for the course. The prospective student must be at least a high school graduatc, have a good memory and emotional balance and be able to work under pressure. Men trained in the program are now serving or studying for the pl'iesthood in 38 dioceses. Former students also include a diplomat, a bartender, a pathologist and a radio sportscaster. Father Henderson, a professor of classical languages, devotes his entire spring semester to the preseminary Latin program.
Rec[:O)pomnCl [}={]@[7Tlufy Committee Htead WASHINGTON (NC)-Edward B. Hanify, Boston attorney and civic leader, has been reappointed for a one-year term as chairman of the executive committee of the National Catholic Community Service, a member agency of USO. The appointment along with the naming of other members of the NCCS executive committee for 1962 was made by Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle, of Washington, who is president of the NCCS board of trustees. The Fall River native, long active in Church and civic activities, became a member of the NCCS executive committee in 1958 and served his first term as chairman in 1961. Other appointments to the NCCS executive committee for 1962 include: Bishop Bryan J. McEntegart, of Brooklyn, N. Y., sect'etary; Msgr. Paul F. Tanner, general secretary, National Catholic Welfare Conference; Mrs. Henry Barkhorn, Newark, N. J.; Cushman B. Bissell, Chicago. Also Frank M. Folsom, New York City; Mrs. Henry Mannix, Neponsit, N. Y.; Vincent J. O'Flaherty Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; ~rs. Albert R. Spillman, fIempsted, N. Y., and J. Howard Ziemann, Los Angeles.
'Door Still Open' On School Aid· . PROVIDENCE (NC) - Gov. John E. Notte of Rhode Island has pt'oposed an official study of the question of providing state aid to private schools. A resolution was filed in the House of Representatives calling for creation of a special sevenmem bel' commission to study the subject. The commission would investigate the constitutionality, expense and other aspects of state aid. to private schools for the purchase of mathematics and sci<!nce texts and materials and diagnostic testing materials. The state aid originally was requested by Msgr. Arthur T. Geoghegan, Providence diocesan school superintendent. The state Board of Education tabled his request pending action on school aid by the U. S. Congress. The Board announced, however, that the door to such aid "is still open" no matter what Congress decides.
Study Ull1loty RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) Catholic priests and Protestant ministers have begun a series of jOillt meetings her'e under the cha'rmanship of Father Esteban Bettencourt, O.S.B., to study subjects related to the coming ecumenical cou.ncil and Christian nnity.
3
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 18, 1962
MIAMI (NC) - A Cuban bishop imprisoned and then exiled by Fidel Castro will arrive here on Saturday, Jan.
THE CENTER OF CHRISTENDOM: An optional tour to the Vatican City and an audience with Pope John XXIII are available to the pilgrims of the Second Official Pilgrimage of the Diocese of Fall River that wilf sail from Boston, July 17, on the 30,000 ton luxury liner S.S. Constitution. The Pilgrimage under the personal leadership of
Bishop Connolly will visit Fatima and Lourdes, as well as Lisbon, Madrid, Barcelona, Nice, Geneva, Wiesbaden, Coiogne, Amsterdam and London. Complete information may be obtained by writing to the Fall River Diocesan Travel League, P.O. Box 2026, Fall River. Last diocesan pilgrimage was led by the Bishop in 1960.
No Nation Can Treat Red China As LOS ANGELES (NC)-Bishop John Baptist Velasco, O.P., is a 50-year-old Spaniard who carries a heavy missioner's crossconcern for a flock whose shepherd has been struck down. The flock is his own-20,000 Catholics in his diocese of Amoy, South China por~ directly op.posite Formosa. Bishop Velesco is exiled from China. He has. been persecuted; arrested, tried, jailed, ousted. His 17 years' work there and his loyal people are at the ercy of communism. Battle Communism "If there is any shame or sense of moral abhorrence at the crimes of Red China, no nation can recognize that government and deal with it as an equal," the Bishop emphasized. ."The day that the United Nations recognizes Red China with or without U. S. backingthat day the small nations of Asia will lose hope of surviving against communism." The graying missioner, full ~~arnc~l'isticSpnbh~~~
ness, visited here on his way back to 'Asia after a journey to Spain. Leaves as Prisoner' He is now Vicar General to the Chinese in the Phipippines. E'rom headquarters in Manila he directs the work of 67 priests working for the Chinese in nine pari~es, 21 missions and 14 schools throughout the islands. Of his priests, 35 are Chinese. Bishop Velasco, who i~ a Dom-
Michael C. Austin Inc.
lnICan and spent four years at a Dominican seminary in Louisiana, was consecrated in Hong Kong in 1948. Nine months after h(! took possession of the Diocese of Amoy, the communists seized the city. Bishop Velasco lived four years under the Red flag, He was in China during the Korean war. "There was an immense desire then among the people that McArthur would come and invade China. We wanted it too, even though we knew that we missionaries would probably be put to death by the communists in any action," he commented. In 1953, Bishop Velasco was brought to trial from house arrest, jailed and ousted from China. He had arrived as a young priest and was forced to leave in the prime of life as a prisoner, his Bishop's staff wrested from him. Revolution Impossible A month ago Bishop Velasco was in Hong Kong and Macao, He told of seeing refugees and hearing the reports the y brought "Hunger in China is apocalyptic," he said. The Red regime is literally dumping all its aged, infirm and incurably ill into the British and Portuguese colonies. The burden on relief agencies there is terrific, he noted. Bishop Velasco is not optimistic about the chances of Chinese communism's downfall. l
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"Revolution is impossible. The communists control everything," he said emphatically.
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27, to take part in a religious rally for Spanish-speaking residents of south Florida. He is Auxiliary Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvidal of Havana who is coming from Bogota, Colombia, for his first visit to the United States. The prelate was arrested on Sept. 12, 1961, by the Castro regime and charged with counterrevolutionary acts following a demonstration the day before by Catholics protesting government cancellation of a traditional procession in honor of Our Lady of Charity. One Catholic was killed by police. Bishop Boza was arrested at gunpoint, held captive until Sept. 17 when he was put on a ship for Spain, along with 130 priests and Brothers the regime had rounded up. Mile-Long Procession The Bishop will preach at a Solemn Pontifical Mass to be celebrated at 8 P. M., in the Miami Stadium by Bishop Coleman F. Carroll of Miami, who will be Bishop Boza's host in this country. The evening Mass at the religious rally will be the concluding ceremony of three days of prayer honoring the Sacred Heart of. Jesus conducted in six parishes here. Some 40,000 Spanish-speaking persons are expected to take part. A mile-long torchlight procession will precede the Mass.
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Enterprise Brewing Co. Globe Manufacturing Co. Gold Medal Bread Hutchinson Oil Co. International ladies Garment Workers Union MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.
. Mason Furniture Showrooms
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Gerald E. McNally, Contrador George Ii. Mantle, Plumber During a Boston visit, pretty Debbie Sue Brown, 5, of Clarkston, Washington, 1962 National Poster Child of the March of Dimes, was welcomed by Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, on whose lap the ch"d is cosily perched. Debbie must wear leg braces because of weakr ss caused by an open spine, one of the birth defects with which 'l50,OOO infants are afflicted every year in the U.S. March of Dimes funds financed much of Debbie's treatment.
Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. SobiloH Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO
GIVE TO- HELP
"I ellow Cab Company
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Bishop's Ball Da'zzling Highlight
AT BISHOP'S BALL: Hundreds enjoy seventh annual Bishop's Charity Ball at Lincoln Park. Top left, Michelle Dagenais, Sacred Heart parish, New Bedford and Walter Bayliss, SS Peter and Paul parish, Fall River, chat with Mil'$s Margaret A. L::1hey,BaiI chairman for Diocesan Council of Catholic Women. Top center, Bishop Connolly addresses throng. Top right, Mr. and, ~rs. William Flaherty, St. Mary's, Norton, enjoy moment with Rev. Edmund L. Dickinson, Sacred Heart, North Attleboro.
Bottom center, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert J. Noonan. She is president of Diocesan Council. Bottom left, Mr. and Mrs. Manley E. Boyce, Holy Trinity, West Harwich, Mrs. Frederick A. English (center), St. Patrick's, Falmouth. Bottom right, Mrs. James A. O'Brien Jr., St. Mary's Cathedral, with Usherettes Lillian ,Patenaude, St. Jacques, and Lorraine Dupont, Holy Family, both Taunton. Approximately 4000 persons from every area of the Diocese enjoyed the Ball.·
Church in Portugal Gives Spiritual, Material Aid Following Goa Crisis' LISBON (NC)-The Church is nuncio has also sent word here Caritas, the Portuguese Catholic extending all possible 'help to that the invasion of the Porturelief organization, at a chilthose whose lives have bee~ up- . guese colony resulted in few dr'::!n's Summer camp near the set by the Indian takeover at deaths, and that the internees are coastal resort of Estoril. Emanuel not in serious straits. Church Cardinal Goncalves Cerejeira, Goa. One example of this is the aid leaders here have asked him to Patriarch of Lisbon, has paid a given to a Portuguese soldier send a complete list of the visit to these families. now in a Bombay hospital. He internees as soon as possible, and Word has been r:eceivcd here told Archbishop James R. Knox, . to give all possible aid to those that large crowds, including InApvstolic Internuncio 'to Indu., of who need it. dian soldiers, continue to gather Pray at Shrine his anxiety for his mother in at the Church of Bom Jesus in Portugal who was cut off from A number of Goan refugee , Goa 'to pray at the shrine of St. his regular support. The Inter- families are being sheltered by Francis Xavier. There is no news
about the ultimate disposition of the .saint's relics. Portuguese Catholics are asking that the sair.t's body be brought back here. One suggestion is that it be transferred to the Jeronimos Church near Lisbon, built on the site of the chapel where the explorer Vasco da Gama prayed before embarking on his voyage to India. Pilgrimage to Fatima A group of direct descendants
of the famous explorer have sponsored a Mass nere for a just settlement to the Goa crisis. A four-day walking pilgrima'ge was made from Lisbon to Our Lady's Shrine at Fatima to implore peace for all of Portugal's overseas territories. An earlier pilgrimage related to the Goa crisis brought thousands to the shrine, including 6,000 who received Holy Communion for the intetl'ion o~ p::ace.
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THE AN':HO~,-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan~ 18, 1962
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Better World
Worthwhile Recipes
Evident· and Acceptable, It ha~ become, a familiar story' b'y now, but it 'is still a shocking experience to read' ofa man of religion not only' refusing to speak out against unnatural or artificial birth control but condemning, those who' do so as conspiring in something that is "essentially immoral." A New Jersey rabbi declared a few days ago that to "withold information relating to birth control techniques, or the actual means of such precaution, is an essentially immoral attitude." And the reason for this 'man of religion's stand is even more shocking: "That the figure of high school pregnancies is soaring in urban and suburban New Jersey is also a direct consequence of this failure"-that is, to make available 'birth ,control information or techniques. . What an intriguing solution to the high rate of high school pregnancies! And from a man of religion! . No appeal to the Ten COIp.mandments. ,The law of God. The sacredness of marriage. The 'plan of God for' the continuation of the human race.' Marded, love. No appeal, to self control. To chastity. To .morality. The possibilities .of such ali attitude 'along., parallel lines are fascinating. . Do not try to dissuade people from stealing. Just give them better escap~ routes. Never mind forbidding murder. Just provide those intent on crime with the method '. of escaping the consequences. Surely this speaker did not really mean all that he said and all that his statements imply. Or it is to be hoped that he did not mean it. If such is the mind of intelligent men and leaders in a community, then there is much work to be done in teaching people 'basic principles of morality according to the objective Law of God and the clear thinking needed to reason from such principles. The mind of man is made (or truth. But that is the clear mind, the objective mind, the mind unhindered by emotion and unhampered by prejudice and extraneous . elements. Such a mind does not exist in itself b:ut always as belonging to a person,. a whole person, with the sum total of his attributes and background and· prejudices and emotions ' And so those who would uphold the entire Law of Goo must approach people with charity and understanding' of human nature and try to clear away prejudices'from their minds so that the truth of God may be evident and clear. It is always a difficult work to make truth evident and acceptable. . I
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"That All May Be :,One"
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The Chair of Unity Octave which begins . today and' devotes itself to prayer and work for'the reunion of Christendom has more significance this year than ever before. Surely up until now, all but the most optimistic have approached and prayed the Octave with more faith in its purpose than hope of its early fulfillment. .. This is not to say that there is firm reason for believing in any dramatic and sudden wave of return to the Church. But the past year has witnessed a change of attitude, an awakening of more sincerity in working toward reunion than ever before. The desire of men of good will for the reunion of Christendom, their nostalgia for what used to be four centuries' ago, their approach to the problems with sincerity and scholarship and prayer instead of with venom and suspicion and the spirit of controversy-this is the. atmosphere in which the Octave is being prayed this year. The coming Vatican Coundl which will display the unity of Christ's Church to all men, the entering into the Octave of those of many religious sects and persuasionsthese urge a greater devotion to prayer and promise a greater reason to hope than ever before. ' So often the expression is mouthed glibly that no prayer is ever said and left unanswered. Too often such a beIfef is an intellectual thing that never fires the whole man and never dev.elops into the conviction that this is literally true. The new hope for return to the Church of Peter, of Christ, is one that the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury has called "miraculous." .' All will agree that it is a striking sign that prayer for this end is not going unheeded.
®rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NIEWSPA~ER Of THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River , 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0., PhD. I GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden' f . 'lJo' . .
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THE ACT OF CHARITY 011 my God, I love Thee above all things, 'with my whole heart and soul, be-' cause Thou art all good and worthy of .all my love. I love my :r.eighbor as my'self for the love of Thee. I forgive all who have injured me, and ask pardon for all whom I . ~ave injured.
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MONDAY-SS. Vincent an cl TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. · Today's beginning of the widely- Anastasius, Martyrs. Jesus' discelebI:ated week of prayer for course on martyrdom (Gospel) Christian unity turns our minds contains words of sound advice again to the diversity which, in for all those active in ecumenGod's providence, characterizes ical dialogues, too: "Resolve the Church as well as the world. therefore in your hearts not to Aril.ong the churches which today meditate beforehand how you acknowledge the Pope as the are to make your defense." The Vicar of -Our Lord on earth and arts of appreciation and underwhich believe that the succes- standing have been almost lost sion of bishops is a divine means in our frenzied concern for "de- . of preserving unity iil faith, we fense." It is idle topniy for have a great variety of liturgies, . Christian reunion unless we are · of languages, of laws and' cus- willirig to meet those of Protesta~t and Orthodox confessions on toms. terms of mutual respect and with TOMORROW- ~ U~ genuine interest in learning from Sunday, But all are one as dis- their spiritual experience. ' eiples of Jesus, sharing the one Spirit, praying to their common . TUESDAY - St. Raymond 01 Father. All are one in the great lP'erinafort, Confessor. Our Lord Eucharistic Sign, the Mass, in does not speak in the Gospel of whatever language and with .this Mass o.f a confessor about whatever c'erem'onies it is cele- what would happen if the Master brated. . returned from the wedding So our prayer for unity is not feast to find his servants split a prayer for any kind of super:' into rival captps and turned from ficial uniformity or conformity. the watchfulness and vigilance It is rather a prayer that many he commands to a sterile suspigreat traditions may come to- cion of one another. But we can gether in the essential Christian imagine. A watching Church, a affirmations, preserving the vigilant Church, cannot afford to richness which lies precisely in be patient of this kind of fratritheir various heritages. cidal luxury. To say nothing of SATURDAY-St. Fabian, Pope, the effect this disunity has on and St. Sebastian, Martyr. "The our witnessing, our "confessing" saints by faith conquered king- of the faith. doms, wrought justice, obtained WEDNESDAY - St. Timothy, promises" (Epistle). It is in this Bishop, Martyr. "Everyone of spirit that Christians all over the you who does not renounce all world are offering special that he possesses, cannot be my prayers these days for a reunion disciple" teaches Jesus in the which, however unlikely its Gospel today. In terms of this early realization may seem to be, week of prayer for the reunion is possible in God's grace. of Christians, this means that we T H I R D SUNDAY AFTER 'must be willing tQ question and EPIPHANY. World-wide prayers perhaps reject many of our atfor Christian unity continue this tachments to superficial cutsoms. week until Jan. 25. And this in- .It does not mean playing with tention is particularly appropri.,. and trading with the Gospel of ate at Mass. For the Eucharist Christ, divine truth But our rehas been called traditionally "the ligious traditions on all sides are sacrament of unity" and "the packed with accumulations of sacrament of peace." It is in quite accidental customs and sharing the Word of God in habits. These we must be willing faith and the Body and Blood of to adapt· or even surrender if Christ in Communion that the they are obstacles to the essenChristian recognizes perhaps tial unity for which we pray. more clearly than at any other time the tragedy of disunity. fli'. fHleslburrgh IFG,vor!§ Today's Epistle teaches: "If it be possible, as far as in you lies, . U.S. Catholic Aid be at peace with all men." Our CLEVELAND (NC) -Father public worship this day should Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., · prompt us to explore whether president of Notre Dame Univer. we have used every power and sity, said here he favors the bill talent which lies within us in Congress for Federal aid to toward the goal of the reunion of colleges and universities. ' Christ's disciples, whether we "The provisions for scholarhave prayed enough for this gift ships to needy students and of health to ChrJst's Body. The grants and loans to schools for Gospel tells us that health .,is. the construction of new facilih~~~~ , ties are justified," he said. He presented his views at a New Diocese press conference during the conVATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope vention of the SOO-member As, John has set up a new diocese, sociation of American Colleges Oita, in southern Japan - the whose president he has bee.n for country's 12th. the past year.
