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Ceremon'y Sunday
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North Easton Receives.Canonical Decree ,
The first ceremony of the canonical establishment of the CCD in a parish ()f the Fall River Diocese will take place at 4:00 Sunday afternoon In· the Immaculate Conception Church, North Easton. Through this establishment the unit of the North Easton Parish becomes automatically affiliated with the Archconfraternity of Christian Doctrine in Rome and members will begin to participate in the spiritual privileges and indul~nces granted by the Sovereign Pontiffs. Seven parishes in the Diocese have received the decree of canonical establishment but the North Easton ceremony is the first planned in the Diocese. The seven parishes granted the decree are: St. Anthony, Mattapoisett; St. Joseph, Taunton; Mt. Carmel, New Bedford; Holy Trinity, West Hal'wich; St. Joseph, Fairhaven, St. James, mew Bedford and St. Patrick, Wareham. The canonical establishment of Confraternity elf Christian Doctrine units is ordered by the Church in Canon 7fl:2 of the Code of Canon
Rev. John J. Casey, pastor, has announced the iolloWi!lg as members of the parish executive board: Rev. John J. Steakem, priest-director; Vincent' P. Wright, president; Francis R. White, vice-president; Grace Mone, secretary-treasurer. The chairmen for the various divisions are: Kathryn Healey and David M. Varella, Jr., teacher group; Ross J. Bridge, fishers; Stephen Nolan, helpers; Richard V. Tino and Joseph E. Freitas, discussion group; Gerald A. Groom and Mary E. Flynn, parent educators; and Fremont Wood, head of the Apostles of good will. Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Director 0'2 the Confraternity, will present each board member with ,his or her Manuel of the Paris Confraternity, of Chistian Doctrine at Sunday's ceremony ! and thus denoting them as members oil the board. Following a sermon on the ,I ConfraternitY', Benediction, of the Blessed Sacrament will close 'the ceremony.
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Over-the~'Top •
Spirit Permeates Taunton Laity I
"Once this school is built and function in g, I am confiQent that everyone who has had.
a part in its l.'ealization will be happy and· proud of ' the success coming from his efforts.
Tbe ANCHOR An Anohor of the Soul, Sur. tmd If'irm-ST. PAUL
Fan River, Mass., Thursday" Jan. 19, 1961 1 3 © V oI. 5, ....l"lIIIO.
1961 The Anchor
PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year
My counsel to you is this: carryon with en thusiasm arid with the confidence that you have a tremendous cause and the sympathi es of the ,people. ,All are anxious that no , stone be left unturned to Cardinal Dedicates give the girls of this area 22nd High School an education complete ill , In Los Angeles every set;lse!' The capacity LOS ANGELES (NC) _ The g·roup of: volunteers for the 22nd high school' built through Greater Taunton Area High the Youth Educlltion' Fund in School heard these words from less than 12 years has been Turn to Page Eighteen dedicated 'by James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles. '. : I Alverno Heights Academy was built at the foot of the Sierra Madre mountains in the City of Sierra Madre. It will accommodate 500.girls. The school is conducted by the Franciscan Sisters of Penance and C h r i s t ian Charity. !;<
Chicago Catholic Schools , S~ving $402 Million,'
Second Class Mail Privilege. Authdrized at Fall River, Mass.
Mother General Visits Holy Union Convents Irish eyes are smiling at Holy Union convents throughout the Diocese these days. Th'ey belong to Very Reverend Mother. Philomena, S.U~S.C.; Mother General of the worldspanning communi,ty, who is in Fall River on an informal visit to area schools and con- Philomena. Both religious are Tents. With the softspoken statione(i at the' community's Irish religious is Mother 'motherhouse in Rome. Anne Joseph, native of St. Cradle of the Religious of the lacques parish, Taunton, who Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts has for the last two years been !s Douai, France, but headquarAmerican Assistant, to Mother Turn to Page Eighteen
VISITOR FROM ROME: Very Rev. Mother Philomena, studies Fund-raising campaign brochure for new BRA addition in the presence of Mother Anne Joseph, 2.U.S.C., American assistant to Mother General in Rome, ~nter, and Sister Mary Laurette, S.U.S.COjI superior at it. Helena's Convent, Fall RiveJf. ~.U.S.C.,
CHICAGO (NC) - If the 332,117 pupils in Chicago
KNIGHT:
Atty,' Charles
E. Cunningham 'of Chestnut Hill and 'a Summer' parishioner of: Our Lady ~~ Victory Parish, Centerville, was invested as a Knight of Malta Monday in St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York.
U'ge Active Role In Family Life For Elderly, WASHINGTON (NC) The aging person should be encouraged to take an active part in family. and congregational life and not be treated I:lS an outcast. This was a key point in a 1,200-word policy statement submitted to the White House Con-' ference on Aging by its religious section. The statement's preamble said that "the meaning of life is to be found solely in man's relationship to God." Any attitude hindering ,the right of the aging person "to responsible membership within the religious fellowship . . • must be regarded as a contradiction to religious teaching," the statement asserted. It pointed out that both the family and congregation have a direct responsibility to provide special services, educational ma~ terials and programs for the aging. But "every effort should be made to see that these do not involve an unnecessary separation from the main stream oj( familial or congregational lifep'" the statement stressed. TUB to Page Eighteem
archdiocesan schools-' the' nation's largest p r i vat e school syste,m - were transferred to, public schools, taxpayers here would have to put out $402.5 million more each year to pay for their education. This estimate was' released here by Msgr. William E. McManus, archdiocesan superintendent of schools., The figure was contained in his report to a Turn to Page Eighteen
APPOINTED: Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, assistant at St. Thomas More Parish. Somerset, has been appointed by the Most Reverend. Bishop as Acting Diocesall Superintendent of Schools.
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THE ANCHOR-,Diocese of
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Amer~can Nun Works forChu[j'~~
.. Explains
Inaugural Prayer
N ear .MaJ· or Red Propaganda· Mi~~
The followfngprayer, composed in the late 18th century by Bishop John Carroll, first Bishop of
Ca~tro'l
·Ma.ss Appeal
SA~T FRANCISCO (NC)-Al- Latin America, especially ArCLEVELAND (NC) most within hailing distance o~ gentina'and Brazil. The, em,Baltimore and the American h~erarchy, will be Cuba's Fidel Castro probably one of Soviet Russia's prime bassy receives aqout 65,000 recited by Richard Cardinal Cushing as the invoca. will be around for a long propaganda mills for Latin pounds of mail every month tion at tomorrow's presidential inauguration in time, John F. Parr, dean ot. America an American nun is from Moscow." Washington: ' working' to stem the Red tide. Mother McGloin said Monte~ foreign service school at Her weapon: Christian educa- video can count on seven or We pray Thee, 0 God of might, wisdom, and Georgetown University, WalDo tion.. eight general strikes a year "injustice, through whom authority is rightly adminington, D. C., said here. Mother Genevieve McGloin is spired by the Reds." istered, laws are enacted, .and judgment decreed, Dean Parr at a First Frid~ president of two-year-old Carassist with Thy holy spirit of counsel and fortitude, Club luncheon cited several rearasco College of the Sacred the President of the United States, that his ad.minissons why Castro has such maa Heart in Montevideo, Ur'uguay. appeal. He mentioned the Castro It is the only Catholic women's tration may be conducted- in righteousness, and be. program of building schoo. college in that country and the Rev. Reginald M. Barrette, eminently useful to Thy people over whom he where there had been none befirst patterned on North Ameriassistant at St. Roch's Church, presides; by encouraging due respect for virtue and fore; opening the beaches to the can lines. The college is con- Fall River, celebrated a Solemn religion; by a faithful- execution of the laws in poor; new parks, and replaciDtr ducted by the Religious of the Funeral Mass Tuesday morning mud huts with real housing. ' J•ustice and mercy·,' and by restraining vice and S acred H ea. rt in St. Louis of France Church, In pointing to Cuba, Mr. Pal'!' The classes are conducted in Swansea, for his father, Zenon 'immorality. cautioned that the U.S. must be English. '''Some fairiilies aren't D. Barrette, who died Friday. Let the light of Thy divine wisdom direct the careful that its aid programs 18 interested in Christian atmosAssisting Father Barrette were deliberations of Congress, and shine forth in all the Latin America are not tailore4 phere, 'but' they want ·their ,Rev. Ernest E. Blais, Swansea, PTOGeedings and laws framed for our rule and govto benefit American business indaughters to learn· English," she deacon, and Rev. Albert - - < H . t e r e s t s at the expense of' the ex,plained. , Brindamour of Woonsocket, sUb_ernment, so that they may tend to the preservation people there. Mother, McGloin describes . deacon. of peace, the promotion of national happiness, the . Mind Jls Dlfferilnt Carrasco as "an attempt 'to im;. Most Rev. James' J. Gerrard, ; increase of industry,' sobriety, and useful knowlHe said the mind of Latins, J!l plant' Christian principles and D.D.,V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of edge; 'and may perpetuate to us th.e blessing of South AMerica is different thaa , culture in the future mothers" the pioc~se, presided. qhaplains .'the PeQple 'of' the U.S., especlof a nation heavily penetrated to the Bishop were Rev. Augusto :. equal liberty. 'ally in matters of governmem. by many y'ears of Secularism in L. Furtado, St. 'Jonnof God, .' We pray for .his Excellency, the Governor of . He added they realize that a nagovernment and the-press. Somerset, and .. Rev.· Joseph R. this State;'for the members of the Assembly, for tion can make progress evell Given this friendly climate in Pannoni, Holy Rosary, Fall all judges, magistrates, and other officers who are under bad government. which to take root, communism River. ' 1'· I weIfare, that th ey "In Brazil the'" have a sayi. appointed to guard our po Ibca looms large in the Uruguayan Rt. Rev. Alfred J. E. Bonneau, that the nation , grows at night. picture, .she added.. Notre Dame Parish, Fall River, may be enabled, by Thy powerful' protection, to while the politicians sleep," :N& "The party is ~fficially recog:and Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeidis~harge the duties ~ o~ their respective stations, Parr·said. nized, but Jllore than that the' ros, Diocesan Chancellor and _ ,with honesty and, ability. . The speaker said that in relaSoviet embassy is .the busiest pastor of 51. Michael's Church, 'We recommend. likewise to' Thy unbounded ,tions with South American naand most' hea'vily staffed of any Fall River, were present with a , .,tions the ,U.S. shoUld remember In Montevideo. It has some 70. large group of Diocesan priestS' 'mercy' all our brethren . and felIow:',citizEms through,. that along with 25 million Spanemployees, where most embas-:. 'and religious. ' , out .the United States, that they may be blessed in illh and Portuguese, .there sies have' four or five," she said. In addition to Father Barrette, ,th~ knowiedgeand' sanctified.' in the observance of millions of natives and Indians. ., "Aild 'it's pretty well' known Mr. Bar(!tte is survive'd 'by"four th h b d . ,most of whom are illiterate and as the he'adquarters for dissem- .' other sons, one of them Brc>ther . 'Thy most holy law;' at t ey may~ e preserve In rt idd Inatioi'!' of Red propaganda in, Dacien, F.I.C:, head of tti,e·Busf.:"· union, and in that ~ace which the "world Cannot ,PO;~ "~:;lar::'th~t 'U.S. aid. , ,.. , ness Administra'tion Department' give; and after' enjoying theble~singl:!'.of this life, ' those" countries, should be in the "of Walsh College;' CantO!}, Ohio;' be' a4mitted ~ those whicl}. are ete~aL . Amen. . .area of elemeiltary reform, such (. ". " and four ,'daughters:' . , 8fI better housing, basic school8,
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Fr. R. • Ba rrette Sings Requiem
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First N'u n Joins
N~w C~mn:-'.Inity Unusua' 1M' CI b ' farm programs.'. . ,HIGPANUM (NC~-The first. en s u ", . , . H e added, however, that such . member of the newly founded Receives, U.S. Grant' .·;"Medical· Mission Sister. Cites aie! is most difficult to get from religious congregation professed MONTCLAIR (NC)-An un~Id f I d. . P I Congress which is willing • her temporary vows at cere- usual club operating under the Great l"'IIIIee son Ian eop e give military help to keep out
monies here in Connecticut. auspic of St V· t' H communists; technical aid f_ . es ' . mcen ~ osMIAMI (NC) - A U. S. mis- with other ~embers of her fam- industrialization-but not the Bishop Vincent :J. Hines of pltal here has been given a -, sionary nun visiting home after ily. She became interested in the kind that the masses can see aDd Norwich presided as Sister Mary $23~,900 research g~ant by the . 13 years' service in India said foreign missions largely through readily appreciate. Louis (Mangine) pronounced NatlOn~1 ~eart .InstItute. here that the need'of the Indian the influence of a great-uncle. her vows in the Congregation of T~e mstitut,e IS an arm· of the people is "so great that one doea, who was a Presbyterian mission-. Our Lady Help of the Clergy. National Institutes of Health, a not count the years." ary physician and who spent The congregation was founded federal agency. Its grant has S· te J F H to most of his life in central India., · been awarded to St. Vincent's", IS r ane ranees ea. n . . . by Fath er N orman J . St . Ma rt In, A C' C ' Cl b . should. know. She and other, She IS here to VISIt her mother, , ;'~-e o~~~aris co~~osed of' 80 'm'embers of the Medical Mission Mrs. Gertrude H.eaton, and her Norwich Dioc~s~ pas.tor., Present at the ceremony was betW' th . f"O' 'd' "Sisters serve some of India~s brother Samuel, who are mem- Mother Marie de Jesus Hostie, ~en h :en sufeales dO A an neediest at the hospital they run .' bers of St. 'Timothy church. She.' 'Superior General of the Ser- mor: °h avte tta ,::e IOtne or in Patna in northeast India. will retUm.- to India 'in six .. ~ tes d N tr Dame R I'n du ear a c s.. . was ' months . ven . e., 0 e ,ee . started' in 1959, and has been Sister' Jane Frances 'conducts • Ctefge, of Quebec, the congreh :-.... CHARlES F. YARG.AS . supported by a grant-in-aid from the hospital pharmacy, were a .gation w'~th which Sister, .M~1'7 the 'New' 0 Jersey State Depart:' ' typical day includes calls for" 214' ROCKDAU AVENUI Louis t~k' her training. . ment· of Health. medicine for patients suffering' NEW BEDfOID. MASS. "~:1OO_ from tuberculosis, malaria, chol';' NONE TOO, SMAIl fever, tetanusOlr FRII?A ~~. Fabian, Pope and Sebastian, Martyrs. III Clal!s.. The" , hospital serves. people Fr. D. ~v'idJ;. Fleming," 6.F.M:, Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no ' '~ithih '8 radius Of 50 miles, and ' Rector of Our' Lady's Chapel' In Creed; Common Preface. some patients come-from even PRINTERS New Bedford announces that the farther away, acco'rding to Sister date for the dedication' of the SATURDAY-St. Agnes, Virgin Jane Frances. new Chapel and Monastery will and' Martyr. III Class. Red. . She said the hospital is en- . be 'on ~unday afternoon, Feb. 5, Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; tirelY dependent on gifts for at 3'· o'clock. Common Preface. antibiotics and . large quantities The Most Reverend James L. of vitamins. Arii-ong the most ............. t-.-e . Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall SUNDAY-III Sun day Aft~r generous donors has' been Dr.' River will preside and 'bless the Epiphany. H Class. Green. William" C.' Caccainaise of Ro• .." Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; ~hester, N.Y. He has also made'· new Chapel, and the Very :RevPreface of Trinity: erend Celsus R. Wheeler, O.F.M., . ' . , . two ,three-month visits to the ', .. IOIlON Minister Provin~~l ~ill pre~ch-, ,'MOND,(\Y-St. Raymond" of Pen- . hospitat'to treat eye' d'iseases in' . , . the ermon. . , , . nafort, Cpnfessor. III Class. which he, specializes. . OCEANPORT, N. J. White.. lV;IassProper; Gloria;', Catholic Relief Service-.:.-Na-. PAWTUCKEt', I.L Second Collect Sf. Emeren- tionaf ,C,lltholic Welfare ~onftlr~ Legion of D~cency thma, Virgin and Martyr; ~o ence supplies medicines and .inUnobjectionable for adults: Creed; Common Preface. f,ant ," app'arel ·to.· the 'hospital. French Mistress. " UNES,CO has equipped ~the Condemned: Girl in Room 13 TUESDAY-St. Timothy, Bishop schoolof nursing attached to the and Martyr. HI Class. Red. hospital. ONE FOLD, ONE SHEPHERD (low mor-al tone, highly indeSister Jane Frances, a native Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; cent costuming, dancing and sitCommon Preface. 'of Akron, Ohio, entered the uations) . SERVICES ] 2:05 DAILY . I WEDNESDAY - Conversion of Church at, the age of nine along St. Paul, Apostle. III ·Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Gets Federal Loan FORTY HOURS Second Collect (under one WASHINGTON (HC) - St. conclusion) St. Peter, Apostle; Edward's University, Austin, DEVOTION no Creed; Preface of Apostles. Texas, ~as been loaned $800,000. :Jan.22--0ur Lady of Mount Carmel, New Bedfol'li. . THURSDAY St. Polycarp, by the Federal government to St. Patrick, Wareham. Bishop and Martyr. III Class. aid in financing construction of housing for 62 faculty members :Jan.29-St. Anthony, TaunRed. Mass Proper; Gloria;_DO and dining facllitie. for .75 ton. Creed; Common Preface. ,students. Sacred Heart, Fall River. J'eb. ~Holy N ame,'New Necrology Bedford. ':'::'lIE ANCHOR lists the u. itO St. .Joseph, Fall River. IIIversar7 da&eli 01 'iWiesie who J'esus Mary Convent, Fall llel'Vecl the Pall River DIoclese River. aiDee its tonaatlOD ill 1101 Feb. Io-La SaJette Semin81'7, wiUt Ute m&eDtioD tba& &be Est. 1897 Attleboro. 'aiD-1u1 wiD dve them •
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JAN. 18 .
Rev. Roland :J. Masse, 1952, Assistant, Noke Dame, Fall Biver•
Builden Supplies
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Wednesday, JanuarY 25
St. Mary's, Cathedral .
FaIlRiver
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,TtfE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 19, 1961
Cardirl'al Salutes·' Press for Credit On Integration
Urges ,Prayers T@ Hait Sp!l'ead
ROME (NC) - JQseph Cardinal Ritter has started that he integrated schools in his archdiocese "simply to provide our people with what is their right in the sight of' God." ' The Archbishop of St. Louig sPoke in a television interview destined for "my fellow Sl Louisians." He gave it shortly before his elevation to the Sacred College of Cardinals. Cardinal Ritter was asked to state his views on integration, which he had pioneered in his own archdiocese in 1947. "In the problem of integration my role has been simply that of a bishop concerned with the spiritual welfare of his flock," he said. SI~bt of God "If I have done anything to further integration, it has not been done particularly to promote integration from a civil rights standpoint, but simply to provide our people with what is their right in the sight of God. ~'The principle of integration Is certainly in keeping with the precepts of Christ." Cardinal Ritter, who has gained wide attention· in Europe as a champion of racial justice; continued: : 'Wholesome Effect "It' has just' so happened; I think j ,that I made some contrlbution,as'a churchman to the·so;.. lution of· this problem, in inte-' grating OUI' Catholic schools. The" reaction to this in the, way of protest 'was, rather limited; 'but in the' long run it had a whole,;,' 'sOme . effect rather than an ad-·· verse one. It inspired others' to ' follow suit and provoked, I' think" general approvaL" Cal'dinal Ritter told how a British bishop from Africa 'vis:ited him in St. Louis 'and recounted the integration' problems in his own diocese. The prelate from Africa said they do what they can but that often they have to go along with the government and as a result are often criticized. , Great Impact But he~ also' told the' Archbishop of St. Louis t~at the integration of schools in St. Louis had a great impact in his own Afl'Jean 'diocese. . Cardinal Ritter credited the press for the impact his actions had outside the Archdiocese of St. 'Louis.' He f1rldresse~ the St. Louis television audience. "I have left very dea\" friends blickhome' to eome to Rome for this occasion'. and I w\int them to ,know what I think of them," he said. "I hope I may represent them' wE;Uhe re." , Heconclu<Ied the interview, by imparting his, blessing' in ' English to the television audience.
O~ C~mmunism NE,'N ORLEANS (NC)A bishop from Mexico advocated intercession to Our Lady of Prompt Succor 00
'CATHOLIC EDUCATION MEANS EVERYTHING': Dick Griffin of Tulsa, Okla..
a middle-inco,me pipeline employee, pays, ou t $540 a year 'to send five young Griffins to Catholic elementary and high schools; "Catholic education for the children means everything to Dick aI1d me," says Mrs. Griffin... ~ only pray that we can continue." Children's ages range f,rom 15 years to five months. NC Photo.