The air suddenly trembled with the sound of a brass trumpet. All turned ' and s t r a i ned their necks' to see a nobleman in 'his colorful silks, approach theTemple door. Then, to an audience of "ahs" and "ohs" the collection box clanged approval as a fistful of ' coinswasspilled before the Holy of Holies. .Charity? "Oh, no," answers Our Lord. The very same thing can hap.. pen to us so easily. We CatholiCti have labored the whole day long -we were pressed' close to the bosom of God whtm we were but a few days old. Yet, how many there are who out-run us in their enthusiasm to be ever so near to our Eternal Father. To be a CaUlolic today---:'especially in our surroundings-is too easy; it would be more difficult not to be one. Yet it is not enough to simply be. Weare not mere stones but gifted animals-gifted with an intellect and a redeemable souL To have omi's name painted on.8 ,door with a star over it does not create the actor; he must play the part, We the Winners There is no question that people want to be loved., But the only reason God could have had to create the world was to give to creatures the chance to love Him' and therefore they would be supremely happy. He had a need of absolutely nothing; He could gain nothing from creation -we would be the only winners. Therefore, by accepting the in.. vitation of God and being baptized, we willingly do that which we were created to doc love God. Now, we are to love God not as the stones or animals do but as His own adopted children. This is the power we receive ,in Baptism: to be and act according to the children of God, with all the powers and rights and possible merits of such children. So leaving the Font we were able to accept and confide in God, we were able to trustingly look toward the future lined with His promises, we welle able to love His as He would. Love All Men How does God want to be loved? Moses recorded God's will: "Listen then, Israel; there is no Lord but the Lord our God, and those shalt love the Lord thy God with the love of thy whole heart, and thy whole soul, and thy whole strength. (Deut. 6:4-5)" The prophets take up the teaching and even parallel it to the love between spouses. There may be troubles that arise but God is always quick to forgive, slow to anger. Again and again he forgives and repeatedly calls His people back to Him. With Christ, we have a new element added. Not alone.are we to love God but we are to love like God loves. Christ extols and emphasizes the need of love of neighbor, Just as God permits rain to fall on the bad and the good; just as His 'Providence cares for all kinds of men; so are we to love all men. ,This shall be the matter for our judgment on the last day of earthly exisl>ence. Well, then can the Church give us a pattern to follow by e_ horting us to pray the Act 011 Charity. It is not only pity that God asks of us for our neighbQll' Turn to Page Seven
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,,Worthwhile Recipes : Sacred ll~~t "Church,' New Bediord, Mother Continued from Pl!offGl Six
Pa;:ish :' for' 'Fren~h Canadians 01 Area
THE AN.CHORThurs., Jan. 18, 1962
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Plan: Convention For O;,ecf@lTs
, but love. And there is nothing greater than a man who saqifices his own life for the love of By Avis C. Roberts his neighbor. Much as to what is The first parish. for the Fte~ch-speaking people of New Bedford was established in meant b,Y love of neighbor could 1876. Previously three French priests had lived with Father Lawrence McMahon in what. Vocat"~on5 have been drawn from the Old 1 ' Testament in its exhortations to he loved to ca I his "petit seminaire" at St. Lawrence Rectory. From there the priests had MIAMI (NC)-Plans for a true brotherhood among the cared for the, spiritual needs of the French,.Canadians in the various sections of the a national convention of dioJews. But as, concerns love of city. New Bedford, until the cesan directors of vocations one's enemies here Christ ele- early 1870's, was a whaling to the priesthood and religvates our love even higher and to d th 1 . cuts the pattern much closer'to wn an e usua unmigious life were mapped ,here durHis own kind of love for us. . grant was Portuguese. But ' ing an executive session by some 40 priests. . So the Act of Charity not alone when the capitalists turned their reminds tis that we have the attention from whaling'to the The priesfs who are vocation power to love from our Baptism cotton' mdustry and to the condirectors in· Eastern. Western but bids us keep our love as struction of cotton mills, the and Midwestern archdioceses Christ's and as HIs was of the French population started to and. dioceses participated in a Father's. 'We must remember thrive. three-day mee.ting with Bishop then that the love of God and In, 1875 Father McMahon Coleman F. Carroll of Miami as neighbor does not spring from bought a large tract Of land on host. .ourselves-from the generosity the co: r of Robeson and sum.. They discussed plans for a of our heart-but from God; We mer' Streets and a church 'was' national convention of the direclc:we because God has first loved begun. Father-George Pager was ' , tors to be heIdi late this year at us as SS. John and Paul would appointed p,astor' of the new par- ,. a site yet to be determined. They so often repeat in the new Testa- ish of the Sacred Heart iIl. 1876. also discussed participation in mente It is a spontaneous love, On Christmas' mor~ing of that the First International Congress Ii love which is not motivated, year the- first .service was held. of Vocations ·scheduled to bo i. e., 'we do not judge the person Today, in addition to -the held in May in Rome. and then love him or her. Like wholly redecorated church, the Relllues& Statistics Christ we are not respecters of parish, numbering 2,450 'soulS, .. , The directors, also discussed persons-their human value is of proudly points to a fine school; cooperation with the Sacred Con· no consequence to us. It is said a convent for the Sisters of the gregation of Seminaries and Uni· that our love of neIghbor is also Holy Cross who staff the school, versities which has requested reo creative. Oh, we do not change a handsome rectory, and Sacred ports. from vocation directors OD , the person we love but by our Heart Home, made possible by statistics covering candidates ~ love for the person, that person' generous contributions of parishthe priesthood during recent simply becomes a little dearer; ioners as well as other New years and copies. of literature the person now becomes an ob- '. Bedford residents. used in promotion of vocations ject of God's love through us; Sacred Heart's first parishionand screening. of candidates. ' Laws of Love ers comprised 122 North· End Father James J. Walsh, Miami In but a few years we shall no and 16 South End. families. diocesan director, served as longer have Faith, nor shall we Father Pager resigned his paschairman of the meeting here. have Hope, but charity will al- . torate in 1882 and was succeeded Msgr.Martin Christopher, Washways be with us. There will no by.Rev. J. A. Prev~st, who re- , ington, D. C., archdiocesan direclonger be need of Faith when we '. ~am~ as pastor until 1888. Durtor,. was namec!J executive secrecan see God face to face' there " mg hIS term the convent was tary for the Eastern directors, .will no longer be Hope' wh,en' , erected. It. was dedicat~d.in 1885 and Father Joseph Knorr, Pittsthe problems of life shall have .'and a portIon ~f. the bUIlding '-!as SACRED HEART CHURCH~ NE,w BEDFORD burgh director. was named to the melted away and all our hope. used as the. first ·sehool, which board. shall be realized as we possess also opened ill 1885. Father Pre- home has been a welcome haven God for our own. But love we vost also bought ground for for non-Catholics as well as Catholics. shall for all eternity. ~ered Heart Cemetery during However, we cannot wait for hIS pastorate. It was originally founded by the Sisters of. Charity to care for' death to love God. When asked Father Payan what the .greatest commandment Rev. J. A. Payan was the'next working girls employed in New was, ChrIst answered that love pastor, He oversaw, in 1891, con- ' Bedford textile mills,. but then of God was the greatest. b~t that struction of the large Sacred became a home for the aged" at Oil BURNERS the s,econd was ve17 SImIlar to Heart school. He remained at the - first accommodating only 20 p~r ,the fust: love of neIghbor. After, . parish until 1895. Up to 1890,', sons. In 1925 .construction began Also complete Boiler-Borner or Furnace Units. Efficient death, we shall be J,udged on how Sacred Heart' had' been the, on'the present main building., . lOW cost beating. Burner aDd we treated our neigthbor. Then, ,',' 'church for all French Canadians The' Christ the King addition . fuel 011' sales and' service. : there shall, be no need to be ;,' in the city, but in that year St.. was erected at a cost of $350,000.. ama.zed and wonder as to w~en Hyacinth's in the South End was, It houses a spacious chapel fea- ' S)t@!'l~@Y Chrl~t asked us ~or food, drmk, formed and five years later, in turing a balcony accessible. in 480' an.. li'iecsnnt Street . clothll1~ ?r dwellmg, The se~ondI895, St. Anthony's parish was any direction from any floor, New Bedff'1l"1ll Wlf R·8tHl'J of ChrIst s commandments IS so erected em.bUng all patients, even those important that it it almost as . who cannot walk, to attend important as the first, according Father Payan was succeeded services. . to Christ the Lawgiver. by Rev. Charles P. Gaboury and The original frame structure of , the next pastor was Rev. Omer Love Is Necessary Valois, who came to the church Sacred Heart Home was torn Through this prayer, therefore, in 1912 and endeared himself to down to make room for the 1958 the Church hopes that we will parishioners during 36 years of addition of St. Anthony's Pavilion, which cost $550,000. The exercise those powers we redevoted service. ceived in becoming Christians. During Father Valois' pastor- newest wing'comprises a therapy To wait is to waste, for St. Paul ate, Sacred Heart Home was room, recreation room, spacious' tells us: built, with an $111,000 fund drive hall, repair shop, 50 private "If I should speak with the for its benefit conducted within rooms. and a large kitchen. tongues of men and of angels, the parish by Rev. Philip Ross, Radio System but do not have charity, I have then a curate. Incidentally, Rev. St. Anthony's Pavilion also has become as sounding brass and a Alphonse Gauthier, the present tinltUng cymbal And if I have pastor, was also a curate at a radio system by which all community events--Mass, entertainprophecy and know all mysteries Sacred Heart at that time. and all knowledge, and if I have Father Gauthier came to ments, movies and such-can be all faith so as to move mountains Sacred Heart as pastor in 1949. piped into every room in the yet do not have charity, I am Previously he was pastor at St. home. In the main building there is nothing. And' if I distribute all George's, Westport, h av i n g my goods to feed the poor, and served there 12 years. His assist- a laundry which can care for the if I deliver my body to be ants are Rev. Lucien Jusseaume needs of 500 persons. There is an' efficient kitchen and kitchenette burned, yet do not have charity, and Rev. Rene Gauthier. it profits me nothing ... So there Under Father Gauthier's astute on each floor where food can be abide faith, hope and charity, direction, the church was com- kept warm until it is served to these three, but the greatest of pletely remodeled last Summer. residents. Many of the men these is charity." (I Cor. 13:1-3; During the restoration, parish- guests: volunteer for small jobs, 13) ioners attended Mass in the such as, gardening, repair work To teach us all this and to ever church basement' until reopening and doing errands. More than keep the commandment and the of the whole edifice Oct. 15. A~ll"iIivemuy Ball ideal before our eyes, the Fathers Trustees are Leon, Lauzon, enacted this prayer in the same Leo LaBrode and Dodila VanFall River Council 85, Knights spirit in which men have always asse. of Columbus, will hold a 68th attempted to show their love. It Organizations of the parish in_ anniversary ball at 8· Monday' is not enough that men love one elude Third Order of S1. Francis, night,. Jan. 29 at Stevenson's another. History has always had St. Jean Baptiste d'Amerique, Restauranli,.' Dartmouth, accordus write poetry, compose sym- St. Anne's Sodality, Children of ing to announcement made by phonies, scribble letters, cut rec- Mary, St. Vincent de Paul, the, Edmond J. Metras, Grand ords to show'it. The- Church has Sacred Heart Society, CYO. and Knight. Dress is, optional. it~s had its carefully cut dogmas Boy Scouts. tran~lated into the, short and, Sacred Heart Heme Of' YOU' conCIse prayers of the catechism , so that often, easily, and' intiNearly 200· men and women. mately we might. not only know are guests of Sacred Heart Home" At RATES THAT WfU SAVE: YOU MONlY our Faith but live it . . which was opened in 1923" first Next week:' the A~elus. home· for the' aged i~ the Diocese. Comparisons a~e convincingI' Come in andf get tlle figures . ' In 1958 a' new wmg, St. Anthony's. Pavilion, was added to D~POS!;T En'l'oUnru~nf Doubling accommodate 50 residents. The institution is staffed by WASHINGTON (NC)-GeorgeSoutheastern Massachusetts' i town University here anticipates the SiSters, of' Charity of Quebec, Largest Independent Chain double its current enrollment of' also known as the Grey Nuns. .' OF NEW BEDFORD 4,000 by. the turn of the century, Christ the King addition to the MAIN OFfiCE-Union and. Pleasant Streets according to Father T. Byron home was made in 1949, when B~G Collins, S.J., vice president for Bishop Cassidy dedicated the . NORTH END-1200 Acushnet Avenu:a 'We Give Gold Bond Stamps' business affairs. 40-room brick addition. The . . . . . . . .~.~~~00000000~vOOOO~,
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,WASHiNGTON -(NC) ,.,..:. Too, Federal 'Housing and Home :Fi:• 'nance Agency, has approved ill loan of $498,000' to Providence Hospital, Seattl~, to help finance construction of aft aparuneM how~ " : , The building will house single men and married interns arid resid,ents in two bachelor, tem one-bedroom, and eight tWooedroom units. It will alsO have a fallout shelter. Commissioner Sidney H. Wool!ner of the Community FacilIties Administration, a division of the agency, announced the loan here. The, funds are being lent under the College Housing Loan Program which has lent millions to public and private institutions for revenue-producing facilitielil such as dormitories and cafeterias.
It's .Shovel,ing Time, f~r Dad
, By Mary Tinley'Daly , , ," "Where are th~ snows of ye8terye~r?~;, ~sks Francois' V,illon. They've gone, M. VilIon; been shoveled away" and :fimiJly taken down the drain. What we're interested in are the snows of this year,' deeper and heavier than ever and harder ,to shovel away. ,And cold air may make you feel 20 from the Rubaiy~t of Omar years younger, but you're not. When you shovel, lift with Khayyam we hear a comparison, of '~the worldly hope' your entire body, letting your
men set their hearts upon" com- back and legs share the hard pared to "Snow upon the desert's, work with your arms. Best of all, concludes the addusty face, vice, turn the snow shovel over lighting' a 'little to an ambitious youngster and hour or two'gO to the nearest ice-skating is gone.'~ pond or rink for your exercise. Maybe sO, in If you can't find such an "amLEARNING BABY CARE: Training young women of other times 'and bitious youngster," or if the elder India, religious and lay, is a vital part of the Medical o the r climes. statesman at your house is adaNot where we mant on doing his own shovel- Mission Sisters apostolate in that country. At Kurji Holy live. 'Once Teach ing, you migli.t try this easy, if Family Hospital, Patna, Sister M. Bertrand gives a class -Iona Conege more the blansomewhat sissy, .trick of making demonstration on infant care. NC Photo. ket of enchantGrade School Pupils the job less difficult: ment falls, "beNEW ROCHELLE (NC)-Iona_ While it is still snowing and gun in the .~i!,:\b C<>llege here will begin this before the man of the house gloaming," or Spring a "Junior Great Books' any other time. It's fairyland, comes home, let women and chilSeminar" for 6th, 7th and 8th with white fluff on every tiny dren take turns every half hour grade students, ranking in the branch, bringing back the old- with the broom on steps and BRIDGEPORT (NC)-A united immodesty in fashions and dress. top 10 per cent of their classes. time, childish thrill at this sidewalk. It's surprising how effort by "strong families" to reHe said that authority, vested much you can remove with little , The seminar, will center On beauty of nature. store to family life in this in the father as head of the effort. analysis and discussion of seMixed Reactions country its proper "dignity and home, "~ust be restored to the Also, there are de-leers rea~ lected great books of the western Though everyone admires the importance" was urged here by 'family circle." world, the college said. Twelve loveliness, human reactions are for the sprinkling. Bishop Walter W. Curtis of "Regardless of the practices ,in , Or-you can hide the shoveD mixed upon second viewing: " Bridgeport. other families," Bishop Curtis. Saturday sessions of two hOUM "Suppose ,they'll close the A,ddressing some 800 persons declared, "his is the authority, each will be held, beginning " schools in the morning-I hop'e?" Publishers to Appeal at a family holy hour in St. to dictate the customs of his own. Feb. 24. Students must' get approva:l ,"What about the family memAugustine's Cathedral, Bishop We say this so pointedly beRhode Island Decision' from. their principals or teacher.. bers on the highways? Let's' an PROVIDENCE (NC) - Four Curtis declared that most pres- cause we believe, that many say a prayer." ent day problems are caused by fathers and mothers are conAnd from the Head of t;he New York paperback publishers "the downgrading of'the family." fused as to their right to, use ,Junior Forest.ers Bouse: uI'd be,tter go out and will appeal to theU. S. Supreme He called on families to resist authority. They sense that a'uCourt' from a recent decision, of Junior Fore'sters of Fall RiV'~ resCue the Snow shovel. Rememthe Rhode Island Supreme Court sOcial1?ressures, which he termed . thority should be used and will ,hold a skating party Wedber ,bow it was buried "today's greatest threat to the stricter control exerci~ed, but upholding the right of the state Spring last year?" , authority of the family circle. social pressure makes them timid nesday, Jan. 24 and are ma~ini How well we remember. w.t Commission to 'Encourage Moral- We have become increasingly and uncertain of their ground. plans for their annual St. Pat' had'to buy a replacement to use ity in Youth to circulate lists of conscious of our neighbor's As a result, many good parents rick's day show. for ensuing snows. Now probably publications deemed obscene for doings and unwilling to be dif- do nothing." both would be buried except for young readers. Unwise Marriages This was disclosed by New ferent from him." the practical side of this snow Freedom for Children York lawyers for the four book The Bishop cautioned paren scene. I Bishop Curtis charged that so- against improper dating customs ONE STOP With snow shovel in either publishers. The State Supreme Court de- elal pressure has resulted in "an for their children, which has rehand, he stomps into'the kitchen, SHOPPING CENTER bringing in all outdoors on the cision reversed the action of Su- ' almost unrestricted and unsuper- sulted in this country itt an inperior Court Judge William M. vised freedom", for children 'creasing number of "unwiSe • Television • FurnltuJoe freshly waxed kitchen floor. . We almost wish, that both Mackenzie in granting an injunc- when they are outside the home; youthful marriages." • Appliance. • ,.G.rocel'J' Bishop Curtis also called for shovels had remained forgotte.n, tion against the commission's- that it has contributed to "an circulation to dealers of lists of unparalleled drink'/ problem more rigorous training of chil.. 1M Allen St., New Bedford along with "the snows of yester)fear." Matter of fact, we are of publications it regarded as objee- : among the old and among the dren in the home, physically, inWYman 1-935. ~ung"; and that it has increased 'tellectually and spiritually.