Parents Have Right To Choose Education COLUMBUS (NC) - A priest who: is a law school dean has calI~d upon the American Civil Liberties Union to come forward with a "satisfactory declaration bn. t~e m~~nin~ and place ,?f the parental right to educate. ' ': Father Rob!=!rt. Drinan; "S.J.. 'deal1 of t/le Boston College law !!chopl, in an address lit tl1e Catholic Men's Luncheon Club's annual awards banquet here, pointed out that: "Ametica has ,developed a blind spot on the parental right ~ to educate," the Jesuit said. "A just zeal on the part of many highminded citi~ens to preserve our cherished separation of Church and Sta~e has pr?du?ed .a v~st de-emR~asls on an I~shtuhon Just as precIOus ~the l'lght of parents to select for their children a type of education conformable to their c~nscience" . Uneasiness , ''The fact that Catholic parents' frbm'their own resources pay 'for almost 'o'ne-fifth' of the· entire' education bill' ,of this', state should theoretically bring jo~ to the Uirifty taxpayer but more and more one finds uneasiness'on' the part of non-CatholIcs about
Marriage Means Romance End 'CINCINNATI (NC)-Romance ends where marriage begins, a psychologist said 8,t the, Xavier University family life, institute here. " Dr. Vytautas J. Bieliauskas, who heads the university's psychology department,- declared: "When two people decide ,to complete their' romance and enter into marriage, they admit through their action that they have found' the 'treasure -and ttl'at the search'is over.'! ' ' Two qualities distinguish love, from romanticism-"a realistic outlook, and tolerance of the other individual and his imperfections," Dr. Bieliauskas ,said.
Swansea KC Sets French Program rAtty. J. Edward Lajoie and ,·1 Charles E. Sevigny will speak at French nationality night Monday, Jan. 23 at Bishop Cassidy Council Knights' of Columbus, meeting at the Council Home, Swansea. French-Canadian foods and entertinment will highlight the evening's program. The council's annual blood donation program will be held Friday, March 3. The unit's n~wspaper, suspended for two VICE PRESIDENT: One years, wilt be 'reissued, beginof 1 the fil"st laymen in the ning in February. Sports activities, include D oo\:mtry to become a vice' president of a university ad- shuffleboard league a,nd a pingpong' tournament.
minIstered by a religious organization, William D. Fissinger of St. Louis, has, been named vice president of Jesuit-operated John Carroll University in Cleveland. NC Photo.
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PONCE (NC)-The School of Law at the Catholic University of: Puerto Rico here will accept its first students next August, Father Thomas Stanley, university ,rector, has, announced.
the financial status of Catholic schools" 'Father Drinan said. "A n ~ fair - minded person 'should ponder deeply before he states that there is nothing wrong w!th the ~ducat!onal setup of thIS state In which Catholic parents pay almost one-fifth of the state's educational bill," he said. Prior Right Father ,Drinan, who has been admitted to practice before the ,U.S. Supreme Court, pointed out ~hat "the United States signed the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 26 of which states: 'parents shall have a prior right to choose the kind
Name Rickover Awa rdWinner
of education that shall be given
to their children.'"
I 'There ~re many groups illl this co,untry working for constitutionallibe,rties and civil righ~. t re.spe?tively request ~hese 01'-' gamzahons, and especlalIy, the, largest of all of them, the,Amer~an ,CiVil' LiQerties Union, to t:<>me forward with a satisfactory ~ecl~ration on' the meaning and place of the ,parental right to educate. The parent's right to obtain, the' type ·of eaucation he desires for -his children is a right which has been' tragically, overlooked in American life," be said. Right to Choose The U. S. Supreme, Court decided unanimously years ago "that parents have a right to choose the type of education they desire for their children" he said.'
NOTRE DAME (NC) Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, "The parental right to educate father of the nuclear submarine, bas become the ~inderella of all has been named recipient of the ., basic American liberties in an eighth annual Patriotism Award era dedicated, as never before of the University of Notre to the 'implementation of aU Dame's senior class. rights," he said. ' Adm. Rickover will accept the award and deliver the major address at Notre Dame's tradition-" Be'rtrand', L. Letendre will al Washington's Birthday Exer- serve as chief ranger' of St. ciRes in the University Drill Hall ·.Anne's 'Court, <:::athoiic Order on Feb. 22, ' ,~f Foresters, Fall River, for the President Kennedy was the ~oming y~ar. Louis J. B. Deswinner of the Notre Dame sen- ,rosiers will' be vice 'chief raniors' aw~rd in 1957 and Vice gel'; Ernest Caron, financial Presid~nt Nixon was similarly secretary; Bernard G. Theroux. honored at a, campus convoca- recording secretary; Albert J. tion last year". 'Other winners Therous, treasurer. Next reghave included 'FBI Director J. ular meeting .is set for 8 MonEdgar Hoover,Bishop Fulton J. day' evening, ,feb. 13 at St. Sheen, Gim', Curtis E. LeMay, Anne's, 'school. Attorney General '- . designate Robert Kennedy and space scientist Wernher von Braun., The recipi~nt is, chosen· in, balloting, by the senior class. ' by
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halt the spread of communism in the world. Bishop Alonso Escalante, M,M.. national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in Mexico, preached the sermon at the 150th anniversary celebration of the arrival here from France of a statue of Our Lady of Prompt Succor. The three ecclesiastical Sees of, Louisiana participated in the celebration. Auxiliary Bishop L. Abel Caillouet of New Orleans offered Solemn Pontifical Mass in the national shrine of Our Lady of Prompt Succor,· where the statue is enshrined on the grounds of the Ursuline convent. Prayers for Victory , This is the statue before which women of New Orleans and the Ursuline nuns offered prayers throughout the night for victory of the U,S. forces under Gen. Andrew Jackson at , the battle of New Orleans, Jan. 8,18J5. Louisiana was dedicated to the Ble'ssed Virgin as patroness ~nder the title of Our LadT of Prompt Succor. _In his sermon, Bishop Escalante recalled it was through the intercession of Our Lady of Prompt Succor that the Ursuline 'nun~ 'were able to come from France to New Orlea~ to work for the good of the cit,. and the state. The pre~ate also recalIed that in 1812 a fire ravaged the cit,.. He'said that an Ursuline placed a small' statue of Our Lady of Succor at a window of the Ursuline convent and prayed that the convent be spared. The flames died out before reaching the convent, he said.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 19, 1961
Cardinal Lercaro Ac(:ents Spirit~al_ In Social Work
@.~ :Blessed- Margu~irifi!~;" Show~, ir~cds ~f Sainthood -" By M.ost. Rev. Robert J: Dwyer, D.D.
life
BOLOGNA (N.c) - Gia.como Cardinal Lercaro has called for heavier emphasia on the spiritual elements in
Bishop of Reno
In theory it is not too difficult to accept· divine chastisement as a mark 'of predilection. It is the personal application of the princIpal which causes' complaint. St. Teresa's celebrated ripostS'-to Our Lord that it was a very good reaSOn why He has so' And the, little Indian girls were few friends may be apocry- off in the forest, plaiting scalps. phal, though it is hardly out Indomitable, she set up The of character with her vig- Cross atop the Royal Mountain,
.social service. Cardinal Lercaro said there b • "very positive and practic:al need for developing to a greater degree the spiritual elements of the problem of social service work along with tbe technie&1 ,elements." Cardinal Lercaro also said the ""Christian priesthood" should' be understood in its broadest sense. including not only the hierarchical priesthood but also the gen-· eral priesthood of the faithful. "The eternal fate of every mali. will depend on whether or not he has recognized the Son of God in the hungry, in the thirsty, ill the pilgrim, in the sick and iD 'the prisoner," he said. "And it is, precisely this that establisha the eminent dignity-not sociologically but spiritually-of !be poor within the Church."
orous realism. Certainly the life fitted up a barn for her school, of the Blessed Marguerite Bour- and did what she could until geoys, foundress of the great the pupils began to multiply. Canadian comFour years later results were munity of the showing. Sisters of the Dream Takes Shape Congregation, is The work, she saw, needed to an illustration be put on a firmer basis. She of the trials of did not want a formai communYOUNG ADULTS: Members of Catholic Young Adult sainthood. Her ity of nuns, but an association of Organization from Fall River and New Bedford meet at name matches Vlomen dedicated like herSelf. her origins, a Back to France she went, the banquet of Fall Rivei' group. Left to right, George O'Brien, cheerful, profirst of many voyages, and gainFall River president; Leo Brunelle, New Bedford president; lific bourgeois ed a few recruits. family of TroyOn her return she bearded the William Connelly, Fall River, master of ceremonies; John eli in the plains lion in his den and gained the Medeiros, Fall River vice president. ot Champagne., approbation of ~ that great and There she was born on April 17, difficult man, Laval de Mont1620, and there she grew up lUI merency, Bishop of Quebec, who much of a hoyden as it is per- saw her worth. He would have missible to imagine a French preferred, of course, that she bemaiden of the 17th century. come one of his Ursulines,' but WASHINGTON (NC) - Renewed efforts are being She was emphatically not a she stood firm. made to, arouse Americans to the danger. of communism. "1>igotte," a term which hardly In Montreal her dream !<!ok • '~Commu:Q.ist power has grown on the home front, well , needs translations; her piety was shape, with the convent, the as in foreign lands," the House, of Representatives Comonce more robust and robus- sc6001, the chapel, the most con- mitte,e on Un-American A c - ' , tious.. ,She' bossed the "jeunes spicuous buildings of the frontthe civilian government and pop-' filles" of her acquaintance, and ier village. By 1676 the commun- tivities says in -its annual ulation that must bear the major might well have become one of· ity had obtained 'some canonical revo~~ for 1960. The 'cold part of' the burden of waging, the outstanding and rather ter-'stariding as "Les Fi~les. secu-,. war 1S 15 years old and we both defensive and offensive op-' rifying matriarchs of which Heres de la Congregati.on de', have not yet devel~ped a pro- erations against' the attacks of' France ha's produced more than 'Notre Dame," and she could gram to win it, Senator T!lomall the enemy." her share: ,think of establishing daughter, J ' Dodd of Connec;ticut has Become 'Bigotte' houses for e~tended ,miSsionary " '~arned!, ... Closing ilion, U. S. Her conversion she attributed work. ' . '. ~ "Tell' the coimtrj' the stark Senator' Dodd, who advocates'" '(e a,rlce lOU can really aDor4/) .... Iook gIven . h er b y a 9 t a t ue Ch as t·.semen ts C orne Mol a unvarnished truth about the na-' establishment of a Freedom'" , of the Virgin over the' 'Portal Then came the chastisements tional emergency" created by Academy to learn all, aspects of' • ' In unreIen t'mg succeSSIOn. . L ava, I ' of S t. Jacques. aggressive Soviet communism, the communist conspiracy, to",1 "I saw her very lovely, and fllvoring his Ursulines, forbade a National Planning Association develop 'scientific counteraction at once I found myself totally her to receive native vocations; committee has urged. against it and to train Ameri· changed, so touched that I hard- her community itself was wrackWarnings have been issued cans and ,nationals of free 1)' knew myself. I was rather ed by dissensions; and on a bit- that demonstrations and protests et:Iuntries in the science of "total light-headed, the ringleader of ter December night in 1685 the staged against the Federal Bur- political warfare," says the comthe girls, but from that moment ~o~her house went up in flames, eau of Investigation, the Cen- munists have a top level poliI left all that behind, gave up the killIng her most devoted com- tral Intelligence Agency and the tical 'warfare center in Moscow · ""'orId and gave myself to God." panions. House Un-American Activities and intermediate training places · She says that she became a Back to the stable she wen~ Committee would weaken our elsewhere. He says one school "bigotte," though we would still adamant against the Bis- defense against Communism if in ;Prague. has become a principrefer to think 'that she lacked hop's' urgings that she throw in successful. ' p a l center for 'training commuthe vocabulary'to describe what her lot with the Ursulines. No~ Weapons Not Enough nists for Latin America. am fUIICf Iiii PILGRIMAGE PROGRAII really happened. . . did matters im~~ove when Bis'The Communist Party has The Chinese' communists have" ·IIICLUDEULLMAUlRCATHOLlCSHRIIIES.... Neither the Carmelites Ytor hop de St. Vallier replaced La- not only recruited additional established "a parallel system' : lnR'lllfR£.II THE WORLDI the Poor Clares would have her; v~l. ' members but many unwitting' of political warfare training'" V18It Rome. Fatima, Lourdea, she was perhaps too healthy, too ,For four yea~s .she ~as ~ound- assistants," the Un-Amer'ican Ac- eenters for Latin America," he' Liaieux. See the famous PAIsIOM noisey, for their quiet retreats. ell by f.alse YlsIOnarieS In her ti"itieli Cominittee report re- warns.· .. ;. PLAY at Il.rt. Visit A!l5isi, home Centuries in advance of her time, community, strange women who veals. "The number of Ameri. th' S I " of St. Francis. See Notre Dame, she thought of something like begUiled e slmp,le u pician, cans who turn. out today ·Three .Year Study" " Sacre Coeur in Paris. Tour what we know as a "secular chaplains, ~hile th.e Bishop re- in support of an organization Institute," a community "without fused ~o mtervene. Only the whose .aim, in' effect, is to strip WASHINGTON (NC) - Dun-, pilgrimage centers in England, cloister, veil or' gimp," but sound Judgment of. M. Tronson, the United States of its most barton College has been awarded' Irdand and Germany. Visittb. · though her confessor approved superior of. the Sulpicians and powerful deterrent military w.ea- $13,500 from the National SciHoly Land. Spend Easter ,she could find none to share her her loyal friend, saved the Con- pon is 'highly disturbing." en~ Foundation for a three-year Jerusalem, Christmas in Beth]. enthusiasm. So she calmed dOwn gregation from ruin, He simply The number who at commu- research project in chemistry by hem. All pilgrimages under the and decided that at least she replaced his priests. . nist instigation, hav~ resorted to Sister Mary Ellen Dolores, a propersonal leadership and spiritual d'Irectlon ' 0 f Chi' . 1 e<lU Id t eac h sc h 00. Iron In Blood violence in an effort to' prevent fessor of chemistry at the womat 0 IC Priests. en's college operated by Holy i i Sees Miss on Vision In 1693, when she was n her a committee of Congress from Air Franceolferspilgrimages from ' Cross Siste~s. I '70s, St. VallIer It was at this point that Pau, fimilly approved conducting its proper business 8 to 54 days' duration with pricea de Chamedy, Sieur de Maison- . all election for the community, Is equally disturbing. Such enitarting at only $625 complete ncuve, governor of Ville-Marie with the result that she was rel- emy forces--for they are all from New York, You get Air de Montreal, in far-off Canada, egated to lowest place. That did that, whether they realize it or . FranceJet Economy Cla!l5 roundvisited Troyes ,and met her. not . 'matter, .but when he went not-cannot ,be defeated with trip transportation from New Promptly he fired her with the further and Insisted .that the Sis- military weapons." . .. . York, hotd accommodations, all . . f a mISSion vIsion 0 awa I' bng h'er t ers become 'a regu Iar Iy conIndividual Effort ' across the ocean, of the children stituted., cl?istered ~odY, she The Congressional Committee Sam. J. LaGasse, Manager meals; sightseeing-even tip.. of the French colonists growing could sbll flg~t and,.dl,d.... s:iys events last year "have pro1872 ACUSHNET AVE. Several convenient departurea up iQ ignorance, of little Indian It was a compromls.e thiS time, vided convincing evidence that between March 22 and Decemgirls yearning for the faith. but at least .~omethIn~ o~ he~ the American people cannot rely near Brooklawn Park ber 13. "Fly Now- Pay Later'! The picture was not quite ac- dream of a secular msbtute completely on this country's NEW BEDFORD, MASS. plan available. Mailcoupon below eunite, but no matter. She was was pres~rved, 'armed forces to protect 'themfor complete details, 6A of.f, creOating the scandaJ 'of II. -', ( Sh~' was almost 80 when she selves from communist domin.--------••• --- •••••••••••••• maiden traveling through Paris . died, a fabled age for Canada in atl'on, and slavery." &III FRANC£, Dept. C, , 683 Fifth Ave" New York 22, N. Y. and Orleans to the coast with- those days, on Jan. 12, 1700. She It said this is so because "the , P1eaae .end Cree illustrated literature out a chaperon. She was fully had the vein of iron in her blood, nature of the attacks being made : em your 1961 Pilgrimage Program. capable of taking care of her- She needed it. One can almost on the United States by its major : Name _ self. . -hear her dry chuckle as she and only significant enemy are Disheartened People entered heaven. so designed as to render conAddreu _
Warns Growing Communism in U.S. Signals Loss of Individual· Rights
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ventional military forces as ineffective as possible.for defense purposes." LIMA (NC)-A Catholic news"In these fields of ,warfare," paper <published by ,.,.American. ,,~pe .,C;ommittee stresses, "it, is' pr,iests, won"V rst prize "in' a' na"
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There was hardly any children to teach, for they were mostly victims of 'stillbirth ,~ri disease.
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Voice), was founded a year and a half ago by Maryknoll missioners s~rving hi ~he Puno dioi:~se, 'rse in the Andes Mountains of southChart Own Cou ern Peru. LEOPOLDVILLE (NC )-:-CathEdited by Father'Timothy J. olic students and scholars from Connair, M.M., of Dayton, Ohio, a dozen African nations have La Voz was awarded the grand urged Africa not to be taken in national prize of $370 for papers tow by either East or West but of limited circulation. Originally rather chart the'ir own courses planned as a parish paper, La within the international eom-- Voz now serves 10 neighboring munity. villages.
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"THE AN€HORThurs., Jan. 19, 1961
Lawmakers Seeking Action On Obscenity Problem
Lauds Progress Of Vincentians
WASHINGTON (NC) - Congressmen have taken up the cudgels against obscene literature again. The early days of the 87th Congress saw introduction of a number of bills intended to deal in various ways with the problem of obscenity. Basically, t w «) sylvania, Gordon H. Scherer of proposals are involved.: 1) Ohio and Glenn Cunningham 01. Nebraska. ~!'\tablishment of a commisCompanion bills have been l!Iion to investigate the smut
introduced in the House to racket and make proposals for 'broaden the definition of 0beoping with it. scenity in case5 involving por2) Amendment of Federal nography sent to minors under laws dealing with pomolO'aphy 19. Their Sl)onsors are Reps. mailed to minors to specify that • broader norm of obscenity be Kathryn E. Granahan of Pennsylvania and George M. Wallapplied in these cases than is used when adults are involved. hauser of .New Jersey. Obsee~ity and Minors The pronosal to set UP a eomTheir proposal is intended to migsion on obscenity is not II newcomer to Canitol Hill. Sev- make it easier to win eonvlceral bills for this purpose were tions of mail order operatol"l who send obscene material to Intr"""C'ed in the 86th Congress. The Senate auproved the meas- minors. Their"bills would amend the Federal law on mail order ure. but the House did not take smut by specifying that a, diffinal' action on it. . ferent, broader norm of 0bNew Versions scenity be applied when the The new versions of the propornography is sent to minors posal, like the old, call for esthan is used when it goell to tablishing a group to be called the Commission on Noxious and adults. The idea is that minors are Obscene Matters and Materials. The eommis9ion would be psychologically more susceptible made up of members of Con- to suggestive material thaD lfress, Federal officials, clergy- adults, and therefore what is men, publishing and entertain- not legally obscene for an adult ment industry representatives. . might be highly objectionable if and !1tate and local law enforce- it fell into the hands Of a minor. ment officials. The group would hold hearings and eonduct inYestigations on obscenity. It would report its findings and lmggestions to the Pre9ident and Congress. Sponsors Senate eo-sponsors of the mea9tire are Sens. Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota, John J. Sparkmaa ef Alabama, and Gordon Allott eI. Colorado. In the House the 8pOnsors of the proposal include Our used car Reps. Carroll D. Kearns of Penn-
HIGH SPEED TRAVELER: Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, shows a 'Strategic Air Command pilot a card attesting to the Cardinal's membership in the select group of persons who have broken the sound barrier• NC Photo.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Holy See has praised the stead,. progress of the Society of st. Vincent de Paul throughout U. world. The Vatican's esteem was elfpressed in a letter written ia the name of Pope John by Domenico Cardinal Tardini, Vaticaa Secretary of State, to the soc~ety:s international headquan. en! in Paris. The letter said the Pope .. especially pleased by the establif;hment of new units of the society in parts of the world where it was not active before and by addition of new grouPl' to its international council. Worthy of Praise It also praised the society fotf adapting itself to the new conditions in which Catholic charitable organizations must opell'ate at present. The plan under which established society unit!! aid new ones in underdeveloped nations was "called worthy of praise and lively encouragement." The society-founded in Parlll hi 1833 by Frederic Ozanamnow has about 250,000 memben in more than 50 eountries. It. members help the poor and sick.