-: the conviction that snow shovel- tionable for persons tinder Ul. ing is a sport only for the young and vigorous. And by this we do Urges Higher Education not mean the "young in heart" and the "vigorous in imagina- For Non-White Students PROVIDENCE (NC)-A Cathtion." We speak here of the ,,'1, physically young-those in their olic laywoman urged here thM high school guidance teachenl teens, twenties, tbirties. ' Every year, in your town and steer more non-white studen•. in ours, are printed obituaries of toward college education. Mrs. Thomas Donahue, former middle-aged men who, at' the Women's Coun. first snowfall, betake themselves chairman of to the high snows and succumb cil on intergroup Reiationsat Brown University here, said to the unaccustomed exertion. , Warning comes this year from many guidance teachers fail 18 Dr. John 'W;' Latimer, Jr.; pres- : appreciate the possibilities' cit ident of the Washington (D. Co> 'post-high school, education for' qualified non-white students. Beart Association. , Mrs. Donllbue said guidaneo ~'Ea(;h shov~lful Of fluffy snow weighs about four pounds," Dr. directors should begin earlY to , ' Latirn:er says. "Ten' of these a instill in an capable students minute is eqQivalent ,to walidng ambition' toward seif-improv&up three flights of stairs'in that' ment. This would lead man,. , one ~inute. ,Even heavier, 'Yet students. to a' College or univer-, anow would Jriake the job equal sity after high school; she ,told, 'to that' of' raCing to the seventh a meeting 'of the eatho!ic LitelPoo ary Guild. floor in '11 minute." . , " , ,Sound Advice ' "Through the office of 'the Veterans Honor ~emory Washington :Heart Association. Dr: Latimer issued this advice: Of Sister-Nurses Remember that 'snow shovelNEW, YORK '(NC)-Fifteen' Ing is strenuous exercise. dedicated Civil War nuns were If you have heart disease, saluted for service to the suidon't shovel snow without your fering in a ceremony here. doctor's approval. Francis X. McBan'on, deparl-, If over 40 and healthy, shovel, ment commander of the CathoIie but take it easy. ' War Veterans,- presented a If you shovel, do so before plaque honoring the nuns to. eating, or wait an hour after Mother Loretto Bernard, mother eating, lis' you should for most general of the Sisters of CharitJ' ~tart, your day thi~ fitting way •.. vigorous exercise. of New York. ' Never shovel to the point of The 15 nuns staffed st. Joewith Fresh Crop'"Hood 100% Pure exhaustion. The ,invigorating' ,seph's Military Hospital in New Orange' Jhice. :It's fresh-squeezed . -! York from Oct. 1862, until Aug. III Flodda daily ••• rushed to New 1865. In that time they cared ~Or Open to Lay Students Erigland:And:'eohvenient? There's ,<',' RUTLAND '(NC)-The College hundreds of wounded and siCk 'D9 mhcing; Just tip and pour •• ~<:"." " ,",: ';0£ St. Joseph the Provider, 'for- troops. It's 100%' pure goodness' • ~ '. full ," ", :: :merly for postulants and novices Children to Model of healthful ntamins and del,ic.ious , of the Sisters of St. Joseph only, Fashions for children will be fl8'Vor~ , , will ,accept lay students ,in ,its presented by Dominican Acad. : ,.- -r , freshm.an cl,ass next September. emy Alumnae Association, F~l1 Students planning to teach,·,.in Riv~r, Wednesday, Fe!;>., ?8. Miss diocesan schools may enroll as Claire Boutin, m" charge of 8l'- j: . ,rangements ,will receive appli- '; _~~~~E,!l?r ·?f ,~~leI15~,~~I~~;::~~:':,.,,:,:cations.fro:n ,menibgrs,,:t6,;ha~ ':!' , did~tes, Sister Mary Matthew, their children participate in the college president, said. - event until MondaY.. Jaa. ~
to
Prelate l)rges Effort to Restore Proper Dignity to Family Life
until
CORREIA, & SONS
the
fresh tip Onfitness
HOOD' FRESH CROP 100% PURE ORANGE JUICE
Sensi'ble
Pr~,cedures
OV~'rcom:'e
Win Help :U~pleasant Habit
'THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 18, 1962
9
Code Stresses Vi ewers' Duty
Bv Audrey Palm Riker "Mama, I did it again." Forlorn and odorous, six-yearold Freddie points to the evidence, his sodden sheets and pajamas. Bedwetting is as old as civilization. Surprisingly widespread among otherwise healthy children, it is neither a disease nor a result of In tne same way, forbidding aU "weak kidneys." Research fluids after dinner and dragging shows that warmly loving children out of bed several times mothers comfortable about a IDRht does little to erase the
NEWARK (NC)-The Newark archdiocesan Legion of Decency office has issued a lO-polnt Code for Television Viewers stressing the duty of individuals to work :for better TV programs. The code puts particular emphasis on parents' responsibility to supervise TV viewing by their children. sex, relaxed and patient about real cause of bedwetting. Among the points In the code: early toilet training, are less Encourage respsonsibility and -There must be "strict mod. self help. Some doctors feel that 11k . ely ... rear "''''~'7'~': bedwetter-s have small blatter eration" of TV viewing by chilbedwetters. Butr~,. •. r.;·' : ., capacity. You can assist your dren, so that homework and 8Ometimes. even :,': other duties are not neglected. children who'" child to increase his capacity by -"Horror" shows and those get plenty of urging him to drink plenty of presenting "excessive violence" attention and fluids during the day and then are ruled out for youngsters. eon sid e r holding his urine as long as pos...:..children and teenagers must ation have acclsible. be made to realize that adult13 dents. An ocoaAfter nighttime accidents, in a have the "primary rights" in relJionallapse due kind and unpunishing way, ask gard to TV viewing. ' to overtiredl\ess ,,' him to "help" you repair the or a change in ,damages. Even a four year old ' Commend Good Shows routine is nothcan remove wet linen to the -Viewers have a duty to protrig to worry'" wilshing machineo~ tub, get out SERVICE AWARDS: Mother Pierre Marie, adminis- test objectionable' programs and about, In school-aged children, ',clean sheets, or assIst in remakcommend good ones. Telephone however, persistent bedwettlng ing me bed. Never make your trator of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, is shown giving Cl;llls or letters to stations, sponpins for 500 hours or more of volunteer service to the sors, performers or producers are is a itign that something is out of child struggle alone to wash balance and needs attention. heavy sheets or hang them out in Hospital to, left to right, Mrs. Emile J. Cote, Miss Angelina recommended. full view of playmates or neighArcand and Mrs. William Deschenes. -The air waves are "public, for TensioDS bors. not private, property," and thUs Take Pressure Off After consulting your child's viewers have a duty to see that Take pressure off. Ridicule doctor to be certain there is they are used properly. nothing physically wrong (there and 'punishment are not only -Family viewing of television seldom is) it's time to look for useless but deeply harmful. Nagshould be fostered. home or school tensions. For ex- ging,belittling parents who fail SIOUX CITY (NC)--Bishop , Open house was held daily at . ~National Legion of Decency ample, does your child see fre- to 3et firm, consistent limits on Joseph M. Mueller of Sioux City quent parental bickering? Is ,he their children's behavior gener- officiated at the' ceremony ,of ' the monastery during the two ratings of televised movies weeks before the sealing of the sho~ld be consulted. freqnently scolded at bedtime?, 'ally make it hard for youngsters sealing the doors of the ,new Stram in school work, conflict to develop the inner controls that Carmelite monastery" here in doors. Some 4,000 persons visited themol1astery, which is the 64th with a teacher, jealousy of a wUl help them want to master Iowa, marking Ute withdrawal houSe of the Discalced Carmelite ' younger ,brother or sister, aU 'bed-wetting. of cloistered nuns from the nuns in the United States. : Try first to ,get rid of your own may bring on "accidents." , ," world. featuring In adc:titlon' to unearthiBgand "exasperation. Remember, v~y It was the, second time int, a .-7th in Religious life attempting ·to remove cause or few children wet on purpose. half-century that.the ceremony ''The GasUght Room" eau!lC8, consider these sugges- ',Then, calmly; help your child to has been performed' in Iowa. In , CARROLL (NC) - GenevieVe '(deal for Communion Break'uoderl.ltaild that' his bedwettlng tions: MorlsSy of 85. Peter and Paul fasts. OrganiZation Banquets 1911 the doors of the Carmelite T l\ k e sensible precautiona. no longer makes you angrY. G6 monastery In Bettendorf were parish in this Iowa Community 186 Acushnet Ave. Even after your youngster rna&- further and refuse to ,permit sealed. became the seventh of 13 chilNew Bedford ters1ayttme drynesS, he;n'still Freddie's or Susie's ftliluresto ,The new community ,here was 'dren in her family to enter reliCat. WYman 2·1701 need help and reminding ,for be sources of teasing, family founded by nuns from the Bet- gious life when she entered the' nighttime. Check to be sure.he jokes, or the main topic of con- tendorf C9nvent, headed 'by Franciscan Sisters' convent in empties his bladder before bed. vero'1tion at the breakfast' table. Mother Agnes, former prioress of LIlCrosse, Wis., recently. Build hope and self confidence. and oy all means use waterproof the Discalced Carmelite nuns mattress covering. It's a lot easl- Ignore accidents and praise suc- there. cesses. When your child haS a , er to be patient and understandIng, if you're notfaoed with Q dry night, show your approval with a big hug ,or a broad, com- Michigan Unit Backs,' , smelly, roned mattress. ~QUIP. ''Early war:ning systems" like pliment. ,Pr~ehim too" for Sunday law, RepeQr:: everything he does for ~self buzz~rs .or ,electric shocks treat , ,BUSINESS :AND ,ClTIESSERVIti LANSING (NC)-,..An 'interim tile fyinptom and not the ea~. ,dressing, bathing" chores. , ' ,DUPUCATING MACHINES DISTRIBUTORS ,- ,!Jelp your youngster to unclercommittee of the State House: of , stand that you want him to learn aepresentatives "h a s ~ported Second and Morgan Sts. 'to control himself.in bedwetting that, it is in' favor, of, repeal·of FALL RIVER' Gasoline as well' as everYthing else, but the 1863 state banning Sun: Vf(. ~·9682 'QS 9-6712 ~ at the same .time show your day business activity. Fuel an~ Range; , ,E. J. McGINN. Prop. willingness to encourage and The committee also saidtbat lit The literature department of support him In ,t~ proces~.T~ll will recommend that the legisFall River Catholic Woman's 'him that manychildrerihave lature adopt no new Sunday .; Club wUl sponsor a lecture by licked ,this' pro,blem ' and" yo~ sales law.The present law makes .. OIL BURNE'S' Michael Novak, author of ''The ,know"that he Will, too.,:' ;it illegal to carryon "any manTiber Was SlIver," at 3 Sun?IlY':::,': ".;""',,,,~., :";,, ner of labor, business or work" .", G. E. BOILER' BURNER UNITS afternoon, Jan. 21 in the ~oup's ' .. Catholics Give Cross ' on Sun$iay. It has not been en"-'-' .~....:.-Hi~hland Avenue headquarters., , ' ' . , ,' "', fOrced' in recent years. For prompt del!very' Mrs. Frederic Tuttle is depart- To Protestant' Church ment chairman. ' " ; AUGSBURG (NC)-Catholics &, Day & Night Service ' The club's annual scholarship in a small Bavarian community drive will' open Thursday, Feb. 1. who have sharedtheir,chuJ!ch Rura' 80ttIed Gas, Service and continue throughout' the \¥ith Protestants forseveialcen61 COHANNET ST. month. turies have now donated a cherEst. 1897 Other "activities, for· J'anuaty Ished cross for' the altar in ~e TAUNTON wlll include a meetiilgof the new ch.urch the Protestants .,llre ,'Attl.boro - No. Attleboro Builders Supplies commiinit,y ,Service, group 1:30,' , ,cOJY\pIeting.</; , T~u'nton" ' 2343 Purchase Street tonight at the clubhouse :and'& -,'ll happened in the towo;l:"of New Bedford m~ting' of','t!ie art 'department ' 'Deiri~en near here. The ,:Jtift at 7:45W:edn~aY·night,JI1~:'31.,:.),i8saccompanied by, the ~o);n ,\vy,'6~S~I:,.. . 'DAUGHTERS The latter wilt willmake:Va'1eit,;; , ment of the Catholic Pastorl,that, . '." .,'OF ST. PAUL, ' , invite "ounll gi,.. " (1,4.U) te, ,.bot .. tine favors for' RO~ 'H.Bwthome though his congregation~oW1d ~ ~;;;' Home.:',: ,'.' ,;' it difficult to part with~t!,teir Chri,'" ~,vln.yard CIt IIII'~""" of til. , Edltlo;,.: P~8aa. Radio. Movl.. and To" FebJ(u~rt~meeting of the club cross, they deemed it a. f,it;i,ng " filion. WIth modem' means. '"... will feilture "An Hour of En- gift as a symbol of thell'..:·deep Missionary Sl,ters brine' Chrl'''' Doctrfae chantment," presented by 'Ber- desi!e for Christian reunion. ;, to an, Ngardl... Of race; colo: cw aNd. nard Whitman. ' T h e common church arrangeFor' Information write to. ment with the Lutherans 'of nv. MOTHER IUPERIOR Deiningen had been in force for If) IT. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MAl., 345 y~ars. ' ," ,
L.
Sealing of Doors Ceremony Marks Nuns' Withdro.wal From World
M-K Restaurant
W.:H.RILEY & SON, Inc.
,TRI-CITY OFFICE
Fall: 'River Club: To Hear Novak
law
"',;'O,LS
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105 William'Street~ New Bedford Sears, Homefinder' Barnstable Town Han - 'Jan. 26, 1962 (Basementt 105 William St., New Bedforcl- Jan. 30,1962 (Distrid OW. .) Pal Ii.,... Public Library -Feb. 2, 1962 (Room 40) 9 A.M. • 12 NooII 1 P.M. - 4 P.M. "
or visit Mrs. ,Hester D.
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ANCHOR-Diocese of 'Fa I.I River-Thurs,;Jan. 18; 19q2
The Parish Parade· ST. STANISLAUS, OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER FALL RIVER Coming events include a parish The PTA and Alumni Association plans a penny sale for SatMardi Gras, ~aturday, March 3. urday, Jan. 27, Mr. and Mrs. A malacada supper and dance will be featured.:A planning Fred Vitullo are in charge of meeting is'set for 7:30 Sunday plans for a spaghetti supper night, Jan. 21 at the parish hall. 'J;hursday, Feb. 22. Also on Jan; 21, at 2 in the afternoon,' parish Girl Scouts wiIi ESPIRITO SANTO, hold an' investiture ceremony. FALL RIVER PTA members will offer a Weekly meetings are held at 10 musical variety show Saturday Saturday mornings. Boy Scouts, another newly and Sunday Jan, 20 and 21 in formed group, will have Charter the church hall. Mrs. Mary GuiNight at 7 Saturday night, Jan. ' mond, chairman, announces that 27,' The. troop meets at 6:30 the program will include American and Portuguese dances and Thursday night. " songs and community singing. The Women's Guild will hold Proceeds will benefit the parish a cake sale at all Masses 'Sunday,' building fund. Jan. 21 and the parish CDD ,unit· will meet with its executive 88. PETER AND PAUL, board Tuesday, Jan, 23, FALL RIVER A whist will be sponsored by New Holy Name Society.officers include Joseph Viveiros, the Women's Club at 8 Monday night, Jan, 22 in the church hall. president; Charles Souza, first vice president; Richard Melan- Mrs, William Sunderland 'Jr.; I chairman, will be' assisted by son, second vice president; Roy NCWC, admires a model plane given him , "ADOPTABLE" CHILD: Eight-year-old Fernandes, secretciJ;y; Manuel A; Mrs. Joseph Sunderla'nd, by an Army "buddy." A person or organSuh Uk,. one of several thousand children Faria, treasurer. ST. PAUL, iZ,ation may adopt "a, youngster by giving from Seoul up for "adoption" _under the The Lenten season will be TAUNTON. ushered in with a two week mis$10 per month for his assistance. Following the annual Cdm- "Help-a-child" program spon:sor~ by the sion to be conducted in Portu- . munion Breakfast on' Sunday, guese by Rev. Antonio Janeiro; , the officers for·the. Holy Name :t~ a Franciscan from Portugal. 'WI U III -CYO members will hold a Society for the coming year VATICAN CITY (NC) -The . Snowball Dance from 7 to 11 were installed. they are too small or too latge, The, new slate consists of: Vatican City newspaper has erit- gestion that it be made possible Saturday night, Jan, 20 in the the possibility of instituting an parish hall. Clara Pacheco is' Philip Farley, president; Norman icized some of the recommenda- for noricardinaIs to be elected to' age limit for bishops and the esvice-president;· tions ~ for 'a,' "reform of the the papacy. ch~irman. The Council ofCath- . Menard, first Another was a' proposal that tablishment of a spec~al training , olic' Women has slated cake John ·G. 'Meda~Jr., s~cond vice,.' Ch~lrch'~ made by the noted' Ital,presi~ent; . w:a1ter ,Drewniach, ian preacher,Father:, Riccardo bishops should be more "sancti- ·:,course for future candidates for sale ,to follow Masses Sunday, the Hierarchy; Jan. 21. Mrs. Mary Botelho is in . 'treasurer;,JosephJohrison secre-, Lombardi, S.J., founder of .the fy'ing than administrative, more , To ~eei tlie"worlwide:priest . 'Mo,;ementfor' a Better World; pastors than superiors."'~ The' charge. Next regular meeting of tary; Earl HudsOn; marsha!.',·' The J;esuit priest made his ,rec- Italian J e sui t particularly shortage, Father Lombardi called the unit will beheld Wednesday, ST JOSEPH'S " '., omme'ndations in a new book, sttessed·then.eed for simplifying, fo.r a new,kind of ordained perFeb, 7 with Mrs. Gloria Magimo 'TAUNTON son" below the level ofa priest, Girl Scouts of Troop 411 wiB' "The Council.'! Recalled on the .the dress of bishop's, asserting: in charge of the social hour. "It is now accepted in' every,· who could' be . entrusted with, Parishioners will hold a mala- hoid an overnight' camping trip prelates, who will take part ,in' ~any . functions now performed cade supper ann dance Saturday Friday,' May 18 at' Camp Merri- the forthcoming ecumeniCal' earthly', hierarchy, that, there! only by priests. council . to make sweeping should be few external manifesnfght, March 3 in the. church' wood, Assonet. . ' . . . changes in the Church's admin- tations of different ranks, reduc:This proposal is similar to hall. Mr, and' Mrs, .Joseph viistrative staff, the Roman curia, ing differences to slight symbolic other proposals to reactivate the veiros -head .the arrangements ST; MICHAEL, ' FALL RIVER including the establishment of a in~iciltions. The government order of deacon.' . committee. ·'rhe annual malaccada supper "world senate" .of Catholic lay- minister dresses like the ,lowest The priest singled out male SANTO CHRISTO, will be held on two consecutive men, The priest wa's also critical employe, the general like the - religious orders for "collective FALL RIVER Saturday nights, Feb. 10, and 17, of, the curia's efficiency. lieutenant and more or less like . mediocrity" and expressed a Mrs. Anne Faria is in charge in the school auditorinum from 6 hope .for their interior renewal In the town of Adria near the soldier,"" of installation ceremonies to be to 8 o'cfock, A penny sale will .h ere, were h h e was preac h'mg a and greater zeal in their apostolie Certain Pomposity activities. ' h~ld Sunday, Feb. 18 by. the follow the supper. series of sermons, Father LomThe Parish Credit Union will b d' But in the Church, Father Council of Catholic Women, To He urged that women Reliar I was asked ,by a reporter .. Lo'mbardl'. sal'd, "there are still a" ' be seated are Mrs. Mary Fontes, h old ItS annual. meeting in the f rom the newspaper L a.Stampa .. ' va'rl'ety of' h'abl'ts and a certal'n gious should be used to greater president; Mrs, 'Agnes Rezendes, 'school auditorium'Saturday night, of Tur' Ital t t ' .' m, . ' y, 0 commen 0,11, pomposity' to est'abll'sh'the 'dl'f;';:" ad'yim~g~. vice president; Mrs. Dialina ~ur a,: t 7 30. ' reactions to his bOok.·.. ,. ," tado, secretary; Mrs. Florence , . Hesaid that the'meaning a~~ ferentpositions-gala' 'trains;' ST.ANNE'8~ shpwy colors, ermine;'" ' Reis, treasurer. imPortlmce which Some papers." . . ' " Members will attend corporate. FALL RIVER While "granting that authority Parish yotingsters will attend had' giyen to. the' suggestions, ....... .... Communion' at 8 o'clock"Mass, made'in his 'book had been ex":' sllould he "surrounded bya halo' a dance from 7:30 to '10:30 tomorStmday morniriP---,' A' " , " : aggerated: ," . ' of respect," and making ft chiar ' row night .in the school The " • WANT TO "E""2 ~.: .' " . ' , . . ' . that he was in no way-referring', , . :.. i LOUIS, Social Group plans a meat pie':' nels PaE5cRIPnON AT It '. is quite natural, 'he sa.id, " to' liturgical vestinents, Father FALL RIVER supper trom6:30 to 8 Saturday ! that the Vatican Cityriews- .' Lombardi 'said: . .' " ,! , paper 'should-have brought' t h e ' ' :Mrs; 'Anth6ny'Rehello heads ll' n~ght, also ·in the school: .' matter within its "proper pro-' ."One sometimes has' the.ini":',. , W:ome'ri's Guild" comrriittee plan-: ST.. ELI~ABETH.. portions, "since the book's con- pression' that people would:~ : ning a penny sale Tuesday, Feb.; FALL RIVER', tents 'are' the ' e~pression . of ;a more edified by seeing ecclesi-" 27. On the schedule of the Women's purely persc>nal attitude' Of' 'a '. astics dressed simply and more ' . A ...W"YS'TAKE MY. 'PRESCRIPTIONS THERE ' or less uniformly, with the little IMMACULATE CONCEPTIO~' Guild are a ham and bean supper . simple priest,' Saturday, Jan. 27, a spaghetti Father Lombardi said he con': traditional differences of the Re~CAUSE THEY ARE KNOWN BREWSTER-DENNIS ' ligious." supper, Wednesday, Feb. 14, a fOR STRICTEST PRECISION The Women's.Guild·will hold penny sale Saturday, Feb. 17 and siders himself, now' more than: aN,.. "Ll" G TIIEM.' , ever 'before, a humble Catholic He als'o 'said that there are . a social at 8 Monday night, Jan.. a 'malacada supper in March. priest, submissive to every wish other things which might be 22 at the home of Mr. 'and Mrs. of ecclesiastical authorities toabolished"':"""certain luxury auto~ Harold Ellis, Pleasant Lake. HOLY CROSS, such a degree that it is impos- mobiles,' c,ertain palaces ~hich, The unit's regular meeting is FALL RIVER' set for 8 Tuesday night, Jan, 23 Future plans' of the PTA in- ' sible to imagine that he could" almost give an impression of at Brewster· Towil Hall. elude a' social Sunday, Jlin. 28· act against the wishes of hildaw-, ostentation." .The jesuit .priest called " f~r" Thirteen "boys' are attending a'nd a ·fashion show Tuesday,: ful superiors even for a single" closer copaboration. amongb,isl].weekly instruction. sessions for March 27. Mrs, Vera Stroj ny is ' minute; ops, reforms of dioceses .which altar boys, conducted each in charge of the social and it is . Private 'Value are ineffective' either because, Th!lrs9ay at Carleton Hall by, also announced that the fashion. 'The editOrial said that Father' Re,v. Real Richard, M.S:, 'curate:. show will be held' at White's" Lo.mbardi's boo k' "advances' .. .. restaurant and will feature a thoughts, ohservations and critiOUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL. children's dartce program. cisms which' have only private. SEEKONK and personal value." .. The Women's Guild has schedNew Jersey CYO In his new book Father Lomuled a meeting for. 8 Wednesday 'OIL COMPANY bardi made a number of recomnight, Jan. 24 at the parish hall. Sets IDimes Dayl, mendations that included a sugMONTCLAIR (NC)-Sunday, ST. MATHIEU, Jan. 28, has been designated as FALL RIVER New credit union officers are · CYO March of, DimeS Day by Philias M. Garant, president of officials of the Essex County board of directors; Philip Vail- Catholic Youth Organization, SOllih Sea Sis• lancourt, credit committee chair- which has headquarters here. Plumbing - Heatin~ . In' the last.10 years, the CYO man; Maurice Cayer, supervisory Hyannis Tel.' HY 81 'Over.. 35 Years' committee. chairman'; Edward · has raised more than $142,000.on of ,.Satisfied ServiCe., Ji.eBlanc,· education'al committee · behalf' of the. March of Dimes. . ,through a variety of collections' chairman.' 806 NO. MAIN STREET :.... and activities.', " ", .... ';', :'.. ; ST. JOSEPH,: Fall',River : OS 5~7"97 : , FALL RivER j ,The Women's ,Gi.lildplans. a whist Thursday, Jan.: 25 in, the .' . NEW' ALBi,\NX' (NC)'7' St.: . ,ATTLEBORcrS , ·Edward's Ho'spital, built .,in' 1902, i ':' parish hall has closedbecau5e of. a decline': , . Leading Garden ce~ter at Rec'eiv.:es .-.. ......ob.,·les ','. in, religious' yoeatioris and tihe~. heavy remodeling needed at the' VATICAN 'CITY (Nc')-Pope hospital. These reasons for the John received the nobility of 'cl.osing were 'given by officials' Rome iIi their traditional yearly of the Poor Sisters of St. Francis South Main & Wall Sts. audience. The' nobles vJere led . Sera-ph of the Perpetual Ador-: :. . '.' . by Prince' <;rluseppe ¢olonna,. .at~on, Mishawaka, Ind;,.. who', NEW,. •;,"", BEDFORD, Prince Assstant at the' Pontifical, conducted, t~e, hospital in" thiS , cA 2-0234, ,", • ",''';,t· .' :.1. ',MASS. .Thr'·o·ne.' : : ' " " ..Indi~~ :co~m~i~_.:. .~" . ' . :
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TtfE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait ~iver-Thurs., Jan. 18, 1962
FIRST ABBOT INSTALLED IN NATION'S CAPITAL: Fourteen Benedictine abbots were present as Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washington presided at the' installation of Father Alban Boultwood, O.S.B., as the first abbot of St. Anselm's Abbey in the nation's capital. Assisting the' Archbishop were Abbot Wulstan Knowles, O.S.B., three times abbot o~ Fort ,Au~ustus Abb,eY,Scotlarid;the,mQtherhous~'o f St. 'Anselm's, and
Vatican Disp~nses' Seame.n, F'rom "Fast and )\bstine'l1ce'
Abbot Celestine Haworth, O.S.B., present abbot of Fort Augustus. At left, Abbot Boultwoodkneels befoI:e the Archbishop who administers the solemn blessing. In center photo, the abbot-elect sits as the Archbishop performs the solemn instaUation before the main a,ltar of the National "Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. At right, the new Abbot receives members of the COmmunity. N.CPhoto.' .
C'YO' Schedule~, Second Program: to Aid Papal. National.Contest·. Volunteers '. Opens in Diocese " DAVENPORT (NC)-Knighis' teerprogram trains lay Catholict I n 0 ra t ory, of Columbus of the Davenport' with specialized abilities to
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The Holy See has dispensed. WASHINGTON (NC) merchant seamen from Church law on fast and abstinence ,. ', when sailors find that difficulties in observing it are 'present ,The 1961 U. S. BIShops and continuing. Father Thomas' A; McDonough, C.SS.R., statement,"UnchangingDuty Secretary of the National' "When, however, even they in a Changing' World" will . " . . ' , Catholic Apostleship of the face difficulties, they ',can' with be the toPIC ~r the eIghth annuSea Conference, announced a clear conscience avail them- al national oratorical contest selves of the new dispensation,!' the dispensation here., '.. sponsored by the, cultural comIt appliEls,he said, on all d ll Y1i" of the year except Good Friday,; ';inso far as it is possible to keep the law on that day." News of the Holy See's decision, said Redemptorist Father McDonough, was received from the International General Secre-· tariat of ,the ApostleShip of the, Sea in Rome. . , ,Cites Difficulties Difticulties seamen"face in!. trying to observe the fast and. abstinence 'law, he said, include: being unable to find the proper foods and long and taxin'g work hours. For these and other reasons, he continued, certain bishops in various countries have been accustomed in recent years to grant a dispensation to the sailors who are from 'their dioceses. Pope Solicitous , "Catholic American merchant seamen who find that abstineri'ce fare' in the form of a fish din~er is usually served on American flag cargo and passenger veSsels and tankers, on Friday, will want to keep the abstinence on that day," Father McDonough said.
'Fire Watch' Drama On Catholic Hour
11
diocese have. un4erwritte~ a serve for a number of years in $50,000 campaIgn for the dlOceo: Latin America. Each diocese san Papal Volunteers program.' must. find the means to train its Robert J. Ballard and Bernard volunteers and to pay their exC V' , h . penses in the field. . ogel WIll serve as, coc alr,men of the campaign, the second major effort in support of ' PAVLA launched here in Iowa ' this 'month. A' week earlier a he explained...: . I g'ft 'g .A petition for the dispens~tion, mitmittee of the National Cath-· specla· I· S campa l n .was, started under the .leadership of was presented to ,Pope John by, ohc Youth Or~mzatlon. Johnny Lujack, former Notre the International General Sec- ' The competition will be held Dame All-America football retariat of the Apostleship of the here Easter Monday; April 23. player, now a partner in ~ Sea, Msgr. McDonough said. T~e ,. . t 1 f h' dispensation was granted in. a Following the contest, the par- Davenport au omobi e ranc Ise. ..FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS decree £rom the ,Sacred Congre-, ticip;lnts will ,tour Washington,' The Diocesan:Papal VolUIiand Loan. Association of Fall River gation of the Council.. , .. ,and attend a luncheon April 24;' ' 1 North Main St.• "This is. another 'exampie Of ' it ~as announced at CYO head" Fell River. Mass. th'e' .sympathetic ,understanding' qu:arters. " and solicitude of His 'Holiness for Finalists' in the nationa'! com" . ~. ' Please send forms and Ihlstal1opaid. SAVE-BY...MAIL envelop"" Catholicseamen"of the' world," petition will be divided illto. two. ,to: he said. .'.,'" ".. '.'.' categories: teenage (high school. R~D, students) and young adult, (posto: NAME _ _ high school to age 25). Each,di~ys, ocese may send one representao: tive in each category. The com.~atura petition is open to both boys and .. CITY _ Famous for our Prime PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arch- 'girls. biShop John J.Krol of PhiladelAnnounce Topics PHONE _ _ Aged Charcoal Broiled phia said here that migration is The winner of the teenage "a natural, inalienable human division will receive a $400 Steaks - also Roast right." scholarship and, a personal troThe prelate declared that ali phy. The ·winner of the young Beef· Sea Food meli "are bound by a solidarity adult competition will receive' which transcends nat~onali polito. a $25 savings bond and a perDancing Every Saturday ical, geographic and racial bar- sonal trophy. The runner-up in Nite to the Music of riel's." , " , .. each division also will receive Each account insured safe by M , "All have a right to the riches a personal trophy. Eddie Davis and his agency of the U. S. Govt. of this earth and all have the: Each contestant must speak on Orchestra· responsibility of making these' the 1961 Bishops' statement for riches available to all members' eight to 10 minutes and externPlanning A Wedding. Sh.ower. Banof the human family," he said. poraneously from three to four OF minutes on a designated section quet or Meeting-Call our Banquet Archbishop Krol spoke to of the recent encyclical of Pope Department for details. An Parties members and guests of the Phil-· John "Mater et Magister." given our Expert Attention-Call adelphia chapter of the American Bristol County's Largest Committee on Italian Migration Federal Savings Association MAYFAIR 4-9888-4-9979 , at a dinner honoring him on the :n North Main St.. cor. Bedforc1 occasion of the 10th anniversary 91 Crandall Rd. Tiverton, R.I. of the founding of the national Dividend Rate 4% per year organization, which now has 120 chapters throughout the U. S. The Archbishop received a bronze "plaque from the migra-,' 94 TREMONT STREET tiongroup for his work on behalf. ,TAUNTON, ,MASS•. of immigrants. Himself' a, son of Famou. Recidlng' HARD COAL ~";D c~ Polish immigrants, he was active: Tel~: VAndyke 2.;.0621 NEW ENGLAND COKE, ,ifi!§~"y iii. this field during his-tenure in' DADSON OIL 'BURNERS, .~l:! ,.~:5. ••Cleveland asa priest and Auxil-; . iary' B·ishop. " . 24-Ho'ur 011 Burner. S"rvlce . : - - ; S~~LL ••••
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NEW YORK (NC) - "Fire Watch," the epilogue to Thomas Merton's "Sign of Jonas," will be dramatized on the "Catholic Hour" on NBC-TV next Sunday as the third of four programs entitled "Landscape of the Soul." The Trappist author will-be portrayed as he describes his thoughts and prayers While act.,. irig as night watch in his mon~s';' tery at G,ethsemani, Ky. ' c' ,Father Dominic Rove, O.P., has adapted the: text from Merton's ,work. The program is pro- :" duced: by the National Council of LITTLE ROCK (NC)-A recCatholic Men in cooperation ord 10,703 children are enrolled with NBC-TV. It will be broad- in Arkansas' 65 Catholic schools, cast lilt 1:30 P.M., but will be Father William M. Beck, Little seen ill many areas on a I delayed Rock diocesan school superin. , basis. The NCCM, advises '. tendent, has announc;ed. This is checktof local1istin~ f~ vi~;' an increase of 193 over the 1960ina. tim~ , . ' , ' , " - .... ,11, term. '
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 18, 1962
the Poor - Intercessors Before. God
dNotv®. LQ)@me<Story Introd~~trion
P~~~!gnt
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J.Sheen, D. D.
-to University
This week's 'column Is addressed to the rich. By the rich. we mean those who have a scissors and a bank vault - ' a bank vault In which to keep their securities and a scissors with whleh to clip the coupons!
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Inexplicably, I missed Richard Sullivan's_ book, Notre Dame: Reminiscences of an Era when it was first published. · In fact I had not heard of it until the new edition (Notre Dame University Press. $1.95) came to my desk for review. Knowing how well Mr. Sulli- to find that O'Donnell had not van writes, knowing, too, even played in that game. how fine a subject Notre Collective Endeavor Dame affords him and how Inevitably the most celebrated long and closely acquainted with · it he has been, I took up the volume wit h pleasUre. The pleasure lasted ( t hat sounds dis t u r b in g I y 1 ike a. cigarette commercial).T his book is a work. 'of love, but not uncritical, more' i in'p r e s sionistic th'a n ' formally chronological or statistical. ... Mr. Sullivan first went to Notre Dame as a freshman in 1962. The changes in the university since Coolidge's heydey have · been tremendous, and they have been very considerabl~ fu the years since the main part of this book was composed' (some of them are touched on In an epi'logue 'for the new edition).
and colorful figures get the greatest amount of attention in an account of a university's progress. But Mr. Sullivan insists t~at Notre Dame, like any comparable institution is a collective endeavor. The toil and sacrifice, the yision and generosity of innumerable people contribute to its .growth. It can easily. be that the less prominent make the genufuely decisiye contributions. Thus, Fr. John Zahmis here ·credited with having done most· to push Notre Dame ou·t of the boarding school class and into the university category. "He established .•. by personal brilliance and personal dedication, a concept of fierce intellectual endeavor. Within the Community he fathered a small school of followers, who in time apd by de.grees subtly remodelled the College into the University." La:r Faculty'
--May we talk to you directly~ We know you are generous. You have br~nze plaques in your homes, citations and memorials Ie field l1ouses; your names are carved in the entrance halls of hospitals; your Portrait may be hanging in the coach's room of a new gymnl!sium. May the Lord bless you for your largesse. But without ceasing to be bountiful to such causes, may we suggest that you ma:r not be' getting- the maximum sPiritual return on your investment. There might conceivabl;r be a danger that "you have
ISSUES WARNING: Now visiting the U.S., Archbish- . :::~:: ~~~ y;: r~'::d·:l::~d~~~~: ~lti: op Pierre Ngo Dinh Thuc of praised you, and ;;ou were pleased. Hue, Vietnam, brother of Now look to the Scriptures. What did . President Ngo Dinh of Viet. Our Lord· use as the teSt of the Divinity of His Mission? It was nam; has. warned that' if not that those' who already have, Will have more, but that "the Vietnam falls to .the com- poor have. the Gospel preached to them" (Matt. 11:5). Notice, "the munists, .all southeast Asia . poor." Next ·look to J~e parable of t.he knavish steward who, with the wealth he possessed, made. friends with the poor. If he was so wili follow. NG Photo.