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Lawmen Smash Smut Ring NEWARK (NC) - New JerIIf!Y officials have smashed a three-state ring of alleged sell: d('viates who distributed pornop'aphic material. Essex County Sheriff Nell G. lDuffy, announcing the arrest of • Newark couple who directed the group's operations, said the ring included persons in New Jersey, New York and Penn-
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Sheriff Duffy said the FBI. the Attorney General's office, the Post .Office Department. Army Intelligence· and local police where other ring members reside were brought. into the investigation. Ring's Operation Explaining the ring's operation, he said the arrested couple would place and answer ads im various sex-oriented publications. Photographs were distributed to "club" members seeured in this way. .. Club" members included. more than 40 couples, although ItOt all were married. Sheriff Duffy said letters to teenagel"lJ were confiscated along with more than 200 photographs. The investigation leading to the arrests began with arrest of two New York men on extortion eharges. Police found in their possession a letter from the Newark woman. Postal insuectors cooperated in the subsequent investigation. Interested . Army Intelligence and the FBI Interested themselves in the case because of the aoparent involYement of a soldier holding II "sensitive" position,· Sheriff Duffy said. The FBI was also interested Itt. Interstate aspects of the case and the faet that one of the publications used for placing ads hi impOrted into the eountry from Canada. . The Attorney General's office III Newark has authorized Federal prosecution of all members fII the ring, Sheriff Duffy stated.
Rosaries for Troops DUBLIN (NC) Rosaries were distributed to 630 Irish troops here prior to their depllrture for the Congo where they will become part at the United Nations police foroe.
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,THE ANCHOR..... oioc~se of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 19, 1,961
r n;'t~ on Smoking •••
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It has been'cl~imed that figures can be made to perform in just about aI!y way a skilled manipulator desires. And the late Fred Allen once asserted that any statistician worthy ()f the name could b\!t count the grains' of 'sand on: ,the bottom of a bird cage and from that he would be able to come up with the ac~tirate 'amount of sand on, the Sahara" desert. . , Be that as it may, the fact is that a psychologist at t~e University of Maryland has' just, produced some fiSlures, the results of a survey relating smoking and college grades. .' In a sample of two' hundred and four freshmen,and using grade of 2.00 equivalent to a C, non-smoker'shad a 'higher average grade than sJt:\okers, and the more cigarettes smoked. a day: the lower ·the grade average went. . The ,non-smokers among the freshmen in the survey had an average grade of 1.98, those smoking half a pack of cigarettes a d~y averaged 1.92, pack-a-day'smokers ave..: raged i,61, and those smoking more than that' averaged
HE'S ONE OF liS, ALL RICHT!
TODAY-Weekday with Maa Sunday. The E a s t e r D Churches are the special COft, cern of Catholic prayer today. Our bond of union with them b already so great-apostolic ~ cession and the full sacramental life-that the desire that it 118 complete is imperative. eI.
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TOMORROW ~ SS. Fabian, Pope, and, Sebastian, Martyr. The variety of gifts (fast Sunday's Epistle) and of types or Christian witness is iliustrated by this coupling, of a pOPe of the third century ,with a layman Of the 'fourth both of whom offered their lives in defense 01 the raith. 'The intention of 'the .. unity octave for today is the re'union of Anglicans with the , Holy See.
iii As a conclusion of his survey" Dr. Donald K. Pumroy,. • j" TT~ ! suggested that "many of those who smoke seem to avoid l'IYI1·it i l' l:l!l,["~"'....... studying," and concluded that both gestures might be forms " of rebellion against conformity. . ~ ! I...· I ,: IiI,; If the survey obtains any kind of publicity, the tobacco eompa~ies will rise up with a host of Phi Beta Kappa types replacing the outdoor men and with campus egg-heads taking the play from the "enjoy yourselves" personalities. Which all proves - what? That rebellion can show itself in many ways; that surveys are useful in determining trends and various relationships; that modern education is using many techniques in evaluating its students; that By Father Joh ll L. Thomas, S.J. Ass't Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University American students should exercise more self-discipline; that ..A group of us high school graduates have been distoo much should not be read into too little. cussing your article on teen-age moral problems and' we At any rate, controversy sur.e to be 'forthcoming. still have some unanswered questions~ We're not sure about ,the notion' of different kinds of. kissing, or about the difference between venial and ' to prepare the couple for sexual Speaking of smoking, the Agricultural 'Department has mortal ,sin, relating to kiss- union. If physical contact just estimated United States cigarette consumption for the ing. We felt you weren't too ,through kissing and embracing past year at a record five hundred and .ten billion -four clear on these points and continues, it inevitably creates know,ttJat other, girls 'need to be an urgent need in the partners ~r cent greater, than in the preceding yea~. . The tob~cco bill for the nation was seven and one half hElped 0r:,t ~heseproblems, also." 'for complete union. ,Girls! ~ Girls!" . There's nothing mysterious billion dollars of which six billion, six hundred million dol'7, rm 'sure i was about this ,mechanism'. God has lars was spent for cigarettes themselves. crystal 'clear in designed the bodies of men and that artiCle' -:women to react hi this way in This amount spent ·on' the big business of tobacco order to' accomplish the imJust one half billion dollars short of the record eight billion you must .have read it' too fast' portant -Work of procreation. dollars which American philanthropists gave away in the or missed my Young men and women would lIame year. So the public-minded gifts of various founda-' line of reasonbe abnormal if they did not re-' spond once they expe'rienced the tions'and iI1dividuals is just managing keep ahead of the iog! Oh well, the nice thing physical contact starting the ,monies spent on "smoke~·." mechanism. . Which brings up the matter of contributions. Never about teaching a class or writSimple Message before have there been so many worthy causes to support Isn't there some exaggeration ing a column and never before have so many causes depended on the is that one can here? Well, let's look at the, charity of the American people. There has b~:p. a certain .. always come, back tQ the same process. Remember we're not amount of cynicism introduced intO the subject by the', supject again if one has missed talking: about the simple kiss exposure of waste, duplication and downright misuse of the: boat the .first. ti.me. As y?U that says "I· like you," but the
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SATURDAY St. Agnes, Virgin-Martyr. Virginity, too, of which St. Agnes is a special patroness, can be witness to Christ if it is an offering of love to God .and of disinterested service to fellowmen. The reunion of European Protestants in Holy Church is ~he object of today's unity prayers. SUNDAY - Third Sunday after Epiphany. Miracles of healing continue the epiphany of Christ before men. But his 'power is not used capriciously. He manifests His command 01. nature for the sake of the truth. In the first case in the Gospel, . He, does it to arouse faith in a Jew, and, in the second, to ~ ward and confirm faith in a pagan. It is truth, not power~ which is His concern.' The Epistle describes and comm'ancis another kind ofep,iphanY""7the m,aking-known of Christ; the reduction of Christ to visibility, by the love, mercy, forbearance and self-sacrifice of Christi~n8. The Chair of Unity Octave inten"~'l for today is the reunion of all American Christians. MONDAY - St. Raymond 01. Pennafort, Confessor. A one-man 13th century' epiphany of the ~aviour,' Raymund was a Dominican preacher and scholar, a great confessor, and an, advjser to the pope. It was upon the'latter that he imposed the pemince of giving special and immediate ,attention to all petition's, preSented by the poor. :rile ret,urn of lapsed Catholics to theit spiritual home in the Church is .today's intention in the octave.
lIome funds don~ted to ~har.itable organizations. Fortu- ,ft:~~:b~~ ~eaa~~~,t~elsa~~:~t~f ~O;~~\i~~ ~~:c:~~cu:~r:n~~: nately, these are m the mmorlty - but the bad taste they knowledge I can bike for grant- exchange of physical feelings. have created jades one's enthusiasm for giving. ed in my readers., Evidently, I Your· bodies have no natural, , TUESDAY - St. Timothy, One place where the gift'is sure to be used in its fun presumed too much in that ar- built-in "controls." When kiss- Bishop and Martyr. Sunday'. 1 . h h .. At' h' t' f . . h 'ticle ' i n g is sought for its own sake, Epistle teaches that the' Ch'risva ue IS c ~~c. gIVIn t IS tIme 0 y~atr man y .parls d~S ~t's' take another try at the .it stimulates sensitive nerve !ian victory is w~n ~.y suU~r d announce elr year y accoun s - recelp s an expen 1- problem. As soon as young peo- endings, and further, when you mg rather than by lOfhcting suftures. It is a good time for parishioners to /understand how pIe start dating, the'y have ,to. like somebody, it's natural to f~ring. Accordingly, 1\imothy, much value they are getting for their gifts and to ask them- deal with the fact that they are want to touch, embrace, stroke, bIshop in the Church's apostolic age, friend and companion o! St. selves if they· are' really giving their parish a fare share. boy~ a~d girls:. The first clear and fondle them. Ar h " . reahzatlon of thiS fact generally This is physical love-making. Paul, to whom were addressed e t ey gIVIng ~o the church what they spend on cIgarettes comes with kissing. Kissing is It'~ message is 'simple-not ''1 two of the latter's New Testaor other luxury Items? both a physical act and a sym- like you," but, "I like your ment letters, preached Christ to the end by offering his life in A few churches in the country have suggested going bol-it says something. Hence body," .'. the proclamation of the good back to the tithing system - one tenth of one's income to there are many different ways Difference Is ,Clear Catholics are asked to the church and charity. Some' have reduced the figure to of kissing. That's it, girls! I think this. message. pray on this day' of 'the 'octave ' '- per cen. t S orne wou 1d even sette 1 f or one percent. A Sign of Affection sh ou ld rna k ethe d'ff . . . l el'en t t ypes for the conversion of the Je)Vs. f lve Or conscientious parishioner would estimate what he spends on 't'hFt . examtPle , there'fsf tht~ kitSS of kissing quite clear, Remem. . ' a IS par 0 f an 1\' ec lOna e ber, you, don't have to experience WEDNESDAY - The ConverlUXUrIes, how much he gIves to the church and charity, and greeting between 'relatives and the difference in order to know sion of St. Paul. This feast then see if he can remain satisfied with those facts and friends. There's the. shy first something about' it: There are mar~s the end of the Chair of figures. . ;,:,' kisl! that's little more than a dare many things about which we Unity Octave observance and the It has been said by more than one church administrator or, ,an experimellt. ,!,here's th~ know all we need to know with- intention of the day is' 'the . . frIendly farewell kiSS on the out .,having experienced them, spiritual and visible unity cf that the church would be more than satIsfIed to receive' doorstep for the ,boy you've like jumping off the roof or sit- mankind in the Church of what is claimed as a tax deduction to lit on the Internal dated often which says, "I like ting on a hot stove. Christ. St. Paul's is the type and Revenue forms you. " and enjoyed being with Some young people like to model of all' conversions. The .. ~ But the only motive that is really worthwhile when it you, . . deceive themselves, however, by Epistle narrative of Paul's findcomes to the support of the church is a spiritual one involv- teAh bttle teXperi~n~e u suhall Y insisting that they do not intend ing faith makes an inescapable • , f bl' t' d "t f . . ac es mos young peop le ow any sexual stimulation in their point: that religion in the new mg a sense 0 olga IOn an a SplrI 0 sacrIfIce. Then the, to .interpret their. feelings on kissing-they just like to kiss- age of redemption comes from facts and figures of giving will take their r:ightful place these occasions. Such : a kiss ia but if they're honest and normal, the Church and that the man in the larger framework of the virtue of charity. simply ~ S~gn:, of affection la- they must admit they can't de- who would follow Christ must find Him in' His members 'aDd . . ' bt>lled, "I' bke . you and I want ceive their bodies. _ their community life you to like' me.'" ,,' . Always SerioWi , But if a couple continue to How do we distinguish })e:; d&te, ,'and' mutual " affection tween venial and mortal sins in' grows, the simple "I like you" IlUch matters? ·Well;·as you have mortal sin ,in this matter' ... kiSs develops easily into the "I. been' taught, the' conditions for little significance for you. Your like to kiss you-more arid more" a mortal sin are serious matter, aIm is to develop adequate selftype. Such kissing'speaks a new' 'adequateknowledge and intent. knowledge and self-control OIl ,In matters related to sexual an understanding and acceptance OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER' message, arousing strange, comor venereal pleasure, the matter of reality so that you, can 'avoid, Published weekly by The Catholic Press ,of the Diocese of Fall River plex, .feelings, and emotions; , It is not a sign of simple afis always serious,' that· is, it is and help others to avoid, any , '.' 410 Highlcmd Avenue . 'fection between two - ,persons, seriously sinful deliberately to ,danger of, misusing your facul~all River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 but the means 'of exchanging arouse and take pleasure in sex- ties and thus displeasing God. PUBLISHER Don't ask how far you can ,phy~ical feelings 'bet~een: two ual feelings ·outside of the marMost Rev; Joines L Connolly, D.O., PhD.. sexually c:omplementary, part- riage state. Hence if, such pleas- "go" on a date without seri0u8 ure is deliberately sought with .in"l1ut'ra:t!ler, how best to live ners. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA'NAGER Nothing MysteriouS' . :,full kno"'ledge. a~d i'ntent, the 'and 'receive affection and 'love Rev: Daniel F. Shalloo, M:A:,:, Rev.' John P. 'OriscoU ' The mechanism';of ;these phy-, ~,action beComes" seriously . sinful~ • witP9ut' claimJng physical priv.i;' 'MANA'Cm,jGEDITO~:-- , ", " , II1cal feelings, which we call ' . However, I feel thatthe,v<lbl::' leges 'that can' De granted "ODIr' ' . .. ., . Hugh J. Golden 'Illl](ual, ,arousal; ,moves 'direcUy Unction between .venial, and in marria£e.
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ANCHOR
i Notre Dame Church,. Fall River,Landmark. . For Decades, ,Has History of Growth
BishoP}$ to· Seek
Fundyf~r World Nee~y March, 5
11fE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 19l, 1961
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La ·Salette Bishop
By Patricia McGO'fan A trav,eler approaching FaD River sees on the horizon the commanding twin spires Hails Transition of Notre Dame Church,for decades a landmark of the city. The parish had its begilming In Malagasy in July, 1874, when Rev. P.J.B.Bedard was l!I~nt toF·all Riv~r by the Bishop of Providence HARTFORD (NC) - The to organize Notre Dame as aD offshoot of St. Anne's parish, which had been in e~istellce . Malagasy Republic, formerly for five years at that time. kn~ as ~adagascar, is • The first weekday Mass of good example of how • the new parish was said at eolonlal area call make a peacethe horne of Noel MaYnard ful and orderly trarisition ..
' NEW YORK (NC)·- The ·15th annual one-week Catb.om .'BishoPs' Relief Ftind ~ppeal to support the work
c1l Catholic Relief ServicesNlll~lonal Catholic Welfare Conference ""ill be conducted nationall' starting Sunday, March
5.. A minimum goal of five mnBon dollars has been set for the
Independence. Bishop Paul Girouard, M.s.. .of Morondava, one of 18 Catholic sees on the large island rewas celebrated at 308 Flint Street, the home' of Henry Mepublic 250 miles off the east coast ~ency. Gee' of Africa, has paid tribute to the Catholic Relief Services aided . By Noveritbe! of 1!le same year. I French government for Its insome 40 million needy .people 11 Mass was said in t'· - "'-... Notre telligen~'andforesight in carry_' more than 60 countries last year. Dame Church. on Bassett Street ing out the gradual change-over For the fourth straight year its (now St. Joseph Street). The of the island from French tern.. overseas shipments of clothing, edifice could seat 1600 and was tor7 to self-governing nation. medicine and U. S. surplus food filled for three Masses each TrahlS Population totaled more than one billion Sunday. The population included pounds. These shipments were 300 French and 40 Irish families.' '"The French authorities begaa '9'alued at more than 90 million Because of the Irish contingent, long ago to train people for key government jobs on the island." dollars. Father Bedard never failed to. Bishop Girouard said. "The AI'4 ~. Nations preach in two languages 'at solnatives were installed first in March 12, closing day of the erit;' Masses. . positions on the municipal level, appeal, is Laetare Sunday. The The first parish school was then they progressed to a level fund appeal will be carried on at erected in 1876, just· two years comparable to our state governthat time in the most of the after the foundation of Notre ments In this country and finally. DIlt!on's 16,500 parishes. Dame. reflecting the keen interwhen they were ready, they took A 40-day Lenten campaign est in education that has charachigher posts In the territorial among children in Catholic te!,'-~-1 the par'-, ·t"lrough the ·government. As 11 result, when parochial schools will begin on ye"l's. the island proclaimed its indeFeb. 15, Ash Wednesday. In the In 1877 the Religious of Jesus pendence In 1958, it had a corPi past year the children's contri- Mary came to .".... parish, orof competent, well trained offibutlons, which go to aid needy gan;";n!! a girls' boar"':"~ school· cials from the native population ehildren overseas, have totaled and in 1878 the first ornhanage to conduct the govern~ent." more than one million dollars. .was constructed. In 1880 came Bishop Girouard praised the Auxiliary Bi<;hop Edward E. the first rectory, and In 1882 hench, too, for seeing that large Swanstror.