If
Diocese Building Program Attaii'ls
$30 Million MIAMI (NC)-The southernmost' 'diocese in .the United States has been expanding its facilities' at the
'~~t 'fr()m the.:Statei\ss¢.mblY,.~
Then the Savior telis what true wisdom is: "M:r counsel to . you is, make use of your base wealth to win yourselves friends who, when you leave It behind, Will welcome )'ou Into eternal habitations" (Luke 16:9). Your money cannot be transferred to the next world, but it can be: so. used here as to gain advocates, Intercessors, defense attorne:rs, pleaders, friends with the Judge In the next world. And' who are these ·defense attorne:rs? They are "the .poo~," the deepest ,reason being that the poor cannot pay you back; therefore, God wUI have to' reward you. "When thou dveth' hospitality, Invite a poor 'maD to come, the crippled. tlie .lame,the! blind; so that. thou: shaU' Win a bleSsing, for these ,.cannot. make .thee .any. retUrn; th,. reward will come when the
The foregoing would make it rate of $770,000 a month as the appear that Notre Dame is; and .result of a building program ever has been, largely, if not ~x whichhlis reached a' total' of 'clusively, clerical in facultY,In . $30 million. , According to a report prepared fact, however, the lay teachers ';.', far' outnumber 'the priests; .and for Bishop Coleman F. 'Carroll, '. JuSt rise awaln." of some of the former Mr. Sulll- first Bishop of the Miami diocese, In' oth~ ~~rd~, the poor 'in Hohg' Ko~g, lepe~s'in U~and~, v.an, gives 'us lively Ukene~. more than $13 million. has been For example, we llI'e introduced expended by individual parishes the crippled .1D Karachi, the homeless in Lima, the blind in to Charles Phillips, whom the on parochial construction while I!'OnIlosa will become your intercessors before" God for the 'salvation au,thor consi4ers to ~ave ~~n a nearly $17 million is being spent of your soul. TheycanIiot .give you a Cap and ·gown in June - tihey on diocesan and" non-diocesan who have no cap; they cannot seat you at the dias in the Diamond very great teacher. . Mr. Sullivan has.. ,a special projects including $10 million of Room. But· they' ate God's:appointed defense attorneys b- sou1tI word of commendation. for the construction under way or· ready that help them•... unmarried lay faculty. "I k~ow to start. The number of buildings and GOd' never intended that the rich should have communloD men now living. amon~ students with one' another, but with the poor. If :rou 'wIsh, contlnueto on the campus who-not by for- institutions completed'during the dve to those who aile fat and eat sweets, but' also give .something mal counselor by self-conscious three-year period just finished includes 24 churches,4 mission to. those who sit In loneliness and sadness of heart. Think of your ex~ple" bU~ simPly by being themselves, naturally,rit:'hlY and chapels; a· shopping center -own' soul a Uttle. ,The next·tlmeyou ·g.ve !$ZOO;OOO~to. build· the 'fully_-:- . hav~ effecte~ amazing chapel; '16 elementary schools, .··,tenth. dormltory,wh:r not dve at least· $200 of:lt\to the· Doly. Father for the poor of' the '. world: that . "the' ·GosPe1.ma, be things among th~~; younger 8 high schools; 17. convents; Z homes for the aged, a Spanish feUow-residents in the balls~" ' .preached to them." You will be' so glad you did. All offer1Dgs of . ~Amazing things. of all. so~ speaking center.·.:" the rich' to the Holy ·Father may .be.sent:to his Society 1W the Also,. a home for·unwedmothhave occ)lrred on tha~ campus. Propagation of the Faith.TIilSls hls.arm, his society for collectln6 . ~rs, a ,studEmt·.center:at· theUni", abnafor the pOor inthe·MlSloiIs. Thanks., God'Love You..· . ~. S1;llllv!in, allu4estO the. in. crease in !rtudentbody .and fac- versity of Miami, a refuge·-for Ulo/, . the pr~lif~~ation, of ~ew ~omeless ,and destitute men,St. ;" ." GOD LOVE YOU to' Ivirs;:E.J;F.. for'$50·."1 .would. have spent buildmg.s, ~e vaSi;range of in- P~~l Book·and·Film Center, the this money for gifts for my parents if' I ,still had them. Now I want tere~an.d. l1¢complishmerit .·in . chancery, ,a· cemetery. and meetit ,to go. t6yotii'charity." •.:: to"J.L.K.for $30 :"$15 from small 'one' 8fter .anot~er.. fie,ld ,of. r~ .ing halls and.·auditoriums.·.. , . ; . weekly~sacrifices;$15from:the 'dime 'baitk.'." • ; • to,'Mrs.'F oM. for sear,chor pt tQ~.~~. He"him:- . '. The principal project in, the $2 "lam 86 'years old arid 'Uve in a home. I will make this sacrifiCe s,elf ~ . ooe~ present~· "the diocese: has been .theerel<tion "of ever'y'·mortth." . " , .--,-.-". ': " . ':"'. ... ,'. , St; JohnVianney -Minor:. Semuriiv~rllIty ~s gone forward Cut out this colwriri, pin your sacrifice to it and mall It. to .the inary. ' . remarkably and become fully Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society.· for wOftlly of the name, and can the Propagation' of the Faith, 3~6 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N•.,Y., Assumption D of I or give first hand witneSs. your'Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, Mrs. Emma Berube will·repreMatter of Football 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. sent Assumption Circle, Fall He con~iDces' us that, in the "process, the special, identifying River Daughters of Isabella, at a friendliness of the place has not state convention to be held Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 20 and been lost; Without a trace' of seri" .. ,' . . timentality~' he' describes arid ,21" in,-Boston.,'Mrs.. Marion' Barpraises the Notre Dame cachet.; rette is her alternate. The Fan . Riye! 'uhJt P~~ts a.cieSsert brIdie "'The sUbway alumni/may .:.=. :. ':' ~~' . .:. ,:,' .' : ~ ~.'. '': .:: .... .r':,",..:':" tiDies sour one' slightly; but 'tii, '. .in . :febr\lary. . .\.. -,'.1' ~chool, afterall,-'is not re~p6.hsi;;' t ,......'•. ; .. biefor ·thein'nordo'the.y in 'the .. least ·rep~eSerit it.'Th.e ··rea('lir'::. ;': ,i,:. -t .~.' .. '> " . .;':';" : t' '1' ,. ih" ..' . . ,'~ \. ,I. ,:'" . ~ ']."., IC e IS sollie Wg' e1l!e agaiIi.: . '~d; sjieaklng. of the So.bWaY 'alumni, thet"e 'is the"~inattet~ of MtI~L.EA·NIS'$EA,'~FOObS'.: ,<~'~l:,::' . football. Mr. cSullivan gets that in; if· he did not the picture , U~IO~ WHARF, FAIRHAVEN, MASS.' would not be complete; although football is far from being the comP.l.ete picture of Notre Dame.
'Father .Sorin One thing 'that has not changed Is. the name and fame of Father Sorin, the founder.. Naturally, Mr'. Sullivan gives more space to him than any other' persOn..Born lit· France in 1814 'Edward Sorin was ordained' ~~ 24, did parish work for' a while, joined the commuDity which eventually became the Congregation of. Holy CroSs and in 1841 was assigned to' lead a group .of brothers of the community to the Diocese of Vincennes 'in Indiana. The party was 36 days on the Atlantic, 25 days in journeying · from New York to Vincennes. Before 1841' was out, Father Sorin had 'founded 'a boarding .school at· Vi asitiIigton, ' India~a, . and in "1842 undertook to establish another school .'at . South Bend. . . .. . . This 'second 'sChool' used a cabin, a shack" and' ~ tiiiychap¢l 'whichha'd .pe¢n .erected bYSte;. 'ph'en Badili~ the' first priest' .to.1:>'e ordailied'in the United .States. In short order' 'Soriri had buildings co~pleted;and''in, 1_844
"new
wise about worldly investments, why are you not wise about heavenly investments? Our Divine Lord points out that you are only stewards of what you have _. administrators, trustees and guardians, but not owners. He is the Proprietor.
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'charter for the1,]liiversi'tt .. f-'ii .Notre Dame.. . . . . . . '''. .,'," . . Father Cavanaugh If Sorin dominates the portrait ·gallery, there are more intiinate and subtle likenesses of men' who . ' -have held the presidency of the 'University in Mr. Sulllvan's'own time. "Of Father: Cavanaugh, who was president· from ·1905' until 1919,·Mr.Sillllvan writeS;' "John W; Cavanaugh wasptobably 'tlie most charming "·man "whOever belon'ged to Notre Dame.""He proceeds·tci· make 'us's~ artd,"feel ·thischarm;"'inosUybyvoiayof a necdot'es'-' whic'h' bring alive .the qualities'of:"'the man.~: .'~ .: . · Merely by deScribIng the way Father Cavanaugh said "Good morning," the· author communicates the radiance of this' "mischievous,' archangelic - looking man, very tall, very gra'nd; with rosy cheeks and a pink scalp Book Moves Graphically shining through white hair, a The author, now. famous as a 'round face, and a way of sWing- novelist, was originally attracted ing along as if he were person- to the school'by its football pres:" ally responsible for the bloom tige. and, although' weighing but on' the lilac or the freshneSs' of 135. pounds, ,he tried, out for'the the snow." team. He didn't make i~··But he .' knew ~!>ckpe, of course;, and he Father O'Donnell" admits'tO a'pride iii the team and He conveys, too, th'e' complex.:.aii' iritei-eSt' fu itS wirirliDg. < ':" ity .of, Father Hugh O'.Donnell,. .,~ .descripton of the night bepr~sident from 1940 to 1946. fore a big home.·game, the. preFather O'Donnell was large and 'llminatiesto the 'game.itBelf, and burly, an athlete· in his day, and the start of action on the field Is :greeted as he walked the campus: . vivid· and enjoyable. But;' like :by_.a chal)-t from some dormitory . the univ~sity, itself, ~'keeps ;'. "windows, which was like versicle football' iil its proper piaee and and response: "Who-o-o lost the proportion. .. His book, moving along as .Y ale game?" "Ja-a-8Y ·Hugh O'Donnel1l" smartly and graphlca1l7 as .a The reference was to a game akillfully edited film, Is a pleasIn 1914, and Mr. Sullivan was ant and informative IntNCluctiOll utoun~ III checking record8. to • notable -.:hooL
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HOW ALMA MATER HAS CHANGED: Alumnae of Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, who have entered Sisters of Mercy, enjoy trying out desks in new classroom at annual Alumnae Association Silver Tea. It wasn't like this in our day, was general comment. Sisters, front to rear in each row, are, row one: Sister Mary de Sales, Sister Mary Thomasella, Sister Mary Caroleen, Sister Mary Jeremiah, Sister Mary Faith. Row two: Sister Mary Julene, Sister Mary Stephen Joseph, Sister Mary
40 Nuns, All Graduates of Fall River Academy, Special Guests of Honor At Annual Alumnae Silver Tea By Clement J. Dowling Mount St..Mary Academy was buzzing Sunday afternoon when 40 special alumnae returned for a visit. They were all Sisters of Mercy, guests of honor at· the 12th annual silver tea of the Mount's Alumnae Association.' . The Sisters of Mercy Charm will hold the spotlight proudly boast of 67 ,nuris at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall who are alumnae of the Fall River, for four weeks, beginning River academy. Rell. George this afternoon. Some 50 students E. Sullivan, pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Fall River, guest speaker at the social event, officiated at the concluding Benediction. Among the many Sisters who paused long enough from greeting old classmates to file into a classroom for' The Anchor photographer we reSister Mary de Sales, formerly Marie Elizabeth Joseph, class of 1956; Sister Mary Thomasella, Mau. reen Carroll, 1954; Sister Mary Caroleen, Ann McTague, 1951; Sister Mary Jeremiah, Nancy Higgins, 1950; Sister Mary Faith, Barbara Harding, 1950; Sister Mary Julene, Marlene Newton, 1957; Sister Mary Stephen Joseph, Beverly Moore, 1957; Sister M'lTY Danella, Dorothy Griffin, 1951. Sister Mary Laetare, Carol Reagan, 195.5; Sister Mary Micliaelyn, Elaine Heffernan, 1950; Sister Mary Mauricita, Margaret Stapleton, 1957; Sister. Mary Aaron, Rose Marie Rocha, 1955; Sister Mary Angela, Carol Ann Heffernan, 1955; Sister Mary Fredella, Lois Dunn, 1950; Sister Mary Jacoba, Eileen Murphy., . 1953. ' ' , Sister, Marie Walter, Lois Eveleth, 1957; Sister Marietta, Joan Walsh, 1953; Sister' Mary Laurita, Jean La' Pierre, 1951; Sister 'Mary, Estella", Patricia Calls, 1951; Sister l'4ary Davida; Mary L. Dunne, 1951; Sister Mary Josephina; Jean Susan Frates, 1957; Sister James Marie, Kathleen Riley, 1957. Sister Mary Julian, Ba.rbara Riley, 1961; Sister Mary Coral, anne, Norma L. Theroux, 1957; -Sister Mary Carl; Margaret Wrobleski, 1957; Sister Mary Bruce, Rita McCann, 1956. Mrs. Phyllis Depin and Mrs. Jean Shea, were in charge of a large committee which planned the affair. J;'luSy SeasOB
have signed up for a charm course with a differe,nce, conducted by Ruth Lang Fitzgerald. Mother of seven children, outstanding model, fashion and ch'um school authority, fashion show commentator and contributor to many national magazines, she presents a course including figure analysis, tips on hair styling, complexion care, clothing, and speech.' The difference is that these glamor techniques are presented together with a Christian assessment of their value and the firm conviction that without charity, modesty and moral· behavior, tricks alone will never generate the inner glow that should characterize the popular girl. "Graciousness," says Mrs. Fitzgerald, "has more than a noddingaequaintance with grace." The charm sessions will be held for an hour and a half for four consecutive Thursdays.
Student Government The art division of the National Poetry Association has awarded a certificate of acceptance to a sketch submitted by Jacqueline Plaud, Stang High School junior from New Bedford. The sketCh will be included in the annual anthology, published by the association,."Art of Young A.."l1erica." Also among recent events at the North Dartmouth school was the monthly student government meeting, at which a panel discussion on the group'S aims and objectives was featured with Counselor Wayne Price acting as c~ ordinator. Sophomore class 210 at Stang has been named student govern_ ment banner winner for the current period. It also holds the Spirit Cup. Oll'iginal Skit Also at Sacred Hearts Academq, Fall River, students are deep in plans for an open house Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair- program for area eighth graders, haven is in the midst of its busy scheduled from 1:30 to 4:30 Sunactivity season. The annual Win- day, Jan. 28. ter semi-formal is due S;tturday, Ann Turner is general cha.r. Jan. 27" in DartmoUth and school man, aided by team captains ,hall chatter centers on the dance, Betty Ann Collins and Patricia appropriately called "The Snow M\lad and representatives of Ball." junior, sophomore and freshman The Fairhaven school is also classes. giving a share of its attention to Program wlll ~clude an origpreparation of its annual Spring inal skit introducing eighth concert, to feature outstandin~ graders to SHA life and seasonal, student talent. .. activities. School tours will folIn ' line" with enrichment 61: low, with displays 'and demoncivic 'and history classes,. stii.!; strations. planned in science, and dents viewed the teleVision 'pres'- art rooms' as well as toe language entation of President Kennedy's laboratorlY and business depart!3tate of the Union message. ment"
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Jan. 18; 1962
Danella, Sister Mary Laetare, Sister Mary Michaelyn. Row three: Sister Mary Mauricita, Sister Mary Aaron, Sister Mary Angela, Sister Mary Fredella, Sister Mary Jacoba. Row four: Sister Marie Walter, Sister Marietta, Sister Mary Laurita, Sister Mary Estella, Sister Mary Davida. Row five: Sister Mary Josephina, Sister James Marie, Sister Mary Julian, Sister Mary Carolanne, Sister Mary Carl, Sister Mary Bruce. Sixty-seven Sisters of Mercy are alumnae of the school.
The afternoon will conclude with refreshments and Benediction. Radio Series Dominican Academy, Fall River, has a number of unusual activities holding sway in January. Its annual Epiphany party, held. recently under, Student Council sponsorship, featured skIts spotlighting Advent projects of each home room. DA's Bishop Walsh Club engages periodically in discussions among its five units. Names of the units honor deceased antiCommunists such as Cardinal Mindzenty. Kathleen Murray, leader of the Dr. Tom Dooley' group, led the interesting Jan-' uary discussion on "Communist Infiltration of Our Movies." The Fall River school continues its participation in a weekly radio program at 7:30 Sunday evenings. A topic recently aired by Dominican's panelists was "The Congo Conquered by Colonialism, Coalition and Cash." Debate League Names in the news right now at DAare those of the select group named students of the month. They include Denise FoIster, freshman; Claire Caron, sophomore; Donna Sears, junior; , Claire Gagnon, senior. These' girls have been chosen because' they typify the Dominican spirit both in school and out and have' been willing to give of their time to aid their classes. Narragansett Debate League' met Wednesday, Jan. 10 to discuss the forthcoming season. It was decided to hold four tourna- , ments: Jan. 31, Feb. 14, Feb. 28 ' and March 14, at Bishop Stang, Mt. St. Mary's, Durfee and Do-
WINS VFW CONTEST:Roderick Hart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Hart,Holy Name parish, Fall River, a, senior at Coyle High School, Taunton, is area finalist in Voice' of :Democracy contest sponsored by Veterans of: Foreign Wars. He will rePt: reseiit'Coyle 'iii Southeasterii' Massachusetts ' competition to determine state finalists.
minican Academy, respectively. Schools will compete for the Sister Ignatius Memorial Trophy. Msgr. Prevost debating team of Fall River will warm up for league competition tomorrow by engaging Sacred Heart Academy of Central Falls, R. I. The all-boy school has elected the following officers to lead the debaters: Paill Guerette, president; Richard Jussaume, vice president; Paul Morrissette, sec,retary; Marc Mancini, treasurer.
L. Connolly and over 600 priests and religious attended a special Open' House day at the Attleboros' new Bishop Feehan high school. ' Swarming over the new educational marvel with expressions of praise and admiration were representatives of a score of religious orders in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. , Bishop Connolly, Superintl~rid ent of' diocesan' schools Rev. Patrick O'Neill, Principal Si~ter Mary Urban, and Student CounHonor Society cil. president Stephen .Nolan adPrevost seniors were in Man- dressed the priests, brothers, and ville, R. I., last week for a retreat nuns with words of welcome and ai Our Lady of Fatima Retreat appreciation. House. Rev. Roland St. Pierre, Students of the newest DiocOMI, was retreat master. esan high school were ushers and ,Two vocation clubs have re- their mothers served refreshcently been organized for under- ments. ' classmen. Meetings, held at the Today students at Bishop Brothers' Residence, take place Feehan will officially begin obafter school hours and have as servance of the Church Un'ity their purpose to help a boy find .Octave. Panel discussions have what God wants ot' him. Brother already' been held in the classVincent' ,is moderator for 'the rooms in preparation for thilJ sophomores and Brother Andrew' increasingly observed eight dayD for the freshmen. . of prayer. , Papa's Choice Brother Roland, principal, re- . eently inducted 13 juniors and Something new is taking place seniors into the National Honor tonight in th"e school gym of Mt. Society. After a short explana- St. Mary's in Fall River ,- ,Il tion of the organization, the priri- Father-Daught~ dance! In SOme cipal introduced the candidates.' cases "Father" will be a godThen followed four brief talks father, brother or uncle because outlining the four requirements Dad can't be present. " for admittance: scholarship, lead'An orchestra will be present ership, character, and service.. to . provide music for waltzes, After having pledged to main- cha':chas, fox-trots, and maybe tain their high standards, the 13 some rock-and-roll. Papa might members signed their names in . even want to Charleston. the. official National Honor SociUpcoming Exams ety register. Debating co a c h Brother Thomas- Keefe of Coyle High has 'Buddin« Poets Members of the writing staff' brought the Taunton school de';' ... baters through intramural and of 'the Prevost yearbook spent several days of their holiday re- . '.inter-school scrimmage debate8 cess at ~hoOl working oil.their iIi preparation for the Narragiulsett league opening. projeCt. " In addition, the Coyle contendm Last Friday 10 Sodalists visited freshmen classes to give one-' ers will vie for honors in debatminute talks ori· various phaSes ing tournaments at Stonehill and of the Sodality and to invite the Holy Cross colleges, and, Mt. :St. freshmen to a special meeting,' , Charles Academy of Woonsocket, Mt. St. Mary's,' 'Fall R'iver, has' R.1. Coyle -also has Freshmen contributed to the list' of riew . and J.V. debating teams, in adpoets. The folll>Wing ,young dition to its varsity Squad. Extra-curricular activities· at ladies and their poems have re-' ceived certificates of achieve-' Bishop Stang High in North ment and will have their work Dartmouth are at a minimum printed in an anthology to be this week due to upcoming expublished by the National High aminations. Tomorrow, however, Ted Kennedy, brother of PresiSchool Poetry Association: Mary Ann' Velho, Paula Mar- dent John F. Kennedy, will adtin, Patricia Collins, Kathryn dress the student body on his Carvalho, Cheryl Martin, Patri- impression of the economic and cia Murphy, Lorraine Mello, social problems of South Amer. Rosemarie Alvernaz, Judith Cal- ica. Corona, yearbook of St. Mary's lahan, Judith Bednarz, Mary Ann High, Taunton, will benefit from Ferreira. a student-sponsored cake sale at Students Partieipate ' all Masses at St. Mary's Chu'rch Most Reverend Bishop Jam~ last Sunday.
FOUR WAYS TO SERVE CHRIST AS A HOLY CROSS FATHER Priest-Teacher Home Missioner Iroreign Missionary Parish Pries, For information about tho
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THE ANCHOR...:.Diocese of Fall River:-·thurs., Ja'j,. 18, 1962
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Supports 'Basic ;' Princap~@~ of Co~nci~ P~an i. '
By Msgr. George G. Higgins
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Director, NCWC Social Action Department,
Some commentators on the new social encyclical, ''Mater et Magistra," ("Christianity and Social Progress") have observed that Pope Joh~ XXIII se'ems to be, less' interested. in the so-called Industi'yCouncil Plan than was Pope Pius XI. This is only good, 'Ilational and internapartially true. Pope John. in tiona!." "Mater et Magistra." care-:Opens Doc)!S fully avoids 'giving his apThese are the basic principles proval to any particular method u~derlying the Industry Council of organizing ,or reorganizihg Plan. Pope John doesn't tell us,. economic life. in detail,' how they are to be put Moreover even into practice. His approach, I his terminology repeat, is very flexible. is somewhat dif' In the' words of Fa~her O1on, ferent from that "Pope John opens the ·doors to . FRYEIlS ancll RiOILEIS - 2. V2 to :; V2 La Avg. of Pius XI in aU kinds of institutional cooperahis encyclical tion among those interested at Cut-up WHOLE "Quadragesimo the different levels of produc1! Ready to Cook Anno" and in tion, strongly insisting on any or~B.,C LB his later, encyganization of the economy which elical on com. takes into account the national Breast and Wing munism, "Divini ,and international common good. QClDG£l'fers Tender, Juicy, White Meat Redemptoris." "The State has a positive role Pius XI used to play and this role must be. the terminology of "corporativ-· accomplished with .respect for Drumstick and Thigh ism" which, in English, has been legitimate autonomies and with Q.lalrlell's Flavorsome Dark Meat freely translated into the Indus-' the participation of all interested try Council plan. groups." . Pope John XXIII, on the other Timely Corrective COLONIAL MASTER Lean, Tender, Meaty hand, carefully avoids using the corporative terminology ein-' In substance, this is what pro- . ponents of the Industry Council . LB SMOKED ployed by Pius XI. Pla'n have been saying all along.. Avoids Misunderstanding They have definitely been on the The reason' for this, according right track. MORRELL PRIDIe No Waste, An Good Eating to Father Gerard Dion of Laval' . At times, perhaps,their apUniversity in Quebc, is that Pope. proach and .their terminology. '1V2 LB John is mosUypreoccupied' with have been a little too: flexible.. CAN the practical aspects of the prob-' If so, the new encyclical "Mater. lem. et Magistra" can serve as a' Choice Pieces of Tender Meat . "~e" is a ,pasto~ and not a .. timelY corrective. " .· JurIst, ~ather D~on ~ld the. I repeat, however, that the new 1961 National SOCIal LIfe Conencyclical should not be inter-: LB !.erence in Canada last. Octo?er. preted to 'meim that these prin- , . ~e knows all the dlscussl~ns ciples· undel'1ying ,the Industry Same'low self· SerVice Prices in All Stores in Thii Vicinity - (We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities) ,ralse<:l by. the formulas of P~us. Council Plan ,are no' longer of' XI and PlUS XII and the mlS- any great importance. understandings caused by these discussions. So he keeps from .. 1\5)0[l!l.e\I.l'!I, £5, F~ght any formulizing and even goes Jr U \liiI1l U 11 I ,So far as to avoid using the words 8 Ruby red and snappy cr,isp, a delicious apple for every use,- U.S. No.l- 2%" .and up , 'corporation' and 'corporative or':' BC@HTd $ 1l1l,tl'n . ganization.' " ~ (Most of the misunderstandTULSA (NC) -.:. The' Tulsa ··.. ings of "Quadragesimo Anno" School Board has asked for a ,referred to by Father Dion cen- _ conference with the Oklahoma ... tered . around the subject of 'AttoI:ney Generars offic,~ to lay, flORIDA - juicy and Sweet, Packed with Vitamin C : : fascism. Some people mistakenly, ground for a possible' court fest, · . of the board's denial of remedial. LB , . t1wught that Pius XI was 10. reading class services to two' : : favor of the fascist corporate. ~[;J ~Wtcil:- ~.- ~~ . . BAG , i. state whereas in fact he had opparochhil school pupils here. '; posed it.) , Claude: H. Rosenstein, the: Fresh and Crisp, Low in Calories board's atto.rney, ga"e an opin-: Less Theoretical ion last Fall that the Tulsa pubIt would appear to be partially' lie school System could not ai.' BUNCH correct, then, to say that POpernit for remedial reading courses: . ,John XXIII is less interested' or other special courses' any Red Ripe - A Salad Favorite than was Pius XI in the so-called . pupils who are not' enrolled in Industry Council Plan. Pope' public schools. John's approach to the problem' The opinion caused school ad-, of social reconstruction and his ministrators to deny, remedial. terminology are less theoretical reading'instruction to two pupils .. <;. -more flexible, if you will- .. who regularly attend Marquette. than that of Pope Pius XI. School, a Catholic school operBut it would be a serious mis- ated by Christ the King parish, take to conclude that Pope John here. is any less interested than was Parents of one of th,e rejected Pius XI in the basic principles of pupils, 12-year-old Michael Sposocial reconstruction underlying sato, have challenged the ruling the so-called Industry Council through attorneys Pat Malley Plan. and Neal E. McNeill. Mr., and The basic principles of social Mrs. Vincent J. Sposato said they STATLER 'reconstruction ou tUned in ','Ma-. would seek again for admission -Soft, Absorbent ter .gt Magistra" are the same as, of the boy at the beginning of those which are .to be f01,111d the. second' semes~r thhr month. in Pius Xl's encyclical "Quadra- : A possible court test of the gesimo Anno.~' Father Dion sum-: ruling may come' from that atmarizes them as follows: tempt. McNeill said that the Need Cooperation school board / and Rosenstein "Economic order will not come. 'were working 'with him to 'make naturally, only by free coinpe- sur.e that proper procedures are tition, free enterprise and free,' followed. McNeill 'praised the initiative, although a certain ,de- ,cooperation of the Tulsa school gree of freedom must always be· authorities in the matter. - safeguarded. , "Intermediate bodies are nat-- Former Red Leader :' ural and necessary if we want to: .. · avoid State totalitarianism. In-N'owat Monastery~ All Bonus Stamp Items are Clearly stitutional cooperation at all levSUBIACO' (NC)"-A former 'els .must be' organized between .lea.der of the BrazilianCommuDisplayed and Ide~tified the .agents of the '~conomy. . " nist party, 'now living at the "Intermediate bodies must coBenedictine monastery of' St: N.OCOUPONS .NEEDED- BUY ALL YOU WANT2 :, operate among themselves and Scholastica here in ltalY,'iseon-:' with the government in order to sidering becoming a monk. help it play 'its positive .role in .. Italian newspapers have re.: the economy for the com~on' ported th~t Armando Rodrigues,' Countinho, who left the com-'_ /Post munist party and became a CathMONTCLAIR (NC) - Msgr.· olic in 1954, has been at; the Benedictine monastery here for John J. Dougherty, president of the past six months. . Seton Hall University, has 'acAt present he leads the life of cepted the post of trustee for a the other monks in the monstery proposed ultra-high frequenc'y but has not as yet officially asked TV station to be operated by the New Jersey F-'!"-ational Tele- to be received as a Religious in vision Corpl).~._.. I the community. .·*M;Sflf. . . . .m.Gs ;n,ahrlA'wC@'MdOWMM£ ee Metew"··'Eseeswww'
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Salve Regina First~ Only· Catholic 'Women'·s .College in State of Rhode Island
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Jan. '?, 1962
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Attended by scores of girls from the Fall River Diocese, Salve Regina College, in historic Newport, has the distinction of being the first and only Catholic college for women in Rhode Island. Ochre Court, former estate of Robert Goulet, located among the Six competitive tuition scholexclusive Summer mansions arships are awarded annually, along the Cliff Walk on the based on performance in college Atlantic Ocean, was pres~nt entrance examinations and high ed to the Bishop of Providence in March, 1947, for educational purposes. The Bishop iri turn, presented the gift to the Sisters of Mercy, who had obtained a college charter from the Rhode Island Assembly in 1934. September 21, 1947, the Sisters opened the college with one buildIng and 50 freshman students. Today, the campus has expanded to nine dormitorIes, classroom buildings, and a student union. Admission Standards Applicants for admissIon must present a minimum of 16 units of high school work successfully completed, submit scores from college entrance tests, present recommendations from their high school principals, and have personal Interviews wIth the college admissions director. Four Year Course Salve Regina offers a fouryear liberal arts education, leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science. Participants In the teacher-education program fulfill the requirements for a liberal arts major and qualify for certification in public and private schools of Rhode Island, with the prIvllcge of reciprocity In other states. The college is accredited by the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and the National League for Nursing. It is approved by the State Department of Education for the preparation of elementary and secondary school teachers and is affiliated with the Catholic University of America. Present enrollment is 532, representing 12 states and 5 foreign countries. Resident students number 291, while the remaining 241 are day students.
Colleges Receive Du Pont GrG nts WILMINGTON (NC) - Seven Catholic institutions have bet:ll given $37,700 of the $1,690,000 granted by the E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company to 161 public and private colleges and universities. The,grants, said the company, are to strengthen the teaching of science and related subjects, for research and for facilities. Most are for work in chemistry. Catholic recipients and the purpose of their grants are: College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn., $4,000, chemistry teaching; Loyola University of Chicago, $4,000, chemistry; Villanova University, $4,000, chemistry; University of Notre Dame, $4,000, chemistry', and $1,700, postgraduate teaching fellowship. College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, $5,000, to advance chemistry department facilities; St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia, $5,000, to advance chemistry department; and Loyola College, Baltimore, $10,000 capital grant for new engineering and physics building.
Catholic UniverSisties Get Wilson GrantS ?RINCETON (NC) - F i v e Catholic universities are among 84 graduate schools in the United States and Canada which have been named to receive grants from the Woodrow' Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., will receive a $12,000 grant; Catholic University of America, Washington, $6,000, and Fordham, Notre Dame and St. Louis University., $2,000 each. The grants were announced here by Sir High Taylor, president of the foundation.
school records. Student Life Student life for the newly arrived freshman begins with the orientation program. There, advice on the use of time, notetaking in college, reading improvement and health protection, as well as information regarding courses, schedules, library facil::' ities and academic requirements give e'ach girl a "this is your home and this is how we live" welcome. Guidance and counseling by faculty advisors continue throughout a student's four years. All students automatically become subject to the constitution and regulations of the Student Government Association of Salve Regina College. The Student Council is the intermediary body between the administration and faculty and the student. There is always mutual profit from exchange of ideas, and the faculty wish to foster intiative, co-operation and self-control in the young women under their care. People to people has always been the extra-curricular aim of the Salve Regina girl. A girl may serve the mission unit of the college on a project that will be sent abroad, or join fellow Home Economics Club members as they organize a Christmas party for needy children at home. ~he Alliance Francaise and El Circulo Salamanca contribute to the culture of their respective classrooms. Among the many activities, the Queen's Choristers, the Art Club, the Women's Recreation Association and the Student Nurses' Organization serve, to deepen a student's appreciation for and awareness of h~r fellow man. Escorted by young men from New England colleges, the young ladies of Salve Regina make a brilliant spectacle in the marble floored Great Hall on the night of the formal dance each class holds. However, the gay and bizarre hold sway at the informal dances also spotting the social calendar. Nothing is neglected in ,the attempt of the college to offer each individual the richest of cultural and spiritual experi_ ences. Authorities in various fields of interest are invited to address the students at regular intervals. Illonor Societies For the scholastic challenge that a student's curriculum presents, there are the recognition and accomplishment that Salve Regina Honor Societies repre.. sent. Membership in Kappa Gamma Pi, national scholastic activity society of Catholic women's colleges is granted annually to 10 per cent of the total number of women graduates. Sigma, Phi Sigma, the National Mercy Honor Society, recognizes those juniors and seniors who best exemplify the Mercy ideal of education. Twice a year, at Honors Assemblies, faculty and student body gather to commend students attaining high academic standing for the prevIous semester. Significant Aspects ' Salve Regina College offers: 1. Intellectual and culiural training in a liberal arts program. 2. Preparation for specific vocations in specialized areas of study: teaching, nursing, medical technology, home economics. 3. Experience in social living through co-curricular and extracurricular activities. Salve Regina believes that the Christian woman has a mission entrusted to her by her education, "To bring to the world a deep faith in God, a love for truth and a harmony among human beings." This, in essence, is the ideal of the Salve Regina College graduate.
WITH PRESIDENT: Left to right, Sister Mary Hilda RS.M., college president; Alice· Oliveira, South Dartmouth; Jane Gibney, Somerset; Mariel Perry, Taunton;
Pauline Hughes, New Bedford; Margaret Miranda, Somerset; Joanne Rzasa, Collette Fortin, Fall River; Janice Santos, New Bedford.
SENIORS ON STAIRS: Left to right, Susan. Jean, Marilyn Kane, Fail River; Barbara Abreu, Mary Silvia,. New Bedford; Lois Souza, Dighton; Frances 'Mis, Som-
erset; Lorraine He'nnessey, Mary Dunn, Fall River; Alice Tenczar, New Bedford; Patricia Souza. Fall River.
BETWEEN CLASSES: Carole Costa, Fairhaven; Patricia Wilder, New Bedford; Joan Winiarski, Colleen-Ann Price, Ellen
Donnelly, Fall River; Diane Francis, New Bedford.
TEA TIME: Left to right, Mary Elizabeth Horan, Katherine Glennon, South
Dartmouth; Elaine Thomas, New Bedford; Janet Pacheco, Mattapoisett. •• 1
, : , !
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1
16
THE ANCW'~
Vitaqity of Ameruc@ Nee~§ Liberalism, Conservatism By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno'
American politicai life, not to say political liveliness, is pretty much predicated on the division of men into liberals and conservatives. Private Willis, ruminating upon this truth, set it to sepulchral song in "Iolanthe," and we have echoed him ever since. seriously, no one, at least, in his Both, it seems, are essential right mind. for the maintenance of bal" Some Holds Barred ance, for the germination of For we have agreed, fundafresh ideas, and for the progress mentally if tacitly, that certain and development of society. If boundar:ee of decency and there were no human clignity ought not to be liberals, conignored. There has been a genservatism would • eraI recognition that both liberdie of inanition; alisr.1 and conservatism, in the if there were no American tradition and underc/o lL--S e r v standing of the terms, are reaatives, liberalson'lbleif different approaches' ism w 0 u 1 d to lifl: and reality. evaporate in a Fur all the name-calling, and mist of rhetoric. some of it admittedly has been A society which faidy lively, we have held, not would seek to so much to a gentleman's agreeMOMENT OF HAPPINESS: Left to Baptism; Sister M. Re~ina Rose; Mrs. Irene eliminate t his ment-for the term hardly seems Russo; and Anthony Russo. right: Rev. Louis Trivison" minister of healthful dichoto fit-as to something like an tomy would be writing its own acceptance of the Marquis of death-warrant. Quef>nbury's rules. As in the constitutional system S0J:Ile, holds are barred. And if, CLEVELAND (NC) - The' of separated powers, liberalism from time to time, regrettably, and conservatism act to check these rules have been ignored or prayers of a lifetime were anand balance each other. Nor does forg,>tten in the heat of combat, swered for a Notre Dame nun this result in stalemate, even they have been vindicated by.the . when she witnessed the baptism when the divisions are matheultimate elimination· of the of- of her' mother, a Jewish convert. matically equal; it answers, fenjers from serious political Mrs. Irene Mary Russo was 'In.&:. \"'£JI..a..JlO'&.I..c.t.':',..:J . . . . au ..;,...:. __ ... ~ _ _ ..... a___ _ vu"'x" rather, to that political reality baptized at the Sisters of Notre conSideration. ~HURClTF.S TODAY-ARE THEY PRO'l'Io;STAN't'S? . _ . The which Calhoun termed the Dame provincial house in nearby Edifying Restraint answer is No . . . When bishops ant. "concurrent majority," the pracChardon. One, of her daughters, Of course conservatives have pI'iests ot the Oniwdox (;hurc.hCl> tical device whereby there is alSister M. Regina Rose, a social ."Greek Orthodox," "Russian OJ"tho· ways, or nearly always, sufficient not liked liberal 'trends over the science teacher at St. Peter High dox," ekl.) oft'e'r ~la:;:; "he Divine give-and-take between the ex- past 50 years or more, but it is School here, was among many Liturg'y), they a"e va,idlY consecrat· tremes to enable society to get evident on the face of it that Sisters of the community at the they have not disliked them to ceremony. ing the bread imd wIDe to become th~ ahead in dealing with any spethe extent of advocating seces-' Body and Blood of Christ. Whei. cific problem.. Also present were Mrs. Russo's Orthodox church members rccei\'~ And it reflects, moreover, a sion from the Union, after the husband, Anthony, who was born Holy Communion in tbeir OWl, truth' which is only too often pattern of 1861. into a Catholic family, and their churches, they receive the sacramem ignored in the contemporary disLiberals are constantly deplorthree other children, ,Barbara, in reality .. In .general. the seven cussion of liberalism v. conserv- ing the intolerable brakes put who was graduated from Regina Tht Holy Fa/her's MiJsion Aid sacraments of the Orthodox are al1 atism, namely, that precious few UPO'!l what they term progress High School here; Virginia, a I:- 'k on /,.L -L valid. With the exception of the pOW by the conservatives, but they do if any men are either the one or Regina sophomore, and Anthony, J~ I mfa VJUnn ers of the Supreme Pontiff (and sev. the other, all the way through, not seem to feel, generally, that a first grader at St. Jerome eral other items). Orthodox church members have the same bp· permanently or consistently. the AIl'\erican experiment is acSchool. lief as Catholies ... Despite this closeness to us, however, thr tually grinding to a halt. Question of Labels Mrs. Russo was baptized by Orthodox churches are not part of the Catholic. Church. Orthfl Somehow, within wide limits Father Louis Trivison. She also JOllE'S, let us say, is a liberal. dox church members do not accept the Bishop of (tome, ou of vigorous criticism and equally received her first Holy CommunHe is known as such, he identiHoly Father, as their Holy Father ... The Orthodox and we art vigorous political action, we ion. , fies hImself with various liberal related to one another very clos~ly, members of one fami!)' have managed to live in the same Mrs. Russo, the former Irene movements, he subscribes to the But the family -Christendom - is a "broken family." In th( country, walk the same streets, Susskind, said she had always mo,'e liberal political party,. family of Christendom, regrettably, our Orthodox brothers anI' Dov. this mean that Jon'es is pray in the same churches. For- admired the Catholic religion cousins are separated from us . . . The reasons for the SepaT8' 100% liberal? By no means. eign"rs visiting us have been but never had taken a deep intion (the "rift" dates back centuries) were not originally tbeo terest in it. She saw to it that all Scntch his skin and it may well shocked by our frankness, then logical. The reasons originally were political and cultural edified by our actual restraint. her children were raised in the prove out that Jones is a dogged Some 160-million Christians belong to the Orthodox Churche: Faith. conservative in regard to whole We Need Both today-many of them in the NEAR and MIDDLE EAST. mos: Prayed to Mary impo:-rant areas of his life, of them in RUSSIA. Our missionaries meet them in countrie~ This, we say, has been generwhether in theory or practice. A few months ago, Mother like SYRIA, JORDAN. LEBANON, TURKEY. GREECE. INDTt ally true up to the present. It ETmOPIA-all through the NEAR and MIDDLE EAST He is liberal only nor', nor' west. has been the American pattern. Mary Elise, superior at the Notre Can we Christians get our "broken family" tQgether aga'in? Pop: Whereas his neighbor Smith, In itS somewhat rough-and- Dame provincial house, gave John intends the up-coming Vatican Council to be a fresb ap· that de-hard conservative, is tumble way it has served fairly Mrs. Russo a Rosary blessed by proach. Our missionaries, most of whom belong to one or an· actnally far more liberal than well to provide an outlet for Pope John and a pamphlet tellotber of the Eastern Rites, are the "natural bridge" by which. Jones in his approach toward polirical steam while containing ing her how to use it. Father please God, the Orthodox and we can be reunited . . . Durin/: countless political and social the heat in the boiler..Trivison, whom the Russos had the CHURCH UNITY OCTAVE, this week. pray fervently fo!' known as an assistant pastor at protJ!ems. We have operated on the conthis Christian "family reunion." Read. think prayerfully, abol" So it bf:'comes, in many cases, their former parish, asked her if curr~nt majority, so that even the prcblems involved. Sacrifice to keep our priests. Brother she would like to learn more a questioll of labels and which now it would be extremely difSisters at work on mission-fronts in the NEAR nnd MIDIY about the Faith and she accepted labd happens to stick. ficult to classify the nation as EAST ••• God willing. we "all may be one" all"ain! several books by Jewish converts riurl Splendid ID.vective dominantly the one or the other. to help prepare the way. It is common practice from Just as well; it is an index still THINGS TO DO 'rODAY Said Sister Regina Rose: "I altime our of mind for liberals and of national vitality and national D WRITE US FOR OUR FREE PAMPHLET. Christ in Christen ways prayed to Our Lady for my. con,:ervatives to dislike each heal.·!l. dom: A Primer of th.e Easte'rn Rites. It's yours for the askin r mother's conversion, and I'm other f.:Jr publicity purposes.' In free-of-charge. And let us keep it that way. sure she was behind it. I've priv~te life they may be bosom D JOIN Tms MISSION AID SOCIETY. The spiritual benefit The day when conservatism friends. but l1s public antagon- ,would finally defeat liberalism prayed for her conversion every you'll receive are innnmerable.. Your "dues" keep priest· day of my life." ists they excel in pouring vitriol in America would be a day of Brothers, Sisters at work In the NEAR and MIDDLE EAST "Dear Monsignor: . on (he ,Hher's head. wrath indeed, only equalled by' If. In the' analysis of your con- the day liberalism would ulti-· ~ Please enroll me as a member. Do Ion lforr D1I«:llll'lty vinc:od conservative the liberal matcly eliminate conservatism. NEW'YORK (NC) - Catholic is a dan~erous fellow, an enemy With all their faults we need Charities of the New York archI Name of society. ap. opponent of God them b o t h . ' diocese raised $3,161,235 in its and mar.; and the charge is 1961 fund appeal, the organiza'Address ••••••••• : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• counter.. a from the other side tion's executive director, Msgr. Doubles Enrollment by morbid reflections on the George Guilfoyle, announced. BUENOS AIRES (NC) -The City .....•••••••••......... Zone City . cons..:lrv";!tive's character, his anANNUAL Memhersh!p D Individual ($11 D Family ($5 tecedents, his motives, and his Catholic University of Santa Maria de los Buenos Aires has PERPETUAL Membership D Individual ($20) D Famil~ ($100 'abiLty to spell. o SEND US YOUR MASS INTENTIONS. The offering you A great part of our political announced that its enrollment make when a missionary priest offers Mass for your intentior literatur!' is devoted to this has' more than doubled in the SHEET METAl, supports bimforone day. ' splendid 'nvective, and there are four academic years since its J. TESER~ Prop. OG,IVE THE MIsSIONS ONE MORE PRIFSl\For 27, a da.'rare geduses who have so ex- foundation. It began with 602 ~ thana smoker pays for 'cigarettes), YOU can help ·educate RESIDENTIAL . ceHil.l i6 it as to raise it to high students in 1958. Present r'egisa young man ·for the priesthood. It costs $8.50 a month, $100 ;>' tration is 1,451. INDUSTRIAL a~t, wherE' ordinary words take year, -$600 ,for the entire six-year course. Write to us. on ,;igniflcances far beyond their COMMERCIAL D REMEMBER THE MISSIONS IN YOUR WILL. Our legal pedc6trian meaning.. 253. Cedar St. New Bedford title: THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIA· ThIS IS the liveliness of politics, WY 3-3222 TION. and Its saving grace is that no one takes this part of it very PLEASE WRITE. IF YOU DON'T WRITB US NOW, YO" Maintenance Suppli.. WON'T WRITE AT AEL.