• of New -·ork, exec- .English-speaking members of numbers of Malagash, as the utive director of Catholic Relief the' parish separated to form people on the island republic are Services, has announced the Immaculate Concention parish. . known, were trained abroad In 1,152,195,183 pounds of relief In 1884 Father Bedard died. professional fields so that there goods sent overse'as by the. Hi~ successors for that y-~l' were would be doctors, teachers and agency:' the' past year' in 1,761: . Father E, E. Norbert-:;lT'\d Father other professional people needed .shipments to 64 countries were ..S. P. McGee, In December, 1885 in the new republic. Rev. M. Laflamme was' named va1ue d ,a t "'90 '" ,694 •616 . pastor. . CatholfM Increase Poor and Needy In 1887 a cemetery was bought . As for the Church in the MalaSurplus food donated by the and construction began on a new. gasy Republic, the white-bearded n. s. government made up $64,- convent in the same year. La Salette Missionary said that 539,255 worth of the total while By 1888 Notre Dame parish it had shown remarkable progsupplies valued at $26.155,361 numbered 900 families, totalling. ress In the last three-quarters Cli were purchased by or given to 5000 souls. Six hundred children • century. NOTRE DAME CJ:lURCH, FALL RIVER - CRS..NCWC. attended the parish schools. In. "Only 75 years ago," he said, Since Catholic Relief Services the same year the Brothers of Workmen building the new more having entered the Re!l-, "the pagan rulers of Madagascar began its overseas relief pro- Christian Instruction' came to· church received $1.25 for a 10 gious of Jesus Mary thaD any banished all Christian mission.8l'8ms in 1943, it has sent over- the parish. In October Rev. Jeanhour working day! Drillers other congregation. aries from the Island. Ten yean t:er3 shipments weighing 6,463, Alfred Prevost was named pas-. fared a little better, earning In 1925 came the death of later the French took control of 194,284 pounds and valued at tor. C1~50 for the same hours. Msgr. Prevost. He was succeeded the island and the mlssionaria $895,485.955, Bishop Swanstrom The Grey Nuns, who operate by Rev. Louis~Damase Robert, were allowed to return. Trial by Fire laid. The supplies have been St. Josephs orphanage, came to who served the parish until he Rhode Island Natlvo given "to the poor and needy the parish In 1890. In 1893 the old Notre Dame became ill In 1939, when Rev. without regard to race or creed," Of interest is a· record In par- church burned down. Mass had Joseph Cournoyer was appoint"'Today we have a mllllOil he sta'ed. Ish account books of the time. to be said in a variety of locaCatholics in the republic, included administrator. In 1945, after tions and Christmas Mass in 1893 the retirement of Father Robert, ing the country's president and was celebratp~ ' ... ~" ~-"'rmous Rev. PhiHas Jalbert took charge a number of high officials." He X. tent. The dislocated state of af- of the parish. termed President PHilibert TI.ranana "a fine Catholic." fairs lasted until December. In 1946, Father Jalbert died 1894. A native of Hamilton, R.t.' and Rev. Stanislaus Goyette beVATICAN CITY (NC) - A The Vatica~ City newspaper Also In 1893, the pastor, Fr. BIshop Girouard was consecrated came administrator. In 1947 Rt. number of Italian newspapers . also stressed the teachings ~ Prevost, was named a ProtonoRev. Alfred J. E. Bonneau be- ill Hartfotd and received hrhave described' as clearty ma- Pope Pius XII and other Popes tary Apostolic. early training as a La Salette came pastor of Notre Dame. terialistic the exploitation by as to the illegitimacy of arUFor th~ -~~t few yearS, bundMissionaray 10 ttWi Connecticut With him as curates at this time the communist press of a lab~ ficial insemination. In~ WI'S the chief C"-~"'l'n of city. oratory experiment which fertiExperiment Msgr. Prevost. At last, " No- are Rev. Gerard Boisvert, Rev. lIzed' a human ovum in a test The stQry of Dr. Petruccrs ex- vember, 1906, the new Notre Roger P. Poirier and Rev. Erntube. periment was first published by Dame church, with a capacity est Bessette. Educational institutions of the . The experiment was conduct- th~ communist oriented Rome of 2,000, was rp--1 v fe':' use. e<! by Dr. Daniele Petrucci of dally newspaper Paesa Sera. The Many "firsts" came the way of parish are Notre Dame GramBologna, a Catholic. He reported newspaper said ~hat the experl- the parish in 1907. Father Aorlen mar School, staffed by the Relithat he 'had successfuly achieved ment was term mated when it Gauthier, first parishioner to at- gious of Jesus Mary, and Msgr: insemination of a female egg becar,ne appar~nt that a mon- tain the priesthood, was ordained Prevost Grammar and High and kept it "alive" under glass stroslty.was bemg produced. Dr. In his own parish church by Schools, staffed by the Brothers for 29 days. PetrUCCi later told .reporters that Bishop Feehan, for whom it waa of Christian Instruction. Nearly NEWIEDFORD 1,000 children are enrolled .t the question of a monstrosity' likewise the first ordination. the three schools. Sp'lr~oal Values was not involved, but that he In 1908 Notre Dame numbered INDUSTRIAL OilS Professor Luigi Gedda, former had ended the experiment when' 1744 families, with a total of head of Italian Catholic Action temperature and nutrition made 9856 souls. In succeeding years 'HEATING OILS many native sons of the parish and director of a genetics in- It impossible to continue. Medical snokesmen, in combecame priests and celebrated stitute, said that "experiments TIMKEN menting on the sensational treat- their first solemn Masses at of human fecundation under glass were made already by ment of the story. by the com- Notre Dame. Building of the Oil BURNERS American scientists a few years munist press, said that a similar parish plant continued, with 1mago. Personally I consider that experiment had been conducted provements to existing, faciUtlei & experiments of this kind don't successfully In the United States constantly being made. In 1930 the Sisters of st. JOIm take into due account the spirit- by Professor Landrum Shett1es of Are were added to the parish ual values of the human being.'" of Columbia University. 501 COUNTY ,ST. f family to care for the temporall L'Osservatore Romano. thtl . needs of pastor and. curates. Vatican City daily newspaper, 7 JEANmE STREET NEW BEDfORD Alsn through ·the years SCOrel! quoted other biologists at the FAIRHAVEN Wi 4-7321 WASHINGTON (NC) - TM O! parishioners entered religiOWl University of Bologna as saying WY 3·175~ :.' " .. '. . Am . . life. Notre' Dame men are ,numthat the prospect of a birth out- .. ,CathOlic Umversltr ~ . . e~lc:a. '.' bered among the Diocesan'elergy side. its natu~al site" ~s h.~n~\ by'.. h'lUl, added a 19.,.y~.~ micr:o~I1m ,and in five' religious' communithe communIst press, wa,s. pure, fi~e .of the Ca.thQhe Mes,s~~ger.... ties.. ,Womim ,of the' parish .-are ,fantasy. They said, that, the newspa~r of th~.· Davenp?rt.·,represented in 18 communities, IN :' 'NEW BEDFORD -IT'S results of Dr. Petrucci's' e~ Iowa. dlocese, to ~ mi~9film ' . , , . . . . ' .... , ment in no way s~Pported 'such eollection of newspapers. The' - , & theory. ".,' 'film runs from Jan. l. 194Jl JAIli...ISO~I, '. . " 9 . 10& • ill be I~ I~ I· .... · !nnual." , ST. PAUL (NC)":":'rh(, c8tb-. .dditiono. , Arthur Janson, Reg. ·Phann. die Bulletin published a speclal . Other. publlcatiom In tho DlABmc AND' SICK ROOM FOR THE FINEST TRADE EVER eupplement to ,. commemorate Its Catholic Universit;y microfilm. 50th anniversary as the DeW&- . eollectiOll Include the NeW York SUPPUES. SUCCESSOR. TO LOUGHlIN cHEVROLET paper of the 'Archdiocese of'S\. 'rimes' from 1851' to date: Lope.. 204 ASHlF( BO~~AID PauL Ordinary' of the ~ . .ervatore '~ ~atieall. ~ twM, ~fqrd. '.' . Milt ST:'Open Ewry hefting WY7-9486 is Archbishop WWiaJa 0- dafJ7. frQm 1848 IIDll &lie . . . . . wy 3-8045 ...... Pilot. ' I Brady, a Fall Rivei' Dative.; Pitman Street, whIch was also the residence of Father Bedard. The first Sunday Mass
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Desc[fibes. Glamoro'us' Tricks To Dress Up Problem Windows By Alice "Bough Cahill '
The Queen's Dau tus c:1 PaD River will hold 0 sil er tea unci - reception from S to 5, Sunday afternoon" .Jan. 22'~ BishOl? Sta~g Day Nursery, ai1, ~iJr.(J St~eet. ' Members and friends ~ rx, "ited to meet t'he White SisteI:J -who staff the nursery' and givo home nursing, servicei:n ~ Greater Fall River area. Them will also be an inspection toc:? of nursery facilities. Dues may be paid at the tea «T mailed to Miss Mary Malead~ 266 Third Street, treasurer; Oi" flo Mrs. Michael A. Connefy, 421iJ Valentine Street, financial eec> retary. . Newly appointed board of go~ ernors for the organization m.SERRA NS PRESENT: Attleboro Serra Club members elUdes Mrs. Joseph Donnelly snell present· Bishop Connolly 'with check for· charities. Left"Mrs~ Charles E.,BradY,'cdl'cha1Jl" Edward Coogan, president; right, Cornelius Lyons vice men; als~ Miss Mildred V. Car-:president. ' rol!, Mrs. John L. Clemmey., ~i~ .' ..,' ..<;Tertrude A. Lynch,·Mrs. William
What's your. choice - curtains and/or draperies ? Either can give you the lift Of. a new Spring hat, so maybe this is when you'd like to change your window treatment.' Either curtain,s or draperies will be the background that displays your furniture and the drapery material. Add . the accessories. You can use same decorative fringe that is draperies and glass curtains on the panel. The horizontal use together, or use either of of this fringe makes the winthem alone, depending on your dows ~ook wider. It's quite helpown preference and on your ful to have your cornice extend win dow s. If aboUt 3 inches on either side you've a big past ends of draperies. In this picture window way they won't bunch ~ top In your home, when opened. you'll probabWell-Dressed 'Look ly want to use V;tlances or cornices hide draperies only, drapery and curtain rods aDd beespecially if Bides they give your windows you have a that well-dressed look of, disclovely garden. tinction. However, be sure valYo u '11 want .anee or 'cornice is deep' enough and John 'lit 'your draperies to bide hardware and ,link' the· '. to hang beside drapery panels. '. the window so .,Requests Federal" Aid Only occ86ionaDy can you . they won't hide a single flower. .ALBANY (NC)-The Albany Separation of Church and State. For Cuban Refugee's ' Windows can have glamour and leave your windows uncurtnewspaper charges The Evangelist said the Secif You resort to some of these ained. But if a window is sman diocesan is behindop-. ondary School Principals' AsNEW ORLEANS (Ne) """ tricks, your task is easy. Drap- and ~ need its light, try Ii lHlt~~athollcism position to iii law ~ich guar- sociation and the State Associa- Mayor deLesseps S. Morrison, eries dress your .windows' aDd simple ruffle over the top or antees tax-paid bus rides for tion of School Boards both of a message to Rep. T. Hale Boggs, accent your color scheme. Best around the sides and top. Or you non-public school pupils, start-· whom oppose the law,' "are 88- has asked Federal assistance fCl!l might use a fabric-covered corof all, draperies can change the lng next. September. sociated with characters whose' 40 girls who are here as ref1i" shape of a window and it may nice around the top and sides of 'J!1e ~vangel.ist defended the defense of Church-State .separa:.:.·' . gees from CUba. 'the window. Sometimes you'n be just this toucll yau need. ., " . lJe said they are "urgently ~ have a small room '-with only :!legIslation wInch removes th~ tion is dubious." To make a window seem B '" ,need of help." , i one mnall window. In such a previous obliga,tion of parents, .wider, use rods which extend . ease your window will look of non-public school pupils to enefit to Child ' Th' 1 ' the draperies beyond the sides 18l'ger if you match your curtain appeal each year to the local MTraJisportation cost is not a leansea gI~oS . reached New Qp,. of the window frame. To make benefit to a religious or private ago an%~reX~a!elY tw t tOh muontbs material to the wall back~und public school board for bus school," it said. "It is an a i d , aymg a e rS1llF> rt seem taller hang draperies and hang the curtain on the wall lcldes. The law also e:rlends from rightfully given to children as, ~~e Academr here, ~here. they . above the top of the trame~ . part, thus leaving all the winDon't be worried' about the dow, area clear to let in light. . eight to ten miles the distance .citizens of the state as a health. continumg t~eIr studieD. apace between window and ceil- Many wallpapers' come with . of transportation to which each and welfare measure." ,'.D of. i Style Show ing - just let a valance, a blind, matching material for wmdows. <;:bi]d is entitled. ' "To attempt to exclude chfl-, Assumption Circle. Of Fmx 1.: or a shade hide the top of the Anti-Church' Drive dren in religious schools from . Today's trend is away from' ~ame. If your draperies are The newspaper said the fact thesehenefits," it said, "is tant- R~ver~ Daughters of . Isabell&. to- q;sJf anti-Catholicism is pointed amount to as~erting that their WIll 'hold a Spring fashion show .. aeiling high, blinds will hide the fmlate window ~ressings ward fuller, simpler Clraperies Nre spot above your window.. up in reports of a New York health, safety and welfare is of' at 2 Sunday afternoon, March I end curtains. To grive your curcity speech of State Senator. no concern or interest to the at Venus de Milo restaurant. Good Rules tains or draperies a quality look, Dutton S. Peter<s<m, Protestant state." These are good rules to rea k~ each pimel the full width Minister, who aftacked' the member - draperies and cur- ' of ·your material, at least. Be Catholic Church's "inroads into Silver Jubilee COR~EIA tains must be made in. onE! .,of eure to ,allow generous hems and public affairs" and the bus bill HELENA (Ne) - Bishop' Jo- . ONE STOP three lengths; to the sill; ~o ~he headings so the draperies or cur- as violating atureh-State sep- seph M. Gilmore of Helena will apron (that's the piece of ~ tains will hapg gracefully.. And,. Illl'ation. SHOPPING Cf;;NTEI . mark the 25th anniversary of hiS that finishes the window sill); or' of course, draperies should' be Senator Peterson, former head consecration ~ the fourth Spirto within one inch of the floor. lined. Another reminder- --, . ., ·'1'eIevlsion. FumitON of the State COlli n e H . of itual leader of this western We're often asked, "Must drap- ~ that fabries are sun£ast, Churches, Protestant an~. Or- . Montana diocese of 83j500Cath.... - < ., 'AppUlUIeeII • Groce.".. ....-..... . . eries and ourtains at the. same. and ,pre-shPUnk befO!'e ,pure1l'P ~x,~ration, spoke under ·olics by, offering a . Pontifical'''' window be the same length?'" uing.' . ·'f·' Allen St.. New·BeM_ aU~II)lces .of the ~~nts and., Mass: in the" Cathedral ,of SL" WYman '2-9354 . No....:. you can mix sill or apronOther Americans UDi~ for ,Helena onFebi 21. " length curtains' with flOOlb 'Sucordiu'm, Whist length draperies. . . '!'he Sucordium CluQ;,mothers" Glass curtains serve many pur- auxiliary of Sacred Hearts,Acadposes. You can use them for emy, Fall Ri'!er, will hold ,a milcolor, to give a room privacy, to" Itary,whistat .8. Monday .night, soften the glare of the sun, or to .Jan. as in the school 'auditorium screen .out an unattractive view. on Prospect Street. It' is open to .. There are so many new ma- the public and there will be· terials on the market that the Jefreshments and prizes. . task of laundering glass c u r - ' '. tains is made easy. Some require' NO tickets wi~ be avaIlable ~ DO ironing _ J'ust dri- -d fDe door, accordmg to Mrs. Manpry. gel Furtado, general chairman. l?ormer windows oft:n present She is assisted by Mrs. Francis qUIte a problem and thIS was ontl McGuigan ticket chairman' and that made the most intrepid dec- . Mrs. Jam~ E. Leary Jr ' , orator rely on all the ideas she . ' . had. The problem was a ceilingExecutive board members and high gable of glass. The solu-' 100m mother~ are serving 051 the tion WIUl to cover the very top arrangements ~ittee. ." " panes. with sheer curtains, fHto ; .. ~ _CompfireGirls ened top and bottom. Then dra.. t;', peries on regular traverse rods " Campfire Girls' Of" 'Sacred • 'v:" were attached at the bottom of' Beart School, Fall, River, will" these upper panes. Sheer' cUr- hold Ii first anniversary', party' , tains were . used on t)le lower at 7:30 tOmorrow night-"iIl the :~' ~aIf of· the yvindowtO give ,pri- 8ehool .auditorium. A .pia)- by . • ~ "1. :' I"~.J'. '-; '. • .:~ ':v;wy. Wh~t,was a problem.wia- ,~ctace Viveiroa win detail the ' . , ' .1;.':'\ "'.. ' '.'. '" .' ;, .• : c· '" dow turned out to be a windoW ~vities of the PouP for tbe with glamour. '" :Past year. " 'in an attic ~here the~~0W8 lOa11 the way' to the corner of the dormer, an easy treatment .. to use a,,traverse rod wnich tutna . featu· , nng th~ corner. This lets part of the draPery lie flat against the side "The Gaslight. Room\WIll inslieadaf covering the Ideal for CominuniOD Breakwindow and obstructing the futs, Organization B8JtQueta· view. Such Ii treatment is not 386. Acushnet ,AYe. necessarily an attic problem, but tOO% PU.RE - the golden-good jui~ is good for any. window group. New Bedford . 9f approxunately 16 Florida Oranges ing that goes across the wall to Can ,WYman 2-1703 earners. ,m·,one q~!~90d <?range Juice:iS::a' _.... . good buy tmd·a:gold.D1me of Vitamin If you want- to. add a little',,' . . . ", ,•.' . . ' .1_ 1 glamour to a pair of tall; narrow ... ~·,ABOUT c . F~ESH FLAVOR-FULL FLAVOR'~ windOW'S, you' might extend tfrai ;'. .... '0 • • you ge~- ~th. Hood 100% Pure' periesand rods over the ",all at Orange Jwee IS squeezed in s\iiinv!l each.side to add width. Thenuse Contrae,on ',~.. , .f ...'~' • cornices and cover them with ' Florid~ rushed, to New Engla'~a ' before it loses' one 'ray' ohhihshiri'e'Or'I/ of I'Magazine . 'one,smack of goodness. , Mrs. ~usan, Crom1;>ie a.np. i\frs; Mary Murphy head a telephone .POUR TO YOU~ ~EALTH TOD~,1, committee contacting members of St. Patrick Circle, Somerset." . J' Daughters of Isabella, to .obtain 944 County Si.. subscriptions to the National
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".:'i:het~.$'!'~~~11 t':lt ~:Oi·r.t·,:·Not'Adult;~(·: ·.···So,ph:isticated'· Ente'rtain'ment;;"
Music Festival To A'id Nuns
... '..'., ... ' ". By
Mary Tinley Daly "What's hi a' Dame 1" asked Shakespeare more than 100 years ago. "Plenty!" eomes the answer from psychologists, 'sociologists, the Madison Avenue Boys and thinking people everywhere. One of the most psychologically perfect re-namings, has come fl"Olil said of a priest who is outgoing, the Catholic W o,m en' 8 friendly and fun-loving. EnLeague of Canada, represent- dowed with sueh a nature, and ing 146,000 Catholic women. with understanding and tolerAs
reported recently in the press, the League has
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word "dirty," instead of sexy er salacious, be ~;, used to describe V offensive reading matter. The Catholie '! Women's League has • point here. When a movie, • play, a book whatever be('()Ines f~-"'kly tilled "dirty" ftlther than the p!Jeudo-smart "'llIexy," "adult," "sophisticated" . . "salacioWl," It is not likely .at people win care to attend, RQd or discuSll the opUf. Alllo the "cute" story told at parties, re-named quite fact118111' "dirty~ loses ·its glamoW". ftlther quickly. Even the LIf~ of,.the-Party would rather not be known as a purveyor of dirty IItories. , . The idea behind the Catholic Women's League may well be .rried forward. Usin" the English language, with all its gradations of meantAg to convey what we really laave in mind can be very sigDlficant.
.r
ance the "unpriestly" one iaughs it off llG one of the stupidities of hUman kind. Boys and Girls During the recent campaign, we found certain words being applied with subtle innuendos. One of these was "boyish." Mr. Kennedy's "boyillh" appearance was countered by his proponents with 'emphasis on his vigor, verve and energy. Though Women strive, perhaps more than mim, to retain the'· aHributes of youth, they do not want to be considered "girlish." Perhaps one of the most saccharine descriptions, and one with feline implications, is the phrase, "She is such !l sWeet, pretty girl!" After the age of 20, would 1'011 want to be a sweet, pretty girl! I wouldn't. Another mistake many of us fall into is in consoling friends beset with' troubles. To be told yoU: are !l "poor, brave little soul" when your heart is breaking and you don't feel the least brave is a demoralizing experience. On the other hand, a certain lift comes when friends speak of you as having spunk, pluck and courage. Words are weapons!
9
·,,,.;thurs., Jan.' i9~ 1961
A festival of music will be held Tuesday, March 1 in SL Anne's Auditorium, Fall River to benefit the building fund of the Sisters of St. Joseph whose provincial house is located at .2501 South Main Street, also 'Fall River. General chairman is Mrs. David Pomfret, Somerset. Program will include instrumental and vocal offerings by Cecile Clement Grobe, pianist; Felix Paul, violinist; the Anthony lmbriglio accordion ensemble and 'soloists; and L'allegro Glee Club, directed by Dr. Normand O. Paquin. Tickets are available at convents of the Sisters of St. Joseph, from committee members or .participants in' the program.
NEW AMERICAN CARDINAL: Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis (left) is welcomed at. the North American 'Col1eg~ in Rome ,by .. ,Archbishop Martin J. O'Conn9r, (right), college rector. ,The St. Louis Ordinary was elevated to the College of Cardina18 by Pope John last Monday. Msgr. Igino Cardinale of the Vatican Secretariat of State is in center. NC Photo.
Golden Wedding Day of Parents Recalls Tommy Costello. Story , SEATTLE (NC)-The story of an 'uimsual spiritual heritage left by' a 10-year":old boy was unfolded when Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Costello celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. Father George T. Boileau, S.J., pastor of, St. Francia
f or Two More Years As Lay Missionar,y in Mexico U
VOaunteers
Church. in Anchorage, Alaska offered the. Mass on the' anni~ versary of Mr. p-" 1IJtrs. Costello in St. Thomas church, in nearby Riverton. The Jesuit from Alaska was the first seminarian to benefit from a burse established 18 years ago after Tommy Costello, the c<>uple's 10-year-old son, died. of Hodgkin's disease.
Falmouth Circle D of I Set Annual Banquet Falmouth Circle, Daughters of Isabella, will hold a food sale Saturday, Jan. 21 at NewberrY'1l Store, Main Street, Falmouth, with Mrs. C. P. Russell as chairman. The unit's annual banquet 18 set for Tuesday, Feb. 14 at the Surrey Room, with Mrs'. Gilbert J. Noonan in charge of arrangements. The quarterly corporate Communion will be held at 7 Sunday morning, Feb. 19 at St. Patrick's Church and a Mass for deceased members will be offered there Wednesday, Feb. 22. Other Spring plans include a March buffet supper and a fashion show in April.