Nun's Prayers Answered at
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17
1111: ANL'"HOJIt-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jo n. 18, 1-962
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BUFFALO (NC)-A bis'hop from Ecuador said here that if American industrial companies do not give educational and economic aid to Latin American nations these nations may be under Red rule in less than two years. BishOp Juan Maria Riofrio, O.P., of Loja, Ecuador, stressed that U. S. companies making a big profit in Latin America are particularly obligated to furnish such aid. The Dominican Bishop, who is in this country seeking aid "for his impoverished diocese, stated: "These companies have to give immediate aid, otherwise there is a good possibility that Ecuador and other Latin American nations 'will be communist-ruled in less than two years." Need Schools "Communist propaganda is making tremendous inroads with the poor," the Bishop continued. "No longer do they dismiss it. They are starting to believe it. We desperately need schools to train the minds of the young to the danger of communism. We also need schools to give the young proper instruction in agriculture and technical services. "These companies can no longer have a 'promise nothing, do nothing,' philosophy," the Bishop asserted. "Immediate action is needed if the Christian way of life is to be followed in Latin America." Urging that steel manufacturers and other basic industries in the U. S. furnish assistance, Bishop Riofrio added: "Certainly these industries have a share in the welfare of Latin America. If they ever hope to continue to have a free and valuable market .in Latin America, they must make this sacrifice now, before it is too late." The Bishop stated that aid given to Ecuador by the U. S. or any other government should be channeled through organizations that understand the situation, such as the Youth Relief Services of Ecuador.
PreD«lli'e Commends Closed Retreats PROVIDENCE (NC) - The closed retreat was recommended by Bishop Russell J. McVinney of Providence as a means of combatting the influence of atheistic communism and secularism. "We must develop dynamic, apostolic laymen and laywomen whose consuming concern is to share their spiritual riches with others," the Bishop said in a pastoral letter read Sunday at Masses in all churches of the diocese. "We must kindle the fires of zeal within our ranks so that all of us, in charity, seek to conquer the world for Christ." The Bishop said the closed retreat is one of the chief tools of apostolic formation. At the retreats the mind \S enlightened through prayer and the sacraments and even the body is refreshed by rest, wholesome food and the absence distraction, Bishop McVinney said.
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World Lepers' Day PARIS (NC)-The ninth annual World Leprosy Day, devoted to awaking world opinion to the plight of the 15 million sufterers' from Hansen's Disease (leprosy), will be sponsored Sur,day, Jan. 28, by the Cathollcoriomted Order of Char.ity headed by RaoUl Follereau of
I'ruJCe.
MONTREAL (NC) - Paul Emile Cardinal Leger predicted "a transformation" of social life in the next ten years, with leisure time activities such as spectator sports becoming· increasingly important. The Archbishop of Montreal addressed 40 leading Montreal professional and amateur athletes who had gathered to recite the Rosary with the Cardinal and receive his blessing. They included representatives of the Canadiens, Montreal's National Hockey League team; the Alouettes, Montreal's professional football team; baseball, swimming, track and field, harness racing and other athletes. Four-Day Week Cardinal Leger predicted automation and a work week of four ' days will be in effect in ten years. He advised parents to prepare themselves for a sane use of . the extra hours of leisure. He suggested that all should have a hobby and that there be participation in healthy sports. Leisure, he said, should not be confused with laziness, and sane, healthy recreation should provide a solution to a problem which other-
i
wise could become tragic. Noting the presence of Jacques Plante, colorful goal tender, and Claude Provost, top scorer, both of the Canadiens, Cardinal Leger recalled how he often uses Q hockey game to illustrate his talks to children. Goalie "When a child sees me putting on my episcopal vestments, he often asks me why all this paraphernalia," the Cardinal said. "I never fail to reply that they never see Jacques Plante going into the Canadiens nets only in his shirt sleeves. "The bishop is the guardian of the nets for his diocese and like Plante the bishop has to block many pucks. The bishop blocks some of these shots but there are some which get past him. Some of those firing pucks at his net do so through malice, some through distraction," he added. The Cardinal said: "The player who observes the rules of the game is an honest man in life. He who evades the rules is a cheat in life. Continue to love the sport to which you are attached. Guard this vitality and continue to play your part."
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SKETClHI JlN 'UOPHCS': When St. Louis Catholic art instructors decided to do some outdoor sketching in nearzero weather, they were able to keep up with their art and still keep warm. During a visit to the huge plexiglassdomed Clymatron which opened recently in Shaw's Botanical Garden in St. Louis, they sketched palm trees, pineapple plants and other tropical vegetation in balmy 75 degree comfort. NCPhoto.
VILLANOVA (NC)-"Roots of Freedom:, Faith and Knowledge" will be the theme of the 22nd annual Catholic Book Week, Feb. 18 to 24, it w~s announced at Catholic Library Association Headquarters. The annual observance seeks to focus attention on the National Council of Cath"all good books" and to stim- olic M~n, the National Council of . . Catholic Women, and the Naulate readmg. In connectIOn tional Office for Decent Literawith the week, book-kits- ture. including posters, annotated book lists for adults, young adults and children, and book marks-are tstributed throughout the coun-
Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh is honorary national chairman of this year's week. . Bishop Wright
y. Reading Lists Richard Wilt, executive secretary of the Cathotic Library Association, estimated that some 300,000 copies of the reading lists of books recommli:Pded for Catholics would be distributed. The observance is cosponsored with the library association by the Catholic Press Association,
The Bishop, in a Book Week statement, recalled Christ's words that "the· truth shall make you free." He said no instrument· for obtaining knowledge is "more convenient or effective than reading." It is this fact, 'Bishop Wright said, that underlines "the special excellence of books in the spread and the strengthening of the truth that makes and keeps us free."
Nam~ CtQlUeg~
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SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Father Charles W. Neumann, S.M., a native of ,san Antonio, has been named president of St. Mary's University to succeed Father Walter J. Buehler, S.M. The announcement was made by Father James A. Young, S.M., superior of the St. Louis province of the Society of Mary.
I
''The Family That Prays Together' Stays Together" THE
Philanthropist Gives Buses to Dio<t:ese MIAMI (NC)-A fleet of 15 diesel-powered buses of various sizes has been donated to the Diocese of Miami. A gift from David I. McCahill Sr., Catholic philanthropist of Pittsburgh, Pa., the buses were driven to Miami after the Harmony Short Line Bus Co., which was owned by McCahill ceased operations. They are now being readied for service at schools and institutions of the Miami Diocese.
Cardinal's Talk to Sports Figures Mentions Automation and Hockey
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Suggests Abandoned Wife Ask Separ@te, Mciinten~~ce 'By Father John L. Thomas, S. J. Asst. Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University
"My Non-Catholic husband left me and our, four chndren a little over a year ago because I refused to go to work. Although his take-home pay was over $600 a month, his expensive hobby of collecting stamps took all the money. He said he earned it and it commentary' .on contemporary was his.' To keep' peace, I society. tried working but couldn't Offers Suggestions' manage both job and home What does all this add up to?
- I have a kidney infection and Well, Esther, you asked how my last two children died at you might get your husband to birth. When I visit the children or to come qui t working,' back. I think it should be obvihe left to live ous' that in dealing with such a with a woman man you have very little upon who works. He which you c'an rely. . sen d s barely He refuses to talk to you or enough money to see his children, while hi's to support tp.e other actions indicate that he ,is children not likely to be' moved by bui won't visit a'ppeals to decency or virtue. them. How clm Hence I would offer 'the folI get him to lowing suggestions. First, 'you' visit the chilshould see your parish priest dren, who miss about suing for 'separate mainliim so badly, or to just come tenance in order to obtain legal back and start over?" ' protection relating to the ade. Although your letter offers quate and continued support of little 'information about your yourself and children. married life together, Esther, it Such action should not be condoes tell us several significant ducted in a spirit of anger or rethings about the character of the venge, but by marrying you and man you married, having children, your husband In the first place, when a has incurred responsibilities that married man claims that the he is not free to escape. BIRTHDAY VISIT: When Mrs. Charles H. Gore celemoney. he earns is his because brated her 100th birthday last week, it was a red-letter day , Must Face Facts he's the one that earned it, you have a clear indication that this Further, you may as well ba'se in more ways than one. One of her callers was Joseph man simply doesn't understand your own plans for the future on Cardinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis, who spent several the meaning of marriage. the assumption that the present minutes chatting with her before giving her a special birthsituation of separation will perPoint of Justice . day blessing; NC Photo. ' sist. There is nothing to be If the marriage contract means a,nything at all, ·it means that gained by wishful thinking or husband and wife solemnly agree refusing to fact· fa'cts-difficult to share life together-complete- as they may be. Like many other unfortunate ' ly and without reservations. In ':::ontinued from Page One "In the spirit of mutu~l regard' this sense, a married couple can mothers in our society, you must tants and Jews involved iIi social and cooperation, and motivated prepare yourself, to raise your ' no longer sa'y, "mine" or "yours", by the high Biblical tradition of action will participate jointly. children alone'. Should your hus- ' , The statement on cooperation but only '.'ours." ,.., prophetic justice, the American band come to his senses and' re- of the American Jewish 'Commit- Jewish Committee has ex'pressed For personal or cultural 'rea. sons, couples'may follow "arious , turn to his family, so much the tee, as madepubli~ at the Cathits, hopes of cooperating with patter'ns determiriing who shall better; but there is no indication " 6lic gr·oup~s,.meeti~g,~'said: . representatives of' the Catholic be responsible for handling 'toe that he will do so, and it would andProtestan't conunimities 'in family ,income ~ ~usbimd, wife, be a serious mistake to continue programs devoted to a joint ,or both together-yet tilere cim' living from day to day ~~as if" he study of ,the principles of social be nothing arbltrary about ,'the were about to come back. . .Continued from Page One" a~:tiol1 propounded in 'the ency,-, Finally, as you suggestin you'r" '. essential, purposes for which ii' clical, and the specific, practical letter, Esther, it will not be easy,any deciSIons made :were made is used. ' proposals for their implementa-' ,Regardless of who earns it or' to explain this situation to your .'pu':>lic,·since it will be'up to the tioil in the social ord'er. assumes responsibility for han- children. Most children can ac.., council itself to make fbal procept the death of their father nounceme'nts' on the matters Social Teachings dling it, it must be used for the without'serious damage because' under consideration. However, good of the whole family. ' "It' is the hope arid intention ' , 'This point of justice is 'so ob- they can still cherish his memory '. the announcement of the topic of the AmeriCan Jewish Com-' ' ,indicated' that the commission's vious that 'only a person who re- and be proud of him.' Trust 'in God discussions centered on moral mittee to stimulate study and fuses to accept the basic obligadiscussion of, the social teachings practice,s in modern society. tions inherent in the marriage It is quite another matter when' embodiEid .in Mater et Magistra ,The commission's, first series ampng its chapters in major contract could possibly ignore it. 'he deserts the family, for they ' Selfish, Immature are bound to interpret this' as of meetings, from June 12 to 20, citie~. 'throughout the United 'Further, a father who doesn't rejectiori. They then face a dif..,' 1961, discussed the c,oming coun- States." bother to visit hiS'young children ficult emotional problem. Al- cil's organization and procedures The Catholic Social Action demonstrates such a lack of nat- though they are naturally in-" to be followed' at its meetings. Conference also announced plans ural affection and responsibility cliiled to condemn him, they sufThe second series from' Nov. that we must characterize him as' fer a sense of guilt if they d~ 7 to 17 discussed the question of for 'its '1962 convention. The psychically and morally sick. ,children are supposed to love inviting non":Catholicobservers meeting will be held in Pittsburgh at Duquesne University, Regardless of the reasons for and honor their parents. to the council. It also studied a separation, the parental' bond,. Because the situation is evil, new formula for the' profession Aug. 23 to 26. Bishop John J. based: on ,the very nature of there's no real Solution to their of faith, questions on the sources Wright of Pittsburgh will address the convention's closing parenthood; 'remains strong 'in problem, but you can lessen its' 'of Revel~tion and proposals for normal fathers and mothers. evil effects somewhat, by con- a better distribution of priests. dinner. When this' does' not occur; we cealing your normal feellngs of Pope John addressed the openhave a clear sign that the delin- resentment against him, and at' ing and closing sessions, stress9ver 33 Years Experience quent parent was either too sel- least until the children are older ing the spiritual aims of the fish, immature, or irresponsible and more emotionally secure, by 'counctl and the importa'nce of to accept the normal obligations indicating ,that the separation the studies being made by the of marriage. may be temporary. preparatory meeting:? BOTTLED AND BULK GAS Any normal' boy who has You will need a good deal of The present seri.es of meetings GAS APPLIANCES . reach2d puberty can beget a strength to carryon alone under is expected to end next Tuesday. child; it takes a man to be a the, circumstances; - but remem4 Show Rooms to serve you father. ' Hyannis Falmouth' ber, Esther,You can rely on the Lacks Moral Fibre E. Main St. 696 E. Main St. grace of the sacrament to see you Moreover, any married' man through successfully. SP 5-0686 KI 8-1560 ' Paint and Wallpaper, who will desert his wife and Orleans Provincetown God does not abandon' those children to live openly with an- who trust in Him. Route 6 !15 Commercial St. Dupont Paint 585 858 other woman shows that he has -..---.. New Bedford Harwich - 1494 no sense of decency, There is no cor Middle St., moral fibre in his character to 422 Acush, Ave. which one can appeal. To Nohe Dame PARKING He is obviously too self-cenNOTRE DAME (NC) - The tered or spiritually undeveloped Rear of Store to be concerned with what hon_ University of Notre Dame has received a gift of $500,000 from est people may think of him, or' with the scandal he is giving to Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Tavares of the children God has entrusted La Jolla, Calif. Mr. Tavares, a 1927 Notre New England's Playground to his care. "SPECIAL MILK Incidentally, the, fact that he Dame civil engineering graduPlan Your Dance Party can "get away" without losing ate, is president of the Tavares From Our Own Constructing Company, Inc., in his job or being rejected by Fashion Shows and Tested Herd" La Jolla, and is a member of the the community is a distressing university's advisory council for Banquets Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 science and engineering. 1R~~llIgee ~OtuJSUIl'il9l (') Special Milk at Lincoln Park's Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, o Homogenized Vito 0 Milk MELBOURNE (NC)-The Aus- C.S.C., university president, said M~LIUONa[»OU.A~ the' gift is "one of the largest o Buttermilk tralian Society of St. Vincent de Paul is building housing for aged received to date" in Notre !5.AlI.I!.~OOM o Tropicana Orange Juice and ill refugees referred to ,it by Dame's $18,000,000 Challenge o Coffee and ChQc. Milk Call ROLAND GAMACH~ the Federal Catholic Immigra- Program, a nationwide" ·fund(') Eggs - Butter WYman 9-6984 raising effort. ' tio~ COJ;Ilmittee,
Other Faiths Study Encyclical
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Continued from, Page One fective Jan. 1, 1962, treats children as a 'specially susceptible audience' to obscenity," he declared. "Anyone con~icted of obscenity in Illinois can be' fined up to $1,OOQ or imprisoned' up to a year, or both, for the first' offense." , He said the new Criminal Code section says it shall be "an affirmative defense to obscenity if the dissemination was not for gain and was made to personal associates other than children under 18 years of age." lHlighly llmpressionable He added: "From this language it appears any adult who uses obscenity can pass the stuff around to his adult friends but takes a risk of fine and imprisonment if he gives it away to children up to 17 years old. "I believe I speak for many organizations who are fighting to stem the tide of smut when I say we have no interest in what adults read," Howlett said. "But we are deeply concerned in keeping smut and filth away from children, to keep it from being offered freely to them, and in some cases being thrust upon them, in the formative years when their minds are highly impressionable."