Sets Up Pre-Marriage .Good7-Good7 'Prlest in Beaven' In the realm of. religion, take The boy wanted to be a priest. Instruction Program the appella.tion ."pious." Used ill CLEVELAND (NC) - :Frank He has been visiting his famBefore he died he had saved. CLEVELAND (NC) - Arch~rlbing a person, this has Il Pavis, 42, a former beer and wine ily here alter two years in Mex- more than $500 toward his edubishop Edward F. Hoban haa pody-goody connotation for IJ8lesman here, has signed up' ieQ's Morelia diocese as a cation for the priesthood from which the adjeetlve "devout" for two more years as a lay member of Association f<>r Inter- money, made by selling news- directed a minimum pre-marriage instruction program to be .ight better be applied. Cert- apostle in Mexieo. national Development (AID). papers and doing odd jobs. "nly we all lMrive to be devoUt / AID was founded three years "Tommy always had a great followed in all parishes of the . . fervent Catholics, but to be Italian Nun~ Community ago and has headEfuarters in admiration for priests," said Cleveland diocese. The directive requires engaged _lied pious makes 115 cringe. I Marks Anniversary Paterson, N. J. Its aim is . to Sister R<>se Theresa, of the 8iscouples to 'have a minimum of _n't know wIlT. unless It III becarry the social program of the tel'S M the Holy Names, the tour private conferences with _use there Is • certain seMe of CHICAGO (NC)-The SilJterli Church to undeveloped nations. ooy's ~ste'r.Wben he knew he parish· priests. Major points to IlIse piety impUed•• good-only-' ,..., the Resurrection,. an Italian Mr. Pavis,a bacheior, was one. would die, ·he ·said he hoped he be covered include: duties of. • .-Sunday quality about the 'community, which came to the of the first to join AID and voleol'" be a priest in heaven." term." United States' in 1900, marked· 'unte~l'ecito· lierveiJl a foreign and wife; duties toward the 10th: anniversary' '01. ita ... ', ., After the boy's death the Cos-' busband Then there are the ~ ~ntry. Hewas'given a'training !lellos' establisheclthe burse in: children; preparation for, anel, -.orals" and ",ood." founding in Rome. course in the Churc~'lI social pro-, T<inmiy's '·memory. They have the holiness of marriage. "He is a ..-~ m~- with ftne FIlther Chester Salkiewicz, gram plus lessons In Spanish a . ......- .... C.R., vicar general of the COIl" . 'added 'to it, through, the years, . In issuing the ,directive, the aoril1s," leaves the impression language he had not spoken, as have relatives and,' friends. ,Bishop, of .Cleveland said there .at there is reallY nothin" gregation of the Resurrection, before long had 'been, a. feeling among , .. Rome, the men's cO~m~nity, o f - ' ,The 'burse now totals 'I some his priests that standard direcwrong with the guy but.he ill f ed M' t th . S'st . ' t Have Catholic Culture $8;000. ~ dl d 11 H 't' k e r · alis a e I ers wes"; " 'As a result of the tral'nl'ng protion was needed because some wea l' u. e won pIC your ern provincial headquarters.' He d parishes gave an extended pI'&pocket or run off with YOW" ·.-gram and two years in Mexico, New Be· ford D of I wife, but the thought of spendis in the United States on a tour. Mr. Pavis now has cracked the marriage course, others less. tog an evening with "s good In its two U. S. provinces, the language barrier. Before return.- Plan Fashion Show alan with fine morals" is not Sisterhood has 446 professed ing home for his vacation, he Hyacinth' Circle 71, New Bedene of the most exciting pl'OSSisters. The eastern province's organized or laid the, ground- ford Daughters of Isabella, will WilEN SICKNESS STRIKES peets imaginable. headquarters are at Mt. St. work for 32 credit unions in the hold a fashion show Monday, IT'S I MPORTANT TO SEE Another misnomer, meant all Joseph, Castleton - on - HUdson, Morelia diocese. Mar. 13 to benefit the White YOUR. OOCTOR. ~ND WHEN • compliment, 1a sometimes apN. Y . , Mr. Pavis will return to MexSisters. The Marian unit of the HE'S <ill/EN 'fOU A plied to the clergy. "He is the Golden Jubilee Couples ico in mid-January to begin his organization will hold a games IJRESCIUPTION, ITS most unpriestly priest you ever second two-year hitch. Of Mex- party at the Robeson Street 1M POIlTANT TO GET aw'" How many times have we Renew Marriage VOWS' icans, he said: clubhouse Tuesday, Feb. '1: IT FILLED Ilr lIleard that one? CHICAGO (NC)-Ab9U~ 1,1)00 "They are devout and have a SHdes of Europe shown by Matter of fact, this is the most couples marrie~ more .than .~. str()ng Catholic culture. Yet Rev. Edward Mitchell of Sacred .sparaging remark that could years crowded Holy Name cathe.:. most":~f them don't understand Ileart· Church,Taunton, will ~ ~ade, DOt only about an dral to renew tllu~'ir:' marr~a«e . ~hat.,~e Church even has a social. . f~ahll'e t~.e ,next .mee~ing, to be PHARM~CY' lDdividual priest, but with refvows. '. .' .';. :,<'prQg.r~m ... but you could say hel~Tuesday, ,Jan. 24 at Holy· erence to t . boly calling to Albert \Ca~dinai JI-;yer, A)..ch- ;.: ~~e'WFe of many U. S. Cat~., Na,ine ch"u.~h" hall :~iijl Mrs. wh!ic4 the. ~ '.an! d~icatlng bishoP ol·:.·Cbicago;'~presided·af'"lies,:. /" . \, ,;Ma.~)',0'CoPIl~r ,as chairman. " .eir lives." I ,',. ". the ~remony, telling the coi.tp~> : ..~~ .'" ; .. Ordinaril,., 'ot. Course, "sueb I .. that 'the', serm'on.· today-,'" ia ;" ..St;,\ Catherine 5 JGrouP , .', . J : .: ,. . ~ \ ~. : . ' .. ", ...\ llemark is made without. JIlll- pr~ached from the'pew~ ~Y/~;.!~.$et~ Valentine''fWhist ',', .• ,~he .. Fami'y That':' licious ,thougbt... Jdadewithoot:a - The more than 56 years In ,:Whl~ ;: :(, :St. Catherine's ;Fund Raisinc hught, period.' Usually It ia y~ hav~ lived togethe~,. is a .' GroUp, auxiliary to the DomiBPrays T~th~ Decl tittmg trlbu~e to.the sta~lhtyt#. . iean. Sisters of Park Street Fall Stays Togetherares Two Words the sacrament of .Matr~~n~.". :ah,er,. will hold a Val~ntine Now Are Obsolete The couples received l~d'lVlcl- , whist Saturday, Feb. 4. Mrs. LONDON (He) _ AngUcaa ual. scrolls. from t,he, CardlDl,l1 ~-: G~orge Pelletier is new president DtI Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher ef '9Cnbed w~th iheu names and. .of' the group, aided by Mrs. Canterbury Ill)'a he hopes, "that prayer written for 'them 'by ~" '. Alex~rider Raymond, vice pres..,. going to visit the Pope, I have School Boord Permits ident; Mrs. Leo Gariepy, secreenabled everybody to see that tary; Mrs. John Reed, treasurer. .Mleboro-Soutll Attie..... 202 ROCK STREET the words ,'Catholic' and; 'Pro*- Bible Reading in Class : Chairmen for the whist party Seek... ..umt,' asC1'fdinariI,o used,'" t •• GREENHILLS (NC) _ Bible are Mrs. Joseph White and M1'lI. FALL' RIVER, .MASS. ~mplete~y ~t 01. da.te.... ,;'".', r'ea d:i n g and· "noil-sectarialll l~dfe:~,.Romanowicz. .¥~st.,Rey\ ~ffrey·,J'. F~sbel'..,:" pray.er" will continue'inpublic ......-:"11"... .... Primate of the Church 01. JCng- 9Cltools of this Ohio, community ~nci, declared each of the WOl'cU . : despite efforts of. SlllIil1 groUp ~ans a d:i#erent 'tbingio' eacb lof parents to have the~ banned. Mrson." He .id the two wor<b ." The Boarel at. Education had ~ '. almost. &1""81'1. i,·DOW· been asked by' Rev. Mr, Robert IIIiret.Y for ~nda purpoeear J. O'~rien, Unitarian pastor who ~ $2 AND UP PEl HOUR PLUS $50 SAVINGS BONDS .. ' " '., ., , . ,Aid he represented the protestPt.US PRIZES. This is the earning opportunity oHered yo., Fairhaven Hop big families, to discard its pollc;, ~yAVON Products. Full or part time. No experience 4 luniors of Sacred Hearts ACIi- 0If permitting Old Testament ~ HCeSsary. . *'my, Fairhaven, will sponsor. re~dings, reeitati~n of the Lord'~ -.cord hop from '7:30 to 11 Sat- prayer and the saying of a nonNEw BEDFORD AREA - WY 7·7089 ~ .-day nigbt, Feb. 4 at Kay BaD- sectarian grace before meals. The South Sea Sts. , CAPE AREA - Hyannis, Spring 5·9306 ley's Fairhavea Center. Younc Rev. Mr. O'Brien a~ ia bead Tel. MY 'AU RIVER AREA - OS 8'-5265 ~ Hyannis ~ from It to 10 Mle litof. the Cincinnati· chapter' of &be ~ :... ~ ~~ .........&Mad. AmericaD ClYil Liberti. UIliOlL • L-'_' ___
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VideJ P'r'cgrams , Aid Missiofiers' Sprea;d Gospel .
. New CU'rricula'
For Schools
gram in Japan. Telecasts are scheduled twice monthly on the Osaka station, YTV, which has a potential aud:' ience of nearly four million persons in the Kyoto-Osaka area. Sponsored by the Maryknoll Fathers' Good 'Shepherd movement in Kyoto, the religious programs have been on the air since late 1960. High production costs have ;Itmited broadcasts to twice' a month, but plans call for a weeRly program. ' , The programs, based on Christian principles, are illustrated with short film segments, stressing the role of the Church in Japan. : Fav~rable Reaction Viewers "are invited to write to the Good Shepherd center .. 101 more informatio'n about the
x.
BALTIMORE (NC) five-year plan "to develop an extremely modern curriculum" ~n all· elementary school courses is in the making
KYOTO (NC)-The Good Shepherd ' movement . has. started ~he first regularly" schedule~ Catholic TV pro-
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for Baltimore archdiocesan Catir 'olic schools. . . A similar overhauling job iii being planned for the CathoUc 'high schools' curriculum, Father James C. D'onohue, schools SUo'perin'tendent, said.. ' Three departments will be established to supervise revision of courses in the eight grades of the elementary schools, Father Donohue detailed. A strong move ' will be made to spend more time on the basic subjects of reading, spelling and arithmetic, he stated. [ Special Education . , Father Donol)ue said five PARADE IN PRESIDENT'S INAUGURAL TOMORROW: Marching along Grant oth~r departments will be formed Avenue in San Francisco's Chinatown is the St. Mary's Chinese Girls Drum Corps. This to deal with guidance, health, . famous unit from the Paulist Fathers Chinese Mission is one of three bands which safety, libraries and special edu~ 'represent California tomorrow in the Inaugural Parade in Washington. The 40-m.ember cation for able students and for " . . . , retaraed pupils. corps w,ith their' beautiful Chinese costumes have been show stoppers wherever they ,' Standardized tests on a widtl appear. NC Photo. .scale will be put into effect iD .. ' ." the elementary schools immed~
will
~~:::~~ E~~~mre~~~~~~r~~t~:~~'
Bible Aids Catholic~ PrQtes·tant·[)ialog·~e.. ~;;:'in~~~:~ j~~~h~r:g::~e~
have been favorable. WILMINGTON (NC)-A Prot-. pointed out. . . .Knother point of agreement pse of system-wide textbooks ia The new;televisiC?~ pxo~f'am, ..~sU;lrtT~m4, a', Catl]-o~~;~''l,bi~lic~l 'I,N~w, J-lfat9~r ;BroWJ:1, anA,pr. ,was that Catholics, and Protest-, aUcolirl'es.. Arithm~tic, apd relt-: directed and' produced bY·'Er.. scholar agreed.here, ,that the '&mpbell 'said; many Catholic Im'iS n'6"I'Onger"sccuse ea'ch other,~ion cou,rse's will ~ revised ~llmes Hyatt," M.M., , of, 'Seaitle;'" 'iBi'ble :carl'serve'to 'bring Cath.;,'an~{'prdte~taii'{serriinaries 'are' of using'a"biased" BIble." '::,' put in effect riext'septeinber, . is based on the highly successful olics and Protestants' together, "l,asing; eacb other.'s "best works'in'" .:' 10 rega'ra t({thd compo'siti~nof ,', sc;hool'superintendent ~aid\ ", ; Good Shepherd radio' program,' especially on a scholarly level. the Biblical sciences, even each the Bible, Father Brown pointed Fundamental SubJectB ~ "'Light of the Heart. This five.:c- "The 'speakers were Dr, Edward other's translations of the Bible. out that the Catholic Church's In the next four years, reviminute program is heard 6 times Fay Campbell,Jr:, professor 'of . B9th men agreed there is an Scripture includes several Old mons will be made in sociai weekly over hundreds of radio 0 14 ,Testament, McCormick The._ atmosphere of friendly exchange .Testament books that Protestants. studies, English, spelling,. reactstations in Japan. logical SefIlinary, "Cpicllgo,., a ,andgrowing understanging un.,. at the time ,of the 16th Century ing" art and music, Father Do.... The Good 'Shepherd ~ove-" Presbyterian; and Father Ray-~'re.aIri~d of a g,e.neration' ago. Reformation' ,rejected because. ohue:added. Committees will se~ ment conducts two information .. mon~,,~. Brow~, S.S.,. PFofess~r, D~!,lllgreement. , , those books were not contained ·Iect the new textbooks and pl_ eenters in :Kyoto and ,publishes . ~f ,~II?,I~cal.~tu~hes at ,~t.:fdary s, .Xhere are still, however, areas'. in the:, Hebrew Old Testament·. :training programs for teachen pamphlets and a magazine about . ~em~,~~ry, B~ltImore, : : ' . of. real and. deep disagreement Dr; Campbell said that both to acquaint them with the new the Church"" ' ' , . ' .,... Their aUl;hence oI..400perso.ns ~tween Catholics and, Protest- ,Catholi'cism' and Protestantism "material.., ". " "included Bishop Michael.V. Hyle ants"such as the Protestant prin- accept the same canon of New " ·~As·for the philosophy of the of WiimingtOn,. several priests, ciple of the Holy Scriptures as Testainent 'books." Protestant program," Father'Donohue said, clergymen of various Protestant the sole rules of' faith; and op- scholars in recent translations. of' '~we felt ,the elementary schools denominations and a rabbi. The posing, views of the role, of the Apocryphal bOoks are find- must give student:s a firm fou~ Catholic Educational Guild was Mary, both speakers .agreed. ing them valuable material for dation for future intellectual PITTSBURGH (NC) _ An the sponsor. ( better understanding of the develo~ment. .We must devote Irish-born priest left the U.S'. Both spea~el'S' mentioned that transitional period between the more ~Ime ~ the fundamental government about $90,000 in for some years, Jewish, .Catholic end of the Old Testament. period subjects;" ' have ' .J h'IS t ory an d th e, b'Ir th an d "gratitude for the opportunities and Protestant scholars·· ' ,,' .' . UL . . ~ffered him in America, the U.S, maintained' an . exchange of .ATLANTA (NC) _ The Na- earthly ministry. of ,JesuS" Baptizes Quad ru pletS . attorney's office here annouil.;. ideas and of their fhldings in the tional Newman' Club Fe<teratiQn Christ, he added. . DETROIT (Ne) - Quadrupeed. . ,~,i'l" . " . ':i, . :Biblical sciences. ':~ ,,: will le'stablish' a lay missionary , "", '~ Commob'Bible let eons of'~. and ~rs.'G'erai. ' '; ~" Exehange" \') ., " clearirig 'hou/le,~, information When asked! J:f"Catholic. and' 'Quinnane were ba,'i>ti~ed."in.'B'le" '. The donor was Msgr. Michael .' HoWeve,r," the !'exchange," has , . ' .. . " . . , , ;So Macken,: who died' on Feb. 9, been more frequent and'more In- '.and"se-rvices.. ,. i"·; Protestant seholatii'-may produce': sed '"Sacrament chur'ch' 'here. 1959, at the' age of 82; His"funds tens'ive :in the past"'f'o' u'~"o'r five":'" Known all •.NewrnanmissioQ" it a,,"common"Bible,""the"speakers' Peter;'Pa~i'.c~~al~'~n1.Yi~?ei1" came fro~i. in"estme,r1~s in.. go';;" I "..~U,provid~ i~ter~sted Catholic, replied·it is unlikely at this time." dressed In thell''' fmest, didn't' , . wears, the sp"eaker a'g"reed. '' t d ts t . c th l' 11 k d d i . .~rJ,~m.. ent bi'ndsa~d'~m,e secur- ." The ..Dead "Sea Scroll'discOv-' .!I.ll ~Jl a non-'a 0 IC co eges Dr, "'Campbell' 'added "that' it' ,mae' a soun or ng the cereA "'" ' , ' . with jn,formaJiot;l,,'on lay. ,mission':' 'might be arglied whether n'ot mony·,performed' by Father"~ , " • .' . ' . > .. eries,' o~ which'¢iith,Qlic".prot., , ary pr\>grams' such'a"comm6ri" BibleforCath.;.'" Leo,Healy,:chaplain of: Pi'o~ , , The money, ,was, given ~e estant' ~;and'·., JeWish' scholars' . It WHlalso.serve laymissiOil ',olics'''''an'd, 'p'r'o'"tes'~'';;n''~;.' J'S ":n''e"c'e's-'''' d~nce ,hospital,' ;'\"'" ".' ,. eountry,th,e Monsignor-'s.-wiil ,worked:in':e,lose as's'oc''J"a'tl'0"n"'1I1', 't' b .; "t' 1 . .... "" . , eaid, ~'in gratef,ul a~k,:nowl,.e.d.ge,,-.,.,: Israel partic'u,larly',i'ne'r'e'a'sed tb"is ,!'OC!~ If'lS y,glv1n.g In~ HI screen- "iiary·or'· ~i'rlibl,e'; '.'," '" ",,,., , '" . ,. .. " , .i~g" to ,appliCants to o.detf'lrmine - ',' ,., ,,,' ',' ment of th~ opportu~~t~,<to prps,:"",. exchange, the' two'sCholar:s ~el'r.,f·l·tn·ess for, ml'ss'I'onary 'serv,_ :6.,." ..,,: ,. ", ,'hj A .' D e ' I'ICI'OU' s·' '. per.both spiritually-and rilater~"'" '". i.. ,~,.;" ..: _". . ' . .. . . ":'~nnounces' rant t .~; It·"! ',: Jally Whiep this .gr~at country A.PP~OV~$of~Jthi"g '.: =~:~,~ th~ir special,qullli,fi~, ~'~,~.,:):"OU'lS"·;(NC),~The""St'.:" .. ",::.)':~';':, ,,,,. 'Treat"" has af{ord~ ~e. and, th~,m~~ 'FORT WAYNE (NC) ~Bjsh~. -i "August Conelave. , LOuJs' University School, of :. b~r!l ~f my rehgH:m and nat~on- op Leo. A, Pursley Of ,.ort· Plans call ,for Newmanmission ~iJl'sing' . and Hell.lth· Servi~eS . ..ahty: ;, Wayne-South Bend bas said to publicize the need for laymen ~as llnnoimcedre<;eiptof a $29,";' Atty. Daniel T. Brahaney of. pastoral letter' that he ap., t:O serve in' missi'on areas and to' 250 grant from the U.S. Public 'Johnsonburg; Pa., said the Mon- prC?ves of the practice of tithing, help prepare candidates by mak- Health Sei'vice to prepare ilUrsei signor .often expressed .his grat- but, will allow individual, par:". iog suggestion~ for, training. , .. at 'graduate level' for I'ositio'nS jt9d~ to .ttUl, Upited StateS', '''He . !shes to decide whether it should , Establishment of. the cle:aring teachers," guidance workers ,.; '" was proud of his citizenship and be introduced. He' Cited' two . llouse has been, entrusted to a andadmiriistrators' of nursing ,said it was Ii privilege to' pay par.ishes fnttie dioCese".where.~QmJ'!'li~tee from the Univerl1ity schools and services. ' Income tax~," the attorney saId. the system h~::been'succesSiui.' of 'So,uthwesfern LOuisiana. .' " , : , , : , ',. ,.:, ",,; ' : , i~ 'i'· ' , , ' i . ,.'" ':'~. -. ': Th~ NewmanrhiSs~on program
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" ",; executive committee oithe'New;;" man; fedtmifioii.: O'Ver:50students " .' I rePresenting'800 colleges,'and ,.., ...,!ni.versities· attend.ed. The fede": , rljti~9-~Il, 47th anh~a~si.:X::-day con-', ." Venti.on y.oill be' held at Berkeley; :·Calif., startirig Aug, '28..' ,-.' .:" , , " United Action . , "Bishop Paul' if Hallina~' Of ,Charles'ton; S. c.;"epis<:oplil mod-' ' eratoi';:told' the executive 'iriittee' ,theniitibrial federation has' achievM 'll\ibgs Impossibie' iolocal,:.camp~s .New'man·'Clubi acthig alone; , '/ ' .: ',', ' .' .' "It ,has' ,united 'Catholic: '8tu-' .: :den.ts:; it~'has '!rep~elie~ted :them; it has .seived 'them:" '..:. . ,. '
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WHITE HOUSE CONFERENCE: Magr. Raymond 1. Gallagher of Cleveland,' cOordinator for' Catholic participa;.-' Stanley QJ,I C~o",O,In,c. tion in the White House Conference'for~he Aged, 'checks tao Mt. PleuaJit Street ~ with Robert H. Grant, director of. the.eonferen~'Ne . Mew ·Bedl"..cJ":·"'·WY(S':2887· t" • '
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.A~~~ .'rUE B~'~~ IS o~~r~ P~i~ipants ,h~~(f ~l'iJrh:t,; ~e:'tt0ri,e~ .','(left) ."Alvin SUmVaJ:l, Hqly 'Name p~fish,\ Fan ::&iv~r' arid: David' &t.' of sevent.n., annual Blshop'eChanty ,Ball. Left, lea-dmg" croUples,ln' ·Grapp :~l{Uroy, St.Patriek's:·,;Somerset.The Most.Reveren(}' 'Bishop headed a .long· ., March listen to Bishop ConnoJly's'addre~s. >~ight,Bi~:Pop yisits bOx with', list of distinguished guests. ','" "
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Richmond Doctor "" .,RecpIINu'ns"~·Civil· War Hospita,IWork:" Red-Ruled Poles Says India Birth tury-'old WASHINGTON (NC)-A cen- ''Twenty-eight Sisters of Charity . sible'to him alone. They have Fi,rm Catholics photograph of some of were on duty and I must bear . been' beloved respected by .BERLIN (NC) - MOre thalli Plan Is',Fizzling' St.. the':28'Daughters of Charity of evidence to their efficiency and' themen."·· . three' quarters of the people ill . Vincent de Paul who staffed superiority as nurses. The extra' Serve'TWoliospitals
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the 'Lincoln, ,Military Hospital diet kitchen is Under the care of Sister Helen' ':Ryan served as :aed~ruled Poland are' practicing here during ,the Civil W~r is on . a Sister, and one is detailed by superior of the nuns at Lincoln CatholiCfl 'according to a Polish exhibit at Ule National Liprary the superior to each 'ward. They hospital. She' also was on the atheist, publication. ' of Medicine.. . administer medicine, diet· and bOard"()f directors' of a ProviFacty i Mysli, atheist fornight8 U,S. medical education eonThe photograph is additional stimulants under the orders Of. dence Hospital. ly, reports there are 21,806,000 llultant who works in New Delhi. evidence of the extent to which a ward surgeon and are respon,Providence Hospital, ronducted the Sisters of Charity served in . . by the Sisters of Charity, was practicing Catholics in a total "There's nothing in the Hindu this nation's epic struggle, the· founded in 1861. Two of the nuns Polish population of 28,535,000.· Those who profess no religioll religion that forbids birth eon- centennial of which now is being , who were members of the foundtrol," Dr. Edward M. Holmes ~r. observed. Records disclose that ing board served at Lincoln Hos- number 5,500,000, it said, while explained "but -the Indians sim- 57fnuns of 12. religious com._ pitaI-Sisters Alphonsa Groell the orthodox total 413,000 and · f 'l'e a d they ASSISI (NC)-Augustin Carp I y Iove th elr amI I s n munities cared' for the sick and and Mary Clothilda O'Neill. T""D Lutherans 143,000. The schis•.. th' h'ld " dinal Bea has p'ointed to lay eomatic Polish National Catholic ...,ve , ell' . c I reno wounded during the war. Of d' operation with the hieJ,'archy DIS other nuns who later filled the Church has 60,000 members and Pointing out that the In. Ian these, at least ~3Q .were .Sisters of Ii'mark .. . of:('ice of superior' of Providence of the Church's modernbirth rate)il "Hrobi1?$ and the, CharitY.. The nuns attended; both" ',;, , al$O ser,ved at Lincoln hospital-:' .' the 'rest of the people belong t sects, i~ revealed. . death .rate' ~~ . ~f?~ping,. ~p~ .~!>r:, '. p-nion ,and ·~qnfedeJ;/;lt!'ltroop;s.,ip" \~Tlie Gerlban' 'Jesuit .Cardinal;" Si~ters, Loretto O'Reilly ··aM . to snialler ..' '., , \"'.. .. ,'-.-. ': . mer Rlchmot;l~,City; ~e.l;ll~h ~,~~~- m'Uitar.,.. hq~~itals.t pJ;.i~n~,:.. ~,np in' an~ 8"tldress to a youth conven~ :Q~;ltt,j.c.e Duffr·" :~".,;, . tor said s~~port of. .t1)9..~trial ·emeJ.lgency ~~~' stations near, t1on,'here,H was ' a nsweihlg'the . ',,:'. Still in'ExiStenee dcvelopme~~;J~" ere!'tmg ~pre. battlefields."" ' .. , ' ! . .eharge.,that'the·Church is out Of. . 'Of'all hospi:tal~ established 'in jobs in Ind,~l\'" .. ";':' ,,' .'.' The "pho,togriPil ,sl),ows . ,~p. date.· ... ,,, " Washington duriilg the" civil . Although, proble~s In!Jla, fae:es Sisters 'of CAa.rity outside of tl:ieir , . Cardinal Bea" pointed' 'to' the War; : 'Providen~e is the" only, . are still "overwhelming,":. ma- . living quar~~rsI ' at, the Linc.o.ln ,.,Churcb~s efforts toward Chris':' generalinstitution 'still in exist-' .. ." ./. laria is being brought under hospital. ltec~rds., show' <~hat ,.tian.unitya's·ariOtherinarkof its" ence.' 'For 'rri~riy yearS \ it' was '., eontrol and education and tight..; President Lhlcoinoften visited .. ml)denlity.He' is 'head of the" located"in the 'southeast section I. '. CITIES SERviCE . er sanitati9n measures are ma)c- the hospital and that Mrs; Lin- secretariat' '1Vhich ',will enable 'l)fthe"cltY, :n()t,f~~.:fioQm the U.S. ' , I','" DISr~lI~uTO"S Jng gradJJa~ headway i.". the'fight ,coin brought ~he'paUents de~ica- ~o~;'Catholicstofollow the'work " Oapitol:' bunding~" It '. is' now against "slich. rampant ,diseases des from .th'e .White : . House of 'I; .the forthcoming' '.. Second" boused '.' in '~od~r~ '. quarters in • \',1.: 8S tuberc~loslS, smallpox, chol- pantries. ... j', . Va~~G~,I1:- Council.. ' .' . the -~northeast ~ction; near .. th~ .' Gasoline . era, trachoma and dysenter.y," K" I ' C'''' .' d' tl ' , As a' third ma'rk, 'li'e:cited 'the ',·'National ,Shrine' of the'lDlInacu- ' eee ve' om,m,e.D a,' Oft, . he noted. :modern' revitalization 'of' the 1Iite ;C oncep t'.lOn and the Catholic Fuel and Range Dr Holmes sent to India hi. Recor~s state tha~ the hospital :Church's missionary.activity'. 'University of America. WaS locate~ on F.i,fteenth Street, These three' mov'ements, he Octob'er , 1958' by the. Internat.. about a mile, south east of the Jonal Cooperation Admmlstra- C 'tol F "ts' " .said,'fare certainly not indicative tion, has worked at India's naPI b' r~:2 ,I. t~en:~g m of an outdated society, without Oil BURNERS health ministry for the All..; ~em. er . •. '" un ,I , was ,life' and· without ·future." n t f M d' IS' _ closed In 1866, more..than 22,000 " I I n d 18 ns I u e 0 e IC~ C1~n of . the war's' wounded . were R G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS ces, a group char~ed WIth gUld- .treated :in the hospital's 20 \:Yards. ' . ecord' S~r",on , .... CO....._· Jng the Iloun~ry s long~range· 'ni" branbh barracksanir:t~iits.:t:"7'il'WASHINqTq1ll'.(NC)-:-:A ser- . For prompt ~liv~i'y . program tp raise· health ~an- "'''-~h ~~ t It: :"~"':~J\;"t"'~:':;i¥i'on given Labor Day in Pitts.,. . ~:-:-~-"""'lO;, '&,Day & Night Servi,ce . dards.: : . : ... ".. ' .' .e '-fIS e~s w~~t:'\,:,~,·,·,'(.~/;:butgh by Bi~hop Jo.hn'J. Wright . 'Distriblfted by . A graduate of the college ana. !-°iSP.lta~, neither :a~ke4j.1o,~~,:~~r:':';;hairbeen reprinted iii. th~ Con':' Rural Bottled' Gas Se'rvic. medical sqhool of Georgetow~ ,~elV~ any compe~~a,~I~ll;:.';,., ,gressional Itecotd " " ~Rpdma.n University. he is afo~mer 'chair- . ,.rhe U. S. Army SVn~,g~9~l:'~n~t," . "~,,', . 61 COHANNET ST. man of the Catholic Chatitiee ,eral in ~ Janu~ry ..t86P, re-J,>.c)rtqo~;':\ . '.'.::,.~everage CO. . . TAUNTON·. . Board of Jiichmo~d. ,·th~ Lmcoln. l).oS.P~~l:,',.~i~,~·;;:)': R. A. WILCOX CO.' .3~~ ,'-'ash Rd., New Bedford Attleboro - N~'. Attieboro ' WYmCin 7-9937 Taimtcll'l,
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RICHMOND (NC) - lridia's goverrlluent-sponsored family planning service i8 not faring 'well, according 'to
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BRUSSELS (N:C)-Two lead- po~erfor the suryeillahc'e of t~~· • ,DESKS • CHAIR! ing international federations of . workers." It went on to ,liar that "FILINGCABINETS ' labor unions have joined I? c.on- t~~ two groups wo~ld, .step up .•. RitE -=ILES' • ·s. AFES demnation of Generahsslmo efforts to help Spamsh workers ... . '.'" , Francisco Franco's government 'obta.in union 'arid .d.emocratic , f()LDI~c; TABLIES . . in, Spain. . rights.. ' . ' '. , ' AND CHAIRS. FED~RAL . .. . ' The Catholic-oriented InterThe sbitentent also w!is ~riticl,ll . R A" WI LeOxeo ; national Federation of Christian .(1( ~~ Yfesterl} democracl~ for .,.. . . , Trade Unions and the Internat- giving assistance. to the"Franco 22' BEDFORD ST. .' i ional Confederation of Free government ."for·reasons. of,exFALL 'RIVER 5·7838 Trade Unio)ls issued a' joirit.Pedhmcy...· . . I,,", , . ~ statement denouncing "the 10- ....:... .... ......_ ...... ---------~ .. .. taHtarian police state of Gen. on regular sQvings accounts, Franco, which has been crushand up to 1%'EXTRA on Bonus ing human'. liberties underfoot Savings Accounts. Inquire. for over 20 years now." PILGRIMAGES 1 The two groups charged the' . Spanish government with con~ TOURS CRUISES demniilg to death trade unionists PILGRIMAGES' ARE OUR SPECIALTY. . . . Save ;n ::::::;:a, by maH. H_ for actions 20 years earlier. They said also that strikes had been Postage Paid your money is insured safe by an agency Appointments at you,!' convenience handled like rebellions with Both Way'~ , , of. the U... S.. Goyernme"t. Air Franc~.~rogram Available - Folders on Request workers tl:ied. before military c:ourts.. ' . ~ STEVE MARKEY - , . ,', ' JOHNTWEEDI~ , Their statement laid that 50~ ~"nty: ~tre., ~ ~ew B_edford, Ma~s.;. present trade unions in Spain are l' NorthMai'~ st.;~: Bedf~~d~O~n Fri;'t"' P. .WYman 3.~~1,3 . 'WYman 3-261,4,' '.. '. I",: "'instruments . of, the, party, . ill
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Ca'u:~iolic[: =:;: <:~Qr:1'it R~straint Under A~:;~(r:~~k'S ~n C~lurc.h
By Most Rev. Fulton J.
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Our Lord had no earihb' fatber'; therefore Elfia Betiii, symbol 01 His Merelful Love, was drawn wholly from tbe Hean of His Mother Mary. It first began beating in the elborlum 01 b0l' ehaste body; the Blood that ftowed from tbat ·Heart on Calvar,' came from the Red Fountains of the Virgin.
Bv Rev. a'eter J. R" ',ill. Ph.D. A generati~n before Theodore Roosevelt predietedthat the future would see "presidents who are Catholics, as well as presidents who are Protestants." Once the Democratic delegates had chosen the New York governor,' Methodist Bishop James with .being 'The Chief of White Cannon strove to confute Slavers.''' Before the writer is this forecast. While stress- a four-page leaflet sent ou! by i~g the prohibition issue, another puhlisher. Of the 30
But there is another side to the picture. His physical Heart copied hers; but her spiritual heart copied His. No one in the world ever imitated the virtues of the Sacred Heart as much as did the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The devotion of the two hearts therefore go together. Paray-Ie-Monial, where the revelation of the Sacred Heart was intensified, was a heavenly trumpet whose echo resounded at Fatima, where Our Lady spoke of her Immaculate Heart.
the bishop did not hesitate to reasons given for voting against attack Catholicism. Perhaps Smith, more than half are calmore than any other single in- umnies against the Church. dJvidual, Bishop Cannon was inSent Free Many wODder about the so-called letter strumental in' breaking the solid It has been estimated that of Fatima.. When will it be opeDe!l? What " South, traditional bulwark of the' anti-Catholic newspapers were . ISLAND ARCHBISHOP: will it say? Expect no short euts to world Democratic Party.' distributed . in the' astonishing peace! The deposit of revelation is lliosed. Her b e r t number of 5,000,000 copies week- . ':M;sgr. John Perris of Syra· We can be :very c'ertain ihai it will oontain H 0 0 v e ~'s ly. Though they contained ap- Island, Aegean Sea has 'been DO other message than that which Our Lady ma m e h a d p e a l s for contributions, the consecrated Archbishop of . gave at La Salette, and at Lourdes; than b'ee-n 'placed papers were sent without waitTinos, Naxos,' Andros and that which was the subjeet 01 the first Sermon of St. Peter, the be for e the ing for payment for anyone confirst sermon of St. John the Baptist, the lirst sermon 01 Our Lord 'd' d t'bl My konas island.s .of the Rep u b lican Sl ere suscep I e. and the last sermoD 01 Our Lord, :which w.. the same ... His Con v ention Stories too vile or indecent, Aegean Sea. The 45-year old first: "Do penance, or you ahall all likewise perish." Thas tile by a zealous e'ven for these "scandal. sheets" . preh~te was ordained in two hearts are one in their appeal. Cal i for nia were circulated by cham-letter R .'In 1940 . NC Ph0 t o. 'b 1 t b ome Catholic, Jossystems. L I e ous car oons pro Why do we represent the HQly Father's Mission Society for the e phS cot t. ahly were even more effective, Propagation of the Faith, speak of the 'Heart of Jesus and the SUbsequently, fOJ" the pictures made an im-. Heart of Mary? Because we are not doing enougb for the Missions . many !Jf the pression upon those who had of. the Church; because we are falling behind in our needs; because faithful benr intention of reading. ~ we know that we can do nothing; because we are certain .that since came critical of the Republican Restraint of Catholics TIN6s (NC) .:..- Hundreds of ' ttie Sacred Heart and the Immaculate Heart can do everything when candidate because of his silence When the head,of the .Womer:t's Greek' peasants donned their fail most, we appeal to you in the name of ~nance to come to regarding anti-Catholic support. Democratic Club of Baltimore Sunday' best, ~estooned their the rescue of the Missions. Hoover's statement appealed to the Catholic wom'en donkeys and mules with oleIn extenuation it could be said of Maryland to support Al Smith, ander flo'wers and converged on IlIl the United States tJhere ought to be at least 1000 faithluU the Baltimore Catholic Review the tiny village of Xynara {or who have been blessed by God witb money and who love Hia that no one knew. what the th effect f' t declared'. "The Pope' would not the consecration of Msgr. John Sacred Heart enougb in return to give the Holy Father a miniwould be since It was e Irs dare to make thl's sugges~ion . . Perris as their new Archbishop. mum sacrifice of $2500 to build a chapel In the Mission landsnational test for a mem b er 0 f hl's suggestl'on would not be ac. It was a festival, the first of leaving it to the Holy Father to decide where it will be bunt~ the Church. Not so easy to uncented I'f he dl'd dare." . its kind in ages for this wind. t f d tate There OUght to be a million who have very little of the world'a derstand is the s . men oun The Assocl'ated Press wl'dely swept island . in the Aegean. A «oods, but 1IO much love 01 the, Saered Heart that tbey wlll buy it; Hoover's Memoirs (p. 209): quoted from a sermon of· Arch,. growing network of roads built ten cents wortb leS6 food lI. day, or smoke ten cents less elgarettes, "The religious issue had" no bl'shop John J. Glennon of St. with American aid has made b us or do without ten cents .worth 01 something for one month. Then ~ight in the LoUI'S, the remark that,: "The . final I 'result. t trayeL possi bl e between many 0 f at the end of the month they will send their sacrifices to the Were thIS ana YSIS correc of the Church I'S the sal- . the ' . . ~ villages of mountainous f f ,. ml·.~sl·on .Holy Father through his Soeldy for the Propagation 01 the Faith. then a stupendous amount 0 e - vation of souls, ~ot the election Tinos; But from time immemPlease let us bear from 70U ia the name of tile Sacred HearL fort and money were expended -I Presdents." ..... .... orial, the people had . taItell without impa ct . S pace permI.... On ele'ctl'on day the New YorL. Il\, pride in the gay trappings of thoe GODLOVE YOU to Anon. for $27.20 ... to P .A.C. for $! "This but a minute smattering th t of the Times' deplored the religious. 'donkeys they ride to solemn · is in thanksgiving for a favor granted through the Intercession 01. abundant evIdenee a cam- -ntroversy InJ'ected Into t h · . . ...~ .. religious services; the customs Our Blessed Mother." .'.. to Mrs. A,C.A. for f3 "Please accept' thw paigners against Smith consldCondl·tl·.ons would of their fathers and t h elr . f a thers' vital campal·gn. th ered his Catholicism e have been far worse, the journal fathers could not be erased that . offering as a token of ,reparation for my many faults." ... to M.R.B. for $500 "This is tor the Holy Father to use as he sees fit to 'preacl.t r.e1°~~r~er Govern~r declared' asserted, iave for "the fact that easily. . the gospel to all nations'. It is' half of my inheritance." . . . to tbe 'Catholics have exhibited such .So the great 'Cathedral of. Our C.F.M. for $66 "The' Chr~9tiaD Famil7 Movement would like til» lIletit was impos91ble for Al to wonde'rful restral'nt under at-, Lady of, the Rosary was. a mass -"" h ti be at. t e sadme odme·CathSUV'Alt. ta<:ks. upon their Church; TheJ'.. of c~lor.bOth inside and...out f()(', donate this money to the Propagation of the' Faith. It would other· wi8ehave been. Used for Christmas eards and stamps." , American an a' go a 0 c." k t' 'silo t· . '.. the'" . . . - . haye ep.· :Ift· •. tbe,.conse.cration, Mas.s. of Msgr. .. ;- '. '-'--'" Re · urge d .- the f al·thful In'. ......, , f t ' en ,eVen... . . United States to set up a ChUM'" fac~o· no orlous m~srepr~"~et:rll.wbowas c.onse~ated b V C u t out·this eoluinn;'PlD y6t1r iacrifice to it and mall it to the· arated from the Pope. :' tatlon and calumny. . ' '.'. ' , : ,·A,rchblshop.Benef,ilct Prmtezill of: Moit Rev. FultOn J.. Sheen, National Director: of the Society f_ MP .. :.~ .: .ChurchThanklul-,,,; .;,At)lens,; ,with '. B.ishop. George· ,.'the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Averiue, New :York I, N. Y.. Ml'h~n Dollar BI&,otr,. When the ·vot.es were,~unted Xenopo\llos Gf Syros .andBishopOl' 'your. Diocesan Director"RT: REV.' RAYMOND T. 'CONSIDINE, An Asslsta~t Attorney G~ne- five states deserted the hitherloHyacinthGad Apostolic Exarch 368 North Main Street.'Fall River, Mass. '. , .. ; ' . '. ral of theymted States.advIsed Solid South' and Smith was de;;"'of:Byzaniine'Rite .Catholics in a convention ,of Methodist cler-'Cisively defeated. Notwithstand"-:: Gteece' . servIng' .: ali' co-conseO'~en. that they should' tell. lng, the' Catholic . candidate l'e"" craiors~ . . . , ., .. DAUGHTERS Of ST:. 'AUl theIr congregations to vote ceived. the .. highest popular vote "1."_ UI . . . . . . III aga~nst Smith.. ' . . ever polled by a Democrat, ap-'C~Heges toCoriduct Christ·, _,, ";n.yard _ _ Apeelte .. . . Even the Chicago Tribune, an proaching the combined total of . Editio"., P,.... Radio, Movi., alNl r.... ardent supporter of Hoover, his party's candidates intlie'1920 Language, Institutes'· ";lion. Wilfl th_ .. oondemn0d this appeal to relig- and ,1924 elections. ' ,.... WAST.TTNGTON (1""') - Five llIIi..ionary Si,t.,. brine Chrilf', Doctrilltt lous prejudice as "an act for If anti-Catholicism had been Catholic institutions of' higher .. an. ,-sa,dl... of ,ace. color • - . POt i"f.rmaliCKI write to: which an official should be re- rampant· still there-had been education are among 55 colleges llEY MOTHER SUJlHIOR moved from office." But the of- none of' the violence whereby and universities named by the to n. PAUl'S A~ eaSTON aG.· MAil. flcial was nei~he~ dismis~ed nor Know-Nothings in Baltimore.. U.S. Office of Education to conceased campalgmng untd elee- dr'ove Catholic voters from the duct language institutes for tion day on Nov. 3. polls in 1856. The fair-minded grade and high school teachers .• A prominent North Carolina outside the Church" and ,espec- this Summer or during the next woman ,asserted. that the anti- ially the secular press, had school' year, _ They are:. Georgetown Uni- .. C!lth()lic literature poured into, learned '. that· defamations ,long' tl~~'state mus! ,Qave :cost a mil.,. accepted without question,~e~..· yersitY.', .W.a s,h i n g ton;. D.C., .." I. . li~)li:: d~Uars: One"pr:oducer had totally ,false.' .,' .. '.,~ ; . . . -';FJ'!IDcQ;'Ionit.. GoJlege,New ·Roch.. i ~orked '. 'for' the: A~~rican Pro- ... ·Most of all as the" New irorli' ., elle. N ,Y.· . French and Spanish;.·,. ., .. t~t~ve .··Asso~iatiQtl'~'a,gainst· ~ Times; recogtiized,:' .the Ch'ill-ch"',: Urii~ersit;' :of Notre 'bl'mie,South, . . qt~J1:~h ini. the ,189Q~~/;. could be thankful that her chUd-' Bend, Ind., French and Spa'nish; 0'. ;,,' . . ' -:.,. ·i~v:·;~. ; ~;"~~~e:A~.~e '~~1denr ren intheUnited,States had re';"-!t'osarydOllege,River'Forest, Dl.,.,<· IJ c"'''';' ".,.' . 3~ .iOn . Q.n~,;POsi::cai-d:-':of vihicli fr;lineILfr:oni returnjng,,~yll for 'Ff'endi'a#d: SpaniSh";" and' the, . :: . ' . J " ,.':,;, '.,.. ;,.,:. ...,-.- , -: . tlf~a;i]~dtfi:ous~M·iitthe-per-Il1··evil: ...... '.. ,. ; .. ' " , :i.i:i ..; conih~'i·,ofi·St .. 'TE;resli;,W~iiona,,\ ..: ..' " ..., ." \:" C' : . ' : " : ": -' rate·th~n:i;~iri"·effeet.:he wildlt. (Nexfweek:'Catholics A~vance':x Minn~?FtenchandSpanish:' "": ,:.,."J 0" ·JI clai~ed.that.ivictory·.forSmithA!Bitterness·LesSens.) '" ." ':Pti15lic ·'sc~ool·teaehets" re-' m An A , "means ·ttie~ Pope :"ilbove t h e · , '.. .' •. ceive stipen!is of $75 a week and UNION' WHARf' FAIRHAVEN, . MASS. President, the dation Law above Group Plans "$15dor,each dependent,but II ' ~ ~ ~ the Constitution, and the Papal B' O!O.'t'on 'Conve"ntion' provision 'in the, 1958, ·National , . rag above the Amertcan flag." , . ~efens~ Educa~ion Act,under Another card' addressed fle WASHINGTgN (NC) - ' The' which' the program is conducted, women read: "I charge the Pope sixth ,national convention. ()f dgesnot· provide' t~ese :for:pri.' " . the National Catholic Carnpin« nteschool teachers. The7 calli' b\Aercy Sisters Leave· Association will be held inBoS-attend"w~t~ouftuitioncharge.. ~ a. " • .• P ton, Jan. 25 to 27.· .' ., ror r",ic;c;lon In era Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder,' ComMunists Stone CHICAGO (NC)-Four Sisters NCCA national director, said the I' Ma·r'y"·kn··o'll.p'ar'."sh .. .~y·~.We:·$uppl' of Mercy have left here to open convehtion theme will be "Cath. 'a school and a clinic In Sicuani, oile" Camping: Spiritual;' Moni, ,' .. LA -PAZ (N€) -,-, The year'o . . ..., C6~PLEr~' : Peru, in "the Diocese of Cuzeo . Physical Frontiers." .. '" -, , . ;. first,. : downpour· :; drove ofL a,. RENTAt WORK·; UNIFORMS which headed by Bishop Nevin Richard Cardinal Cus~ing,;:,;m~iof communist demoD,stra-. ,". ." t .,. Hayes, O.Carm., formerly lJtI., Archbishop of Boston, host iA):the'~ tors stoning the Maryknoll par,;' . .' Convention,." will ;., addreSs ;1. the, .ish of San Pedro here in Bolivia..' L: Chicago. .. Ak!o Reclai~ l~dustri~1 GIo..... The'Sisters are: Mother MarY opening-':'session:-" Joseph ~nk, ",Frustrated in· their efforts to, Huberta Provincial 01. the COID- Jr., NCCA president, said high- prevent, Archbishop 'Abel Antemunity's C h'l c a «0 province; lights of the conferences will be. zana of La Paz from offering lIl' Mother Mary Baptista of the discussions on liturgical partici- . Mass in the cathedral in 'protest Omaha province; Sister Mary'pation apd spiritual dev:elopment against the presence of Russian JOhnetta Kaney; Sister Mary in camping; employment, 1I"ain- 'good-will' officials in Bolivia," Nivard Murphy; Sister Mary ing llnd d~velopment of camp said Father John J.. O'Brien,' Svccessor .. Damaris Twigg; and Sister MalT counselors; camp standards, and M.M., "the ~eds diverted' their . ' New England Overall & Supply Ce. Lauren Rogers. The two Mothers effective adminiostration.Gov. anger 'towardthe parish 01. San Ie Boward Aye., New Bedford will return to the United Statea John ,E. Volpe of MasSachuietta· Pedro, whicb is located near the ~OIIe .,... 'T -"., _ WY ,-". abortlT. . will addreSlrtbe delegate&. .. oenter of the city. > ... ' .'