Un~ty
Octave
, Continued from Page One well as non-Catholics responded with great enthusiasm," Father Cummings noted. In 1909 Father Paul and the other members of the Society of 'the Atonement were received corporately into the' Catholic Church, and a year later the founder was ordained a Catholic ,priest. He died in 1940. Father Cummings recalled that the Bishops of the United States, England, Ireland, Scotland,' Belgium, France, Poland and Italy have all directed that Unity Octave be observed annu-' ally in all, the dioceses of their countries.. ', In addition, he said, members of the Anglican Church in the . U,S. and England; some Orthodox , and sonie Lutherans also' conduct unity devotions. ," Stressing the 'importance of religious unity, he declared, "The end to be ,attained' is so important and, so necessary that we cannot be satisfied with a week's prayer alone." , "Christian unity must be constantly in our prayers, day after day, week after week" month after month. The world is in a chaotic state. Its only salvation is a r~turn to our Father's house."
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Bristol
·County~·
Bask.etball
In Typical Tight Scramb~e
/Bright Future
]By Jack Kineavy Bristol County basketball appears headed for another hectic season not unlike the 1961 campaign that saw Attleboro, Fairhaven and Durfee share league honors. All three are battling for undisputed final leadership, but New Bedford Yoke came up this Lague in the Apponequet contest year to make it a four way but the rangy center was back struggle for first spot. on duty against Case. Leading scorer in Narry play Tuesday night was Yoke's nemises. Although playing at home, Durfee's Toppers ran the Artisans off the court in a Red and Black victory by 36 points. Fairhaven defeated Coyle 50-43 to remain in the one loss column and Attleboro is listed with the other three with one los s. Durfee, however, is leading by half a game due to an extra win in league play. Player of the week honors go without question to Fairhaven's talented Mike Fitzgerald who posted a 50 point total against Voke and Attleboro. Fitz flipped in 29· to spark the Blue's 52-40 victory over the hitherto undefeated Jewelers. Playing a leading role in Vocational's title quest is Skip Alves who as a sophomore in 1960 paired with Paul Gomes to bring the Artisans their first league crown. Tonight's schedule pits first against second division clubs with Durfee slated to meet rival New Bedford in a non-league tilt. This is a make or break str~tch for the veteran-studded Topper combine which has been beset with key injuries after se tting .a blazing pre-season exhibition pace. Papoula and Ma,::hado saw limited service in Durfee's 63-34 victory over Ta'.mton on Friday and both may be ready to resume starting roles. Narry Leaders Things are not nearly so confusing in Narry pl~y, though the closeness of the games is testimony of the league's middle balance. Case and Holy Family emerged from first half playas the class of the' loop. The New Bedford Parochials, upset by Apponequet a week ago, rebounded on Friday to defeat Case, 64-53, and pull even again in the loss column. The Family. closed out first half play at Somerset on Tuesday with a 57-34 win. Co-captain Charley Palmer who caged 19 against Apponeq:.let in a losing cause came back with 18 to match Al Hughes in the big game against Case. The Wave's alternate floor leader, Richie Frechette, also hit double figures for the week, triggering a combined total of 25. The Parochials were without the services of pivotman Norm
Cel!1lt~rr SUPIPIi<es
And For Homeless Men
NEWARK (NC)-5ome 7;000 hcmeless men have found temporary shelter at the Mt. Carmel Guild Social Service Center here since it was established in 1949. Msgr. John J. Kiley, director, said the center has been able to rehabilitate about 20 per cent of these men. The center, managed by Michael J. Hurley, is self-supporting. It has a fleet of trucks and collects furniture, clothing and bric-a-brac. The material is refurbished and much of it sold to families with low incol)1cs. ,
Si'(J,[J~®llil{hs (;jet D@g~)? M(J,[J$n~ 0[(il$ll'fi'(J,[J€:ll'D(Q)lfi) ST. LOUIS (NC) - Some 225 Catholic grade and high schools here have instituted daily music instructions for all students, following the release of a new "Music Syllabus" for the archdiocesan school system. Students in the elementary grades are required to receive at least 20 minutes of music instruction five days a week. In place of instruction being confined to a few children, it is required that all receive training.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Jon. 18, 1962
I~g'
Flfosh Grad Star
Jeff Riley of New Bedford Ou~ )1@ Cop Eogles Quarterbar:k Be,th Nexft ?@gU By Frank Trond The curtain has been rung down on another football season, and with the many all-star pro clashes now but
during the first half was Prevost's Bernie Petit. The Leafs' veteran forward registered 137 a lingering memory, fans and points in eight games and was players of the grid sport are named to the Record American's . settling back on the sidelines honor .roll list. Petit is a two preparing for the long wait until sports regular at Prevost where Fall, when the pigskin parade he has been the regular catcher resumes. While coaches are being hired for coach Al Tremblay's baseball team for the past couple of years. and fired, now is the time grid enthusiasts begin thinking about Upset Victory Big gun for c'oach Vic Bisson- their team's chances ·for next ette's Apponequet Raiders in season. At Boston College, .with the their upset 51-45 victory over Holy Family was Bob Nelson parting of Coach Ernie Hefferle, with 20 points. The late game rumors of who will mentor the sharpshooting of Cass Santos Eagles next season are running pushed the contest into overtime rampant. Across the nation there is talk and thence to victory. The Lakers then fell victim to Somerset on of young players coming along to varsity ranks from Freshman FrIday when John Burns sank a foul shot with only nine seconds squads, to fill gaps left in elevens by departing Seniors. remaining to give coach Sherm A New Bedford youth who has Kinney's hustling Raiders a designs on filling the quarter37-36 edge. The win was Somerset's fifth straight in league back slot at Boston College in competition after two initial the Fall is Jeffrey E. "Jeff" Riley, who did a fine job of setbacks. masterminding the Eagles' Frosh Showing fine versatility for gridders. Durfee in a backcourt post has Hefferle, an experienced coach been Topper co-captain Don with a fine eye for talent, held Carey. The shift was necessitated Jeff in high regard as.a quarterwhen Barry Machado sustained back. a knee injury in the latter stages in QB Slot of the Attleboro game. The posiThe Whaling City youth, who tion isn't altogether unfamiliar stands 6 feet, 2 inches tall and to Carey who saw service at a weighs a solid 182 pounds,. had a guard slot under former coach creditable season with the young Luke Urban. Eagles. The loss of Jeff Mansfield who Jeff, the son of Mr. and Mrs. injured an ankle in the waning Edward J. Riley of 267 Aquidmoments of the Durfee game was neck Street, started the recent a blow to Coyle High and coach grid campaign by playing deJim Lanagan. Mansfield, togethfense for BC against Brown and er with Dick Brezinski, has Boston Universities. consistently hit in double figures But Jeff was in at starting all season long and his presence quarterback against Harvard and will be sorely missed. The Waralso in two battles with the Holy riors gave a good account of Cross Freshman eleven, giving !1 th':lmselves against Durfee last fine account of himself. week, then came on to beat a IExcellent Passer better than average Dartmouth In the Harvard clash Jeff comteam, 58-5~, on Friday. manded attention by throwing a pair·of touchdown passes. One of the strong-armed· gridder's TD l®~DClrn @~ tosses covered 65 yards and another was good for a distance of ~M[),O@ ~®rPtQ)(ffr 70 yards to paydirt. Jeff couldn't The fifth report of the Legion do wrong against the young of Mary Praesfdium of St. Jo- 'Crimson and 'gained a total of seph's Parish, New Bedford, was 370 yards via his accurate aerials. Then came two games with the made at the regular monthly meeting of the Diocesan Curia. Holy Cross Frosh eleven. Jeff Nine members made 657 visits quarterbacked his team to a under the direction of the Spir- 33-14 win over the Crusaders at itual Director. The Praesidium home, but the BC Frosh lost their last outing of the season, an lists 737 auxiliary members. away game at Holy Cross. Sixteen members of the PraeWhile the New Bedford gridsidium of St. Anne's Parish, Fall der did not connect for' any furRiver, made 400 visits and disther TD passes in the last two tributed 407 religious articles games of the season, he did run and pamphlets. for a tally in the Holy Cross The next Curia meeting is game at Boston, and his passing scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 11. game was highly proised. Business Administration QMedo(QJtl'I? Hefferle, while head coach of SYDNEY (NC) - What is a the Boston College football Nuptial Mass and what is a machine, was high in his praise Requiem Mass? .This question in a final exam for sixth graders in the Catholic schools here in Australia brought one answer which read: "A Nuptial Mass is said for the bride and a Requiem Mass . FARM is said for the groom."
M@flY
JlElFlF RlILEY for Jeff. And Hefferle hinted, on more than one occasion, that his plans for the 1963 campaign called for Jeff to see considerable action. Jeff, who will be 19 on Jan. 26, is a communicant of St. James Church. A '61 graduate of 'New Bedford High School, he was quarterback of NBH elevens for three years. But he was not eligible to play at New Bedford High during his Senior year because of a 10-semester ruling of the Principals Association. The New Bedford gridder, attending BC on a football scholarship is studying business administration. Jeff has considered
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taking up law during his last two years at the Jesuit-operated university. If he stays with business, chances are he'll work with his father's construction firm after graduation. Year Round Practice Besides starring as a footballer, Jeff is no stranger on a basketball court, having played the hoop sport for CYO teams at St. James Church. In 1960 when he averaged better than 18 points a game for his parish five, Jeff was named to a CYO all-star aggregation. An apprentice carpenter, Jeff, who has a 10-year-old brother Daniel, works Summers for his father's construction firm. Jeff is a member of the school which holds the theory "practice makes perfect." He practices his favorite sport - football- year'round. Bright lFuture Rumors have had everyone from former Notre Dame Coach Terry Brennan, to Whistler's mother as the leading candidatea for the Boston College coaching job. Whoever is appointed BC grid mentor will have-including the New Bedford quarterback-some fine talent to manipulate in an attempt to.bring the Eagles their long-awaited "big year." There are many indications that Jeff Riley will, during the next three years at Boston College, make a fine reputation for himself. Much will be heard of the Whaling City quarterback, who appears to be on the treshhold of a great grid career.
D®1Patrtment lnl@U'@ S~OW fCllm<e[l" °low Marn on TCU'®M rJ!>@~@D
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NEW YORK (NC) - The farmer as a recipient of income "is clearly low man on the totem' pole," a professor told the Catholi(' Economic Association at its meeting here. Farmers, as a group, are ;not keeping pace with the increased material prosperity of the non':' farm sector of the population, sain James E. Kenney, professor of economics at Le Moyne College, Syracuse, N. Y. He asserted that "data supplied by the Department of Commerce for the period 1946 to 1960 indicate that the average annual earnings per fulltime employee have consistently been lowest in farming." Key Question "In 1960," he stated, "the average for all industries was $4,705,
while in farming it was $1,555." Kenney, basing his talk on the examination of farm problems in the encyclical "Mater et Magistra," said the key question is the following: "Can we say that the farmer is not getting III fair share of the national income?" Kenney gave no definitive answer to the question, but he did point out the threat to society if the farmer does not get an adequate income. "Farming, particularly that done on the family farm, is a fundamental American institution," he stated, and "low or faIling farm income threatens the extinction of a way of life which should be preserved for the good of the whole nation."
( THOUeS ~~l lOW (OSi HO~ ITll PlAN
Another
DETROIT (NC)-Detroit Un~ versity has announced its fourth tuition increase in five years, a hike to $24 a, credit hour 0~ M more tl~an the present rate. More than 60 fees other than tuition will be dropped, ho:-vever.
"9
Catholic men and women now get low cost hospital insurance from our 83 year old non-profit Society-The Catholic AssociaI:! or. of Foresters (formerly known as the Massachusetts Ca~holic Order of Foresters). Hp.re's an example: for only $205 a month men under 61 ('aT' receive $50 a week while hC'spitalized for. any accident or sickness covered by our \murance. Payments of $100 or 5150 a week are also available. Catholics of advanced age can ,:>" insured at additional cost. You are paid in addition to
of-r.er insurance. You spend the money as you wish-for hosDital bills, doctor bills, or expenses at home. Choose from it wide variety of ulans to bring your present insurance up to date or get complete protection. With hospital costs more than d'll'ble what they were just ten years ago, there is a good cllance you need more insurance. Send for complete information induding details cn our excel:.~{)~ life insurance plans. There is no obligation-so mail the coupon today.
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(Formerly Masachusetts Catholic Order of Foresters) 347 Commonwealth Ave., Boston 15, Mass. Please rush free facts on insurance plans for Catholics:
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TJ:I~ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 18, 1962
.
The Magic· of Information President JohnF. Kennedy has, often been photographed in the act of r~ading his newspapers. He has gained the reputation of being a voracious reader of the daily press. Obviously he has learned that the information gained from reading newspapers is a strong ally. The magic of information is available to you
".11_
01
every week in The An·chor. To stay infor~ed about the: happenings of your parish,' your·' diocese, your count.ry,· read THE ANCHOR.
@rheANCHOR 1.'_ •
•nation of the "Cross An.,. She does this by Milton Lorna; (J case histories, $2.50). Through lb, and Hugh.· dian teen-agers, Ii neglected b,v....iIIIIII. . .~:.: ary school grew up d artyrdomo. :cess 'in thf nd Fa lher J rule over cen ruled. anner Bo' l'ted by 11: Banner child and it. Brothers . de life fur h. •• y West" • miserable by • oJ. ~:)('hlafly; "Mo',,' . gless resi:<ta~'ce the DOl'lors M' recautiOns. Richardson: ~ bolh Am<'rit.. ?d in Bany" :01l/lis $2, linC'd "Ligh wifE.'.
!
at close 9Ull • 11 this is for Us are... pat comfort an'd of hope," the pI! stated, "and precisely for EO purpose of facilitating these ntacts We inslitut,ed some time J the secretari{1t for this spe· t' purpose." e questions oC who will be as observers at the coun· hen the for.' ,1'K
,
has
• ldE.'rs
she Jrant o;l1l1U uvuu ....."w ••• • 'orne, she says, may need to visualize more clearly how various can be the applications of this t.heory"to become more 'widely percep. tive, to t.hink with more imagination about its possible work· ingS in iiI.iII.kiI!~s. h, deing of there· isn't ) gue or ( riends more f the ry reshand Sacred pIe" is ars he ribe of most orid. casual -to-day to the ts that severe f borepriIrii. pIe in uthweet , hat. It'. pirituaI. fe with e Father issuaded ide over ng her a
.Contlnued Iro...
a phe
bU~ion and' sale' of tic•• Fall River Area: JeromE: Foley, President; Albert Petie, Spcretary; Edouard W. LacroiX, Treasurer. • 'Iaunton A~ Fagan, Preside. Trt?asurer. . 'ew Bedford I. ta, Jr" Preside, ien, Treasurer. tleboro Area: Myl. ent; Nando Me. rer. Cod and the Islan. niel F. Sullivan, Prestes C. Brophy, Treasu-
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of the Dubhn
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ish, but will repay the adult reader who has an eye for style. It tells of a woman, taken from ipts are consolidated '.leI Sardinha, Tres... the Irish countryside to live iD the slums, abused for years by Central Council. her husband, finally dying of iii , New Bedford. treatment, and of her valiant efbe purchased forts to care for her children iQ ieties and . oceeds· the midst of corruption. "Patriot's Progress" by Joseph ed C.E. Hopkins (Scribners, $3.95) - -......... - of the American Revolution in the microcosm of a ~"''''''''''huSetts vil1age. A ry and a with a duoa
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..en when . .:ms fo()li~hness Kallsa:< • _ have not yet Diol:(':<t'. progre:<s •••'" lesson. to railr< ,her paSl _ _.A~d the end of an era. Ht'r story is interestingly Catholic Newspapers told by Father Schlafly, t.istorian. To Aid Journalasts and archivist for the Kansas City CHICAGO (NC)-F. A. It'ink, Dio('ese. managing editor of Our Sunday The founding of the famous Mayo Cli.IJ.in .- IA'-IM 'Ii! ¥~cen named to hea.d ill II1II 1iL~ II the Cathohe "Mother. . £II' Mayo." and a combine girls esp. CaptaiJ of "Fat! Navy." I 01. the N
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Joined" (Sheed a factual, count of healthy, • couple to marriageeation-ant need both I The autt able ad-h( spiritual d protect Got highly pers from the vi. and her hus tHng and BE way back t JOve with Go IttJe children should have a No M for no other reason than t.o ·HThe days ;t1way through Christmat phone (in a 1 .. 't down and loe. quick halt '9 \orboy)." ries (. (Brigite Bar, in John's e, .ire are far ~, (Thereafter) .lan that for e• habit to devel. o,'ew gifts last progress tow . so often and fW Vision." .rned to. Not maD' That's a Ilal. C?served for one's thor's hard-heaa..· , books often are. realism and unfailing ~ Golden Readers . insistence on avoiding the near - Two Golden Readers 101 occasions of sin. Clergymen and social science ginning readers are "Syl' workers-and invalidly married the Mouse with the Mus!' couples-will obviously find the by Adelaide Hall and " book of special interest. for a Nickel" by Lt' Claire McAuley writes that "it Published by " Is ·an impossible life we have each is $1. chosen, yet both of us feel truly Sylvesleo' alive for the first time in years." . "with " That is perhaps her finest sen- pt>" tence. Christ-inspired theolon. it is alllO psychologica1J¥ ..... " Jess. , All of whicll "! book has _ third gr" In OUT mov'
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