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SOCIAL EVENING: Not the least enjoyable part of the Bishop's Ball was the opportunity of meeting friends from aUparls of the Diocese. Left, "table-hoppers" Mr. and Mrs. George Bauza, St. 'Mary's parish, Norton, chat with (left to right) Edward Smith, Bernard J. Byrnes, Mrs. Smith and Mrs. 'Byrnes, an 'of St. Mary's, North Attleboro. Right,
usherettes msplay eorsages to Mrs. James A. O'Brien Jr., vice-president of the Diocesan, Council of Catholic Women. Left to right, Mary Ann Childs, Our Lady of Assumption, Osterville; Mrs. O'Brien; Agnea
Brachman, St. Joseph's, Fairhaven; Cynthia ·Abreau, St; Anthony'li!o Taunton. .
Assert Study 'of Theology, Deny Legislative Insnires Love for Truth, ' s~@]~~ to Vi«:tors ~
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Pope Joh'n CaUs at V@t~ca!11 Of*oc:®s To Know Has ASSHStl'CiIrrofrS rge~t~r
VATICAN CITY (NC) - His gregation for the Orlen~ Holiness Pope John XXIII has Church the Sacred Congregabegun a series of calls at V a t i - ' . . can offices to make himself bet- tion of Sacramental DIscipline, ter acquainted with the men the Apostolic Penitentiary, and who help him govern the the cen~al preparatory commisChurc~. sion for the coming ecumenic~ His first 'caN last week was council. Elt the o~ices of the Sac~ed While calling at the' CongregaCongregatIon of the Holy OffIce tion for the Oriental Church the just outside Vatican City in Pope also received membe~s oi Fathers. It is operated by lay them a deeper love for truth., until a legislative committee Rome. His visit was made in the preparatory secretariat f~ members of the Assumption ' Almost as high (55 per cent) completes its investigation into private form, that is without the . Christian unity, led by its preslChapter of the Third Order of . were those who credited the charges of fraud in voter regis- ceremony that usually accomdent, Augustin Cardinal Beo. panies his public appearances. S.J. St. Dominie. Classes are held two ciourse with teaching them to tration by the CAP. Earlier Pope John had renights a week atSt. Vincent think theologically, or about God Legislators of both the Pop_ Ferr~ ,school Qere. ' in a ri~orous, scientific, Ill~nner. - alar Democrat party and the ceived groups of lay Vatican· dependents", At the. conclusion of the 1~ , Roughly 40 p'er ,cent ~~t the" ·Statehood party, two chief poUt- . 1lmployees and Spring semester, questionnaires, study had helped them solely in, :ical unitS, voted unanimously to headed' by Count Enrico Gal-, . .SHEET METAL'\' ,were .sent to all registered s\~-. ,~eir.personal!lfe. More women, :deny seats to" Senator-elect E. elinJi, general director of the dentll,. asking them to ev"luat~ than ml;ln fou,nd this to ~ the 'Davila Polanco and Representa- Va,tican's technical serVices; and J. lESER, Prop. :' the scope and presentati~n"of case, while the IIlen appreciated, 'tive-elect Jose L. Feliu Pesquer~. Tomasso Labella; dean of the , -RESIDENTIAL Papal Chambers. , their courses, list the beqe~its more the scientific aspects of' , ,The 'fraud aliegedly tooltplace .NDUSlRIAL ' . received as a result of taking the theologic41 study. during the CAPis efforts to'meet Two Boun COMMERCIAL eourses, and state whether they a Puerto. Rican requirement that The Pope's visit to the Holy 253 Cedar St. New Bedford intended to register next term. , WY 3-3222 . The school received 201 returns, ' a political party can obtain 11 Office lasted nearly two hours~" place on the ballot only if it se- during which he stopped in each ' all but a few of the total number cures affidavits of support from, office and spoke to each member ',... ~ registered. NEW YORK (NC)-A bishop , 10 per cent of the registered of the staff. It ended with a BUCK OSSICK'S Level '.Just Right' " v o t e r s . Charges have been made brief address by the Pope to In general, students expressed has praised a' housing plan to a high degree of satisfactioriboth provide decent homes in Harlem that some affidavits were forged. members and consultors oj) the . with their courses and their in- for members of cooperative The CAP is the. outgrowth of congregation. On succeeding days the Ponstructors, although a few, pos- movement. Catholic dissatisfaction with the tiff visited the headqul,lrters of sibly reflecting a higher aca, The plan, to be explained in Popular Democrat' party led by demic background than the ma- five talks, proposes to have mem- Gov. Luiz Munoz Marin. The the Sacred Congregation ef jority, registered 'some disap- bel'S save together, accumulate Puerto Rican Bishops appealed Rites, the Sacred Consistorial pointment with the shallowness sufficient cayital to purchase an to Catholics to support the party. Congregation, the Sacred Conof the courses. apartment house, renovate it and In mid-Octobp.r, the country's The curriculum covered by the inha):lit it. . archbishop and two bishops spe~ Free Delivery 3, Times D.aily survey included courses on "The Auxiliary Bishop John 1. ,Ma-" ,cifically condemned the Popular Passions and Virtues," ,"Crime guire of New York praised the' Democrats,the island's strongest and Punishment," "The Trinity," plan, Qeing carried' out under 'party, and warned Catholics they "The Creation," "The Liturgy" the direction Of Father,. William could not vote for the organiza': 'I • I . , and ''The Life of Christ." J. McPe'ak'of All 'Saint(! Catho- tion. Complete Selection of '. • MEATS • GROCERIES Six t y-seven per cen t of the lie 'Church'• .' ',., :,~: I ' ,-, . " H.o,wever,' G,ov. Muno'" ~arin _. d t d' id th "l' cOnsider It hi"),}" a':"por_'j .. .".. ,,'. 'PROVIS'IO'NS: l MU en s respon 109 sa ey , 6 " " u'. and,his party. swept the Nov.'S",. found the level of their courses *ant ~hat Catholics. realize, the' eltlCtions. The CAP failed. to get 249 Adams St.,' Fairhaven to be "just right," while 28 per benefits of coopeI:abves,'linterest" 10 perCent of th' , te ' t·' d ', WYman 4-4441 ' cent said It was "deep/' and the themselves in fUrthering this lost. ItS . status as' ~anvoisland s, casparty, an "I'-='E===lE'==='l9El=;' ==.!C;e~ • f h i" . d il th' ..~ remainder consisted of those who type 0 ous ng an ava em. found it "shallow." selves of these facilities," be Sen. Davila and Rep. Fellu, --tl--' said h~wever, won by popular vote Prime Aged Courses P..... .,..... in their two districts. ,Charcoal Broiled Steaks An overwhelming number of the students (86%) found the Roast Beef - Seafood Prescriptions called for courses to be practical in nature Special Poultry Dishes Literatur~ rather than too abstract. They and delivered WEDDINGS AND BANQUETS OLEVELAND (NC)-8t. ChrisSCRAP METALS were somewhat more critical, HEADQUARTERS FOR IN PRIVATE ROOMS topher Parish Men's Sodality is WASTE PAPER _ RAGS however, of the classroom pre&- ' Mayfair 4-9$88; 4-997,9 . DIETETIC SUPPLIES ' finding it difficult to keep its TRU.CKS AND TRA'ILERS FOR entation of their instructors, all Catholic liter-ature rack 'well 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 - , 91 CRANDALL RD. of whom were theologians on the stocked at .Cleveland - Hopkins PAPER DRIVES 'TIVERTON, R. I. Bedford " faculties of local universities. '. ~ Ai t h " ", CHURCHES, SCOUTS' and rpor ere. ,..",: :~'.:', '; CIIVIC ORGANIZATIONS While 75 per cent found their The sodality ,. began Its "sky teachers' presentation "lively," apostolate" three" years :ago. lOBO .. Shawmut Avenue 21 per cent called it' only ''1air,'' Since then 55,000 magazines,' ~e.w. ~e~f~r,: + • ~-!8:8 I" pamphlets, ari~ n~wspapers ~ave .: I~~~~~~~~~~~I been 'taken :from 'the airport' , Gift hhelp-yourself r~ck·~':1 " . BEFORE YOU ,; BRIDGEPORT (NC) - The Air traveietS~'.cariY away a~ , '. BUY.,.. TRY , major par'tion of a $250,000' e&average of 2,000 free, pieces of . .~f' tate has been left to the Diocese literature each. week. Some 29 of Bridgeport and its Society for' sodelists take turns making three, the Propagation of the Faith or more trips to the airport each , office. The bequest, made in the week to keep the rack neat: and, OLDSMOBILE. will of Henry 'J. Neal, retired':~ well stocked. Much of'the liter':'". realtor, directs' the 'diocese to atu,.e is purchased"by the sodal.,. 'I, , .Oldsmobile - Peugot .,Renalt I use the money' to help educate lsts, the remainder donated by 6'1 Middle" $tr~t, "F~haveD NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. 8tudentB 1m the priesthood. Catholic publishers. '
NEW YORK (NC) - Theological studies inspire stuSANJUAN (NC) -.The dents to a deeper love for truth and are an impetus to the two successful candidates of apostolic life, a survey conducted by the School of Theology for Laymen has disclosed. The school, which has teacher eol- the Church-backed Christian , Action Party in last Novemlege-level eourses ba~ed on and four per cent said it was just ber's elections have been denied the Summa TheologIca of plain "dull." their seats by the Puerto Rican St. Thomas Aquinas, is conThe largest number - 59 per Legislature. ducted by the Dominican cen~said the cour~ had given' The seats have been refused
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This Bride Made Trip to' Altar SmOothI,
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION. FALL RIVER SANTIAGO (NC) - Primltiva The Women's Guild will hold a bean s~pper and square dance made sure her bridal trip to tile Saturday night, Jan. 28. Mrs. altar would be smooth. She did Dolores Cangello, guild presi- . everything herself. "When Primitiva, the cook at dent, is chairman. • Maryknoll mission here in SANTO CHRISTO, Chile, finally hooked her boy FA"~L RIVER friend," Father Charles F. Mc:New officer!" of the Holy Name Carthy, M.M., of San Francisco Society include Joseph Rapoza, aid, "she made sure nothing was president; Joseph V. Medeiros, lfOing togo wrong at her wedvice president; Joseph Arruda, cUng.. seCret"~v: Manuel Martin, treasurer; Edward Rapo2;ll and Manuel Domingos, marshals. The CYO will discuss the litur.gy of the Mass at the Februllr7 meeting, with Geraldine Rapoza heading a panel of five. " A social is planned for Saturday, Feb. 11 in the church halL The Council of Catholic Women will hold installation ceremonies ilt 7:30 Sunday night, Jan. 29 at Hotel Mellen. Mrs. Mllr7 Medeiros is chairman. The unit'. study group will meet Monda,.. Feb. G and a Cana Conference will be -held Tuesday, Feb. T Sa the lower ·church. Next regular meeting is set for. '7:30 Tuesday night, Feb. 14.
On the morning of the bie daiF she was In the chureb c:leanlnc
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ST. JOAN OF ARC, ORLEANS M;rs: Robert R. Peno Jr. will serve as president of the Friend. ly Club: for the coming ·year. Mrs. John Keenan will be secretary; Mrs. Edwin Bessom, ST. JEAN BAPTISTE. treasurer; Mrs. Gordon Nadeau. FALL RIVER chaplain. The Council of Catholic Women A whist party is planned for will hold a fashion show Mon8 We~nesday night, Jan. 25 m. day, March 13 with M:s. Ernest the school hall, with Mrs. Mercier and Mrs. EmIle PelleGeorge Morin as chairman. The tier as co-chairmen. Mrs. Omer annual Summer. fair is . t for Martineau is program chairman Wednesday, July 12for the next regular meeting., ST. MICHAEL, Monday. Feb. 13. FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT. will hold a cabaret dance this FALL RIVER Saturday night in the school Rec. Ferris A. M. Kleems, C.S.C., will preach a mission at auditorium. Mrs. Arthur Oliveira the ch~rch the week of March 11: is chairman. The unit 'will receive corporIT. ELiZABETH, ate Communion at 8:30 Mass FALL RIVER . Sunday morning, Feb. 5 and will The Women's Guild will hold also hold a cake sale following • penny sale at' 7:30 Saturday all Masses. ST. MARY'S. night, Jan. l!1 in the crurch halL A fashion show is set ·for Sun- SEEKONK Mrs. Manuel Ferreira and Miss The Women's Guild ·will hold day, March 12, also in the 5choot Amelia Oliveira are co-chairmen. Next regular meeting of the unit II meinbership drive from '7 to e The unit will hold joint In- ~ill be Wednesday, Feb. 8.. Sunday evening, Jan. 29 in.the lIltallation ceremonies with' the The Holy Rosary Sodality of parish hall. Mrs. Dorothy BreDHoly Name Society at a date to the parish will sponsor a mala- nan is chairman, assisted b,. • be announced. cada. supper at 6:30 Saturday large committee. Other events scheduled by tbe , night, Jan. 2l! in the IChooL OUR LADY OF VICTORY. guild include a cake sale SUD-', ST. ROCH, CENTERVILLE day, Feb. i9; ,II fashion sh9W The Women's Guild will hold FALL RIVlER Friday, April 14; a mother and Mrs. Romeo Charest heackJ 8\' food sale Friday, Feb. 10 at daugh~er Communion breakfast", Stop and Shop market, Hyannis. officers of the' Women's Guild Sunday;"May 7 and a strawberry .' Mrs. Ernest C. Labadie is chair- for the coming two years. With ' 'supper ill June. . " her will serve Mrs. Paul GirouX, man. The parish~s ,51st, annual varLvice-president; Mrs. Ernest GagIMMACULATE CONCEPTION, non, treasurer; Mrs. Pierre Gag- ety show will be staged in Peter,' Thacher School theatre, AttleFALL RIVER non, secretary. ,bor.o, in March.• Afternoon aDd The CYO will hold a fashion , ,Next regular meeting of. , tbo mow at 7:30 Thursday night, group will be Monday, Feb. CL 'evenirig perlorin.ances will be Mar'ch 2 at White's restaurant. . Slides of Notre ,Dame, chuich' "given; with the ,date to be anEntertainment will also' be' furwill be shown by Edmond Poi- nounced., Mrs. Veneta S. Ca~ nished by Immaculate Concep- rier and activities for the re- and Mrs. Marie Tetreault are tion Boys' Choir. Chairmen are ml;linder of the year will be an- co-directors. .Jeannine Comeau, Patricia Pulnounced. ST. MARY'S, len and Anne McMillan. Pro,ST. STANISLAUS, NEW BEDFORD eeeds will benefit the Paul FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold . Nogueira scholarship fund.. Mrs. C~cilia Wolowiee wiD be a cake sale Sunday, Jan. 22 fo1pres,ident of ·the Holy Rosary lowing Masses. February event. lIT. JOSEPH, 'Sodality for' the cominB year. will include a bean supper lit FAIRHAVEN The Couples' Club will hold'its -With her w:ill be Mrs. Agnell- P.oli~h-AmericanVeterans M _ ,.1fth annual semi-formal dance Wolowiec, vice president; Mrs. ,orial Hall Satu,rday, the 4th;. from 8 to 12 Saturday night" Jan. !ean Toulan, financi8J. .eereta&; """ Valentine dance, also at the·baD, Zl at Allendale Country Club. A . Mrs. Mary GoscimiDsJd, treasu- Saturday, the 11th; and • ....buffet will be served. Mr. and rer; Mrs. Sally Crygiel, .eeietai7. . Dight Monday, Feb. 13. Future plans include a whUt Mrs. Roland Surprenant, club . party in Marc;h,' aperform~ president couple, are chairmea BLESSED SA,CRAME'!lT. FALL R I V E R , ' in April, rummage sale in May f1l. the event. . The Women's Guild will hold and dance in June. OUR LADY OF GRACE, a cake sale Sunday, Jan. 29, post' NORTH WESTPORT priried from Sunday, Jan. 15 in ST. PIUS X, . :., Spring projects for the Wom- respect to the memorY of Rev. SOUTH YARMOUTH , ' en's Guild include a May basket Eugene Dion, pastor and 'guild New officers of, the Women'. " . Guild include Mrs. Chester A. whist, for which members are moderator. "Savery, president; Mrs. JosePia eontributing canned goods; and a '. Cipkowski, vice president; lin. 'Jayette '.for Westport Nurses' HOLY ROSARY, . John Simpson, recording seere_ Association, for which items are FALL RivER tary'; Mrs. Robert Shea, ciozTe., ,to be left at the home of Mrs. . The Women's Guild willspooMargaret Goslin, Sanford Road. sor a fashion show at White'l! sponding' secretary; M1iL BoUIlI The discussion group will meet restaurant Monday, Feb 20. Mrs. Batchelder ir., treasurer. Secret pals will be revealed lit 'Tuesday, Jan. 24 at the home III Ernest IYAmbrosio ¥ ticket February's meeting. Mrs.' KenMrs. Lorraine Emond, Sanford chairman. 'Mrs. Florence Spear and Mrs. neth Marshall will head the reRoad. Mrs. Marguerite Briand is Raymond Parise are in charge freshment oommittee. chairman. , of the church altar for February. A Cana conference for married . ST. WILLIAM, eouples is scheduled Wednesday, ST. DOMINIC'S FALL RIVER Feb. 1 under dIrection of Mrs. SWANSEA The Women's Guild is SPODThe Women's Guild will hold Lorraine Zajac. its annual potluck supper and soring a whist every TuesdaJ' Next regular meeting is set for Tuesday, Feb. A' cosmetic . penny sale Saturday night, Jan. , night in the parish halL A fashioa demonstration will be featu'red. 21. The supper will begin at 6:3C1 show will Qe held, at 7:30 SundaJ' and the penny sale at S. Botlll night, Feb. 5 at Venus de Mile NOTRE DAME. events win take place m Jt oi restaurant. Tickets are availabltt from all guild members. F~~~C~~~~~of Catholic Women Old Wa~n Ro!ld, S. . . . - will hold a Communion breakfast Special awards at the .le wfJll ST.' PATRICK, at 9 Sunday morning, Jan. 29 at Include a portable television aet, . WAREHAM The' first in a series of lect~ Notre Dame school hall. Rev. tIilverware and a handmade rug. Roger P. Poirier, curate at Notre Supper ticketsiu'e availablo' by prominent Cathoiic educator. Dame and native of St. Joseph'll from guild membera OIl' at st. will be given Sunday under the sponsorship of St. Patrick's C~ parish, New Bedford, will speak. Dominic's rectory. Tickets' are now available. Mrs. Chairmen include :P4rs. SaD7 cleo Rev. 'Edward Hilton,' OP• ~ymond Boulay is general Almeida, general ehain,Dan; Mrs. .Dean of Freshmen at Providence' c:hairman. Mary PrizeD; supper ebairman; College will address parents and : The unit will hold its regular, Mrs. Gladys, Urban '..'aDd :IitIn. high school students OIl "Tbe meeting and election of officers Mary Furtado, penily seJe ec-' Needs'and Advantages of Highei'f' .; Monday night, Jan. 30. chairmen; and Mrs. Almeida amt Catholic Education." A questi. . JAMES, Mrs. Alice Jarvis, sp~~iaI awarckJ and answer period will follow. TIle Circle fa the sponsor of a :NEW BEDFORD eo-chairmen: , ' . scholarship to a deserving Cath\ i;;Dr. Arthur F. Buckley, K.S.G. OUR LADY' OF ASS~TRON. olic girl p~anning t.cattend ~ j:"!as guest speaker at iast night's OSTERVILLE ."", Catholic College. It is .nained foIi 'm..~eting of Msgr. Noon Circle. The Women's G~ild.:~~ll hold . the Circle's first advisOr, Rev. ; Mrs. T·~O J. '!'elesmanick presid- a green tea St. Patridd'iDay in Joseph P. Lyons, former pastoi' '~' and Mrs. Edward MacKllY' the neW-church hall. MrsiJames of the parish and: pow pastor ~ " and M;~s Anna Meehan were co...· F. Shields ischairman,'<~i~ed by St. Joseph's"FallR~v~, ~ c:hllirmen of the hospitality a large committee. ~ommittee. ' A !lupper is planned for April ST. LOUIS, ST. MARY'S, with Mrs. ' Jerome Bowes as' FALL Riv.ER '$OU~" DARTMOUTH' chairman." '. " The Women's GuD.d Wrnhold ·:~:~.-:rlcte Women's Guilwill sPon,; February guild meeUb,g wm 21' penny Sale' TueSdai, Feb.' l~ . hi. the church auditorium. Mn. so~,. 'its annual ham and beaD' be the firSt.to be held b1'the new sUpper\"SaturdaY'night;:':Jant"~";:' ',church,: Jlnd;_~::;feature II Oliver Dawsona.Dd Mrs. Ra7~ the church 11all. demons,tration of electric' rao&ea. mond. Morin are co-chairmen. :BOLY NAME, :FALL RIVER :: The Women's Guild will spon.:: ~r a supper at 6:30 tonight, in .; the school hall. Mrs. Raymond , :Conboy is general chairman.
and making preparatlona. TbeII she went home and prepared the wedding feast. At 3:30 abe .... back in the chUrch putting up decorations. At T she left aDd was back in a half houraJl dolled up in her wedding finelT. Aftef the wedding she tidied up the church before leavinC _ her honeymoon.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Jon. 19, 1961
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niE ANCHOR-Diocese affol1
River-Thurs~, Jol1.19, 196'.
Rector. Reports Progre'ss On Ho'rtford Cathedral By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy To the scanners of this column in various parts of the - country, the author is known simply as one of those wretches who, for some mysterious reason, are fated to ., spend years reading and reviewing books.. In fact,. however, lie leads a double life. And it which was faced by the' builders _ occurs to him that some ac- of the Hartford cathdral. . count of the other side of 'The Institute undertakes to· that life might be of gome advi~e on liturgical. propriety in
. slight interest. For the last year he has been rector of a cathedrat A cathedral,. t hat ~s, WhICh, u n t 11 DOW, ;1r:~llally did not eXIst. It may be remembered that among the speetacular fires of 1956 was one which broke out en the vel' Y last, and possibly bleakest, day of that year. It destroyed St. .Josenh Cathedral, Hartford, Connecticut, a brown - stone, Gothic-derivative edifice which bad been consecrated in 1892. After the fire there beean the tledious work of cle;1t"in!! the site. plannin!! '. a new structure, and .brlngin'! the latter into beinl!!. The" present writer had a tittle something to do with the prelim 1"""rjes. and constru~tion was ·In progress when. In Nov"~""r 1959, hI'! was appointed to the rectorship. The first objective was tl!e readying of the lower church. The entire buildin'!', of prelItressed. concrete faced. with 1tmestone, was being raised at once. But to prepare tbe lower ehurch for occu!>ancy as soon as I)Ossible was. ·the primary CGn·eern, because the. pooulous par,Ish had 'no adequate place <Jl 'I)rship. Since the fire, Sunday Masses bad been ·uffered in three different pla~s; and it was often ·the case that there was a Ma. In.each at the same hour. Beautiful Deslp The design of the new cathedral, by Eggers and Higgins of New York, was strikingly beautiful. ,.".,temporary in style, but Dot freakish. It called Jor a main c:athedral of majestic proportions, yet essentially simple lines. Of so-called decoration af the Interior, there would be none; all would be integral to the building itself. The focal point of the upper church would be the high altar, with a curved, unpier<'ed apse going up some 100 feet behind it. There would be two transept chapels, and six 9tnall chapels off the main sanctuary. . In the nave walls would be Z6 windows, each 67 feet hi.eh and more than 13 feet wide. Also in the I"'''''. "~~I,..,n;TJ.I!· at eye level, woul-t h'" t"n windows, five on either side, each 13 feet high. And in thf! transeots would be more windows, nine In each, ·thes" too 13 'feet high. Over the main doors would be stillmore glass. F··erythl~ Correet It was decided that all these windows would be of mosaic . glass: that is, thick glass set into concrete without leading. The eoncrete supplies all figuration and delineation. The nave win. dows were assigned to Jean Barillet of Paris, the transept windows to Pierre Millous of Chartres. . A scheme of iconography had heen worked out, specifying . subject matter and symbolism tbr all the liturgical and irtistie appointments. But there arose a problem of successfully coordinating the execution. For a project so va~t, complex, and important, it was essential that everything be correct,_excellent and hannonious. without repetition, conflict, or eonfusion. Institute in Rome It was suggested that the International Institute of Liturgieal Art in Rome be cons!J.1ted. This is a relatively new or,ganization, brought. into being' by
appomtments. On Its staff are experts of eminence and experience men who know the mind and' the law of the Church. Moreover, it engages first-rate artists in various media for the works required. It sees to it that all fits well together. ' The institute arranged for an the liturgieal and artistic appointments in the lower church, and one can now see for himself how well this organization carries out a project entrusted to it. Main Sanctuary The central feature is, 01. course, the main sanctuary. This Is ciominated by an altar which is' massive but simple. It is of verde antique marble, a rich. dignified green, with the _Chi Rho incised and gilded on th~ central support of the SlPlendld mensa. Behind the altar is a reredoo of travertine, picked out with contrasting marble in. diamond shapes. Fastened to the middle panel of the reredos is II crucl. fix of bronze, and also of bronze are the candlesticks and. the sanctuary laIl1P standard. Over the altar is a tester III anodized alumirl.Um, an especially handsome piece. The ensemble effect is unusually happy. To repeat, it is in establishing a clear and proper rela<tionship amon'! these several features, in securing a single conceptiGn and the due ·working out of the dif-. ferent parts, that the Institute has something special and valuable to offer - to say nothinc of the quality of design, materials; and workmanship. Baptismal FODt Its effectiveness can be seen" as well, in the baptistry. Thia OCC;lIn;~s the entire east transept. save for the sanctuary area. The funt, an almost monumental onG of cipollino marble, has a band of sculptures In bronze. The sculntnres are 12: each carriel! an image of an Apostle, an article of the Apostles' Creed, and a symbol relevant to both. The font stands alone in oOG of the two principal baptistry areas, which ·are marked off by a ten-sided screen. The screen is of bronze, with crystal pan'e1l:, etched with representations ~ historical instances of the admin1<:tration of this sacrament. These windows (of stained! glass leaded), all the other stained glass windows in tho lower church (they total 38). and the crystal panels of the baptistry screen are by GiG-> vanni Hajnal. As yet little known in thu(country, he is unlikely to remain unknown hera If the work he has done in the lower cathedral'gets ·the atteDtioD it deserves. . Hopes for C"m"letlolll Bajnal's style is rather angular. but not grotesquely .so. His designs are imaginative, superbly composed, and cleanly executed.. His glass sculptures are strong and rich .ift interest. His windows are glorious In color, 'am array of. jewels. . Calling on the resources of the International Institute of Liturgical Art, one is. able .te obtain original works.·of art, ~ standard .stuff or mass-produced, items, and at. reasona ble cost. There is the asSurance, too, of. close and knowing attention .te the suitability of the iconography. Well, your reviewer has seen ·a part of his other job achieved. But there remains the even more challenging business of getting the main cathedral through to completion. The upper church is yet but a shell.. It has to be fleshed with all the details which will make it A place of worship. There is! . rea", Sl)oto hope thatthi.l,·,wW be ;·tIIe very ·....... e=itv.awI ,.o.rab.IeDII· dowi!.&lI tisfactodl.x.
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THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Ja n. 19, 1961
South Africa Bans ~coks By CI~rBcs CAPE TOWN (NC)-The South Mrican government has banned two books critieal of its race separation policy, one by a Catholic priest and the other by an Anglican bishop. The books a,re "The Night Cometh," a novel by Father Laurence J. McCauley of Cape Town, and "The Agony of South Africa/' a chronicle of the poli~ shootings in Sharpeville 11llSl March, when 67 Africans were killed. Anglican Bishop Ambro~ Reeves of Johannesburg wrote it. He was deported by the government last October.
BUSY BROTHER: Brother Leonard Melanson, M.S., prepares articles for Mass in sacristy at Santiago, Isabela, Philippines, where he has been stationed for five years. Right, he shows unique La Salette cross to Filipino children.
Priests in Poland Need Brevia ries LONDON (NC)-The secretary .t William Cardinal Godfrey, Archbishop of Westminster, has urged priests, to send their outdated breviaries to prieata ill Poland. Msgr. Derek Worlock told • meeting of priests here: "You will be getting new breviarie. for yourselves in view of the rubrical changes. Let U8 have your old ones. We will send them to Poland." Msgr. Worlock eriticized Polish Catholics in Britain for failure to play a full part in Britain's Catholic life. "I have aeen very 'few Polish boys serving in the sanctuaries of our parish churches," he noted.
Worn by all brothers and priests of La Salette, it reproduces cross worn by Our Lady at apparitions at Salette, France in 1846. Brother Leonard is a native of St. Joseph's Parish: New Bedford.
Native of St. Josep'h's Parish, New Bedford, All Around Man at Philippines Mission "His name is mentio~ed every day at ho me." So said Mrs. Peter Melanson, 32 Duncan Street, New Bedford, of her son, Brother Leonard, a La Salette missionary who has been stationed at Santiago, Isabela, Philippines for the last five years. Brother Leonard is the oldest of 13 children and his youngest broth er, too, is in training to-become a La Salette Brother. Most' of the chil- lege in Brewster, on Cape Cod, ' dren in between are married erime next, then a year of noviand away from home, 6- tiate at Center' Harbor, N. H., plained Mrs. Melanson, but where Brother Leonard's brother from the end 01 tbe nearest dirt
THREE HOURS BY MULE TRAIL, _
she' hopes for as large a reunion as possible this Summer when Brother Leonard is scheduled for home leave.
is. Candidates' for the priesthood complete their course with six years of study at Attleboro, where a major seminary and La Salette Shrine are located.
DOW
The missionary, a native of S1. Joseph's parish in New Bedford, graduated from the parBrothers are postulants at any ochial school, then attended high of the 'congregation's houses, school and college at St. Fran- ,then make a year's novitiate at cis College, Biddeford, Me" beCenter Harbor before receiving He also observed that Polish fore entering the La Salette assignments. They wear D cincchildren in Britain are not atcommunity 13 years ago. ture whereas priests wear a sash. tending Catholic schools in suffiBoth priests and brothers, howdent numbers. "What would be All Around Man ever, wear the unique La Salette the response of children in Brother Leonard's an all eross, which bears two instruPoland were they to have a IIlround man at the Philippine ments of the passion in addition ehance to go . to a Catholic mission. He does plumbing, to the corpus, and reproduces 8Chool?" he asked. electricity, "a' little of everythe cross worn by Our Lady , , thing," says Mrs. Melanson. The when she appeared to two chilLa Salette plant is large; i~clud- dren near the town of Salette, Greater Fall River CYO will' 'ing n ,church, school and other France, in 1846. hold a cadet dance open to' parish facilities. Some 14 misPurpose of the apparition was lleventh, eighth' Bnd ninth grad- sionaries are assigned to the stato warn mankind of the need for ers from 7:30 to 10 Friday night, tion. repentance and turning to God. Jan. 27 at the Catholic Com"He likes the Philippines very That message the Missionaries Dlunity Center, Franklin Street. much," said Brother Leonard's of La Salette have assumed remother. "There's 80 much to be responsibility fo r spreading done there." throughout the world. Before going to the missions, Brother Leonard was at La Salette houses in AtUeboro and Brewster. There seminarians and brothers are trained for the LONDON (NC)-William Car_ worldwide work of the commun- dinal Godfrey, Archbishop I of ity. Over 1,000 La Salette misWestminster, has made a special sionaries are active throughout appeal for wider supj>ort of the the world. Octave of Christian Unity. Boys are accepted for the com"At this important time in the munity after completing eighth history of the Church, when acgrade. High school courses are tive preparations are being made given at a minor seminary- in for the ecumenical council, we Enfield, N. H. Two years of colshould redouble our prayers for Christian unity," the Cardinal said in a 'statement. "We must ask God to help those outside the Church that DENVER (NC)-Father Theothey may be guided to the true dore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., presFaith and we must p-ray that He ident of Notre Dame University, will give us the gift of charity was elected president here of more abundantly so that we can the Association of American help them to find the way, the Colleges, a federation of 800 truth and the light." public and private liberal arts institutions. The Holy Cross priest succeeds Dr. David A. Lockmiller, presiThe fact that silence is golden "'-ay dent of Ohio Weslyan University. explain why there is 10 littl., of it. He was elected at the annual two-day meeting of the association. REYNOLDS,.DEWAlT The association's resolutions in_ cluded one urging Federal assistWilliam & Second Sts. ance to ~igher educatiQn for the' construction :of 'classrooms .. ,.New Bedford~. 'WY 6-1234 through either Federal loans 'or grants. The college would have the option of borrowing' the FIRST JAPAN-ESE: The funds or applying them as a first native Japal)ese Pas- gift, according to, ~e r,esolution.
Fall River CYO
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Asks More Prayers For Christian Unity
Fr. Hesburgh Heads Colleqe Association
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sionist, Frater Augustine Paul Kunii, took his final vows as "a religious Monday last at Passionist Fathers Seminary, Louisville. He entered the Catholic Church in 1952 while a student 'at Kyoto University. NC Photo.
Pen Name Father McCauley's novel pu~ lished in New York a year ago snd later reissued as a paperback, was issued under the pen name "Eugene O'DonnelL" Thr 45-year-old priest revealed hert' last spring that he was the au-, thor. He said at the time he did nol expect the book to appe.,tl" iJJ this country, as "anything It all eritkal of the government is banned." South African·· hom, Father McCauley spent sevsaJ years in the Uitited States. •
Seton Hall Grant , JERSEY CITY (NC) - The Seton Hall University College of Medecine here received eight year-end grants totaling $312,578 from the Nat,ional Institutes of lIealth. The largest individual grant was a research award of $93,006.-
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road, Is the length of time It' iakea to reach the village of FARNETA la, southern Italy. About S t fh onc thousand Catholics of the By-' ~'b-. "Ji II:8ntlne-Albanian Rite live in this vII.r.. "'", }age. rhey are the descendants of fb', ..... a group of people who, in order not ~ 0 to lose their faitb, Oed tbelr home~ land ot Albania when it was invadetil by Turkisb Mohammedans,' and took + refuge in Italy. Througb tbe yesrm they have maintained tbeir own language, &heir traditions" and their own Rite. Their parish Church is now faJ... 1lIt Holy Pathm Mission Aid ing npal't aod their poverty is suelu r- tht "-' I .rL..J. that they cannot afford to build a new 1"' VTienkl vmrm one. To do 80 would Clost $5,000.' When the appeal for belp to build this Church was received! &he thought crossed our minds thllt, perhaps, some of our goocll Catholic Americans of Italian descent might, be moved to '.14 iD making a new Churcb for these people a reality. If enoull"~ people would send us • amall donation the Cburch could be 1»ullt and the benefactors would always be held in piayerful memol7 by tbe priest and the people. Could you help?
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NEAR THE SPOT where Saul of Tarsus condoned the rna'" tyrdom of Saint Stepben, ALPHONSE SALAH and FAHAD HADDAD are studying for the priesthood. They are students at the !LATIN PATRIARCHAL SEMINARY In n;aUSALEM. Wben tbey attend Mass on ~be Feast of tbe Conversion of Saint Paul ~bey will pray fervently ,to advance toward God by followmg the example of the converted Saul. As ordained priests tbey wiII physically follow ,-, In bis footsteps since tbe territory wbere they will exercise,' their prlestlyministry will be that in wbich Saint Paul begalll the conversion of .the Gentiles. To prepare them for the priestbood will cost $600. Could you finance tbe education of one eI Chem? Members of our DAMIEN LEPER CLUB, by their dues of one-dollar-a month, bring physical, mental and spiritual, comfort to the poor Lepers being cared for by our Missionaries. "WE PRAISE THEE, WE BLESS THEE, WE ADORE THEE, WE GLORIFY THEE" ••• words of the Gloria said In festive Masses. This is what SISTER FLOWERLET and SISTER JOHN MARY are now doing as novices of the ADORATION SISTERS ill 'INDIA. Wben their nov~tiate is finishecll they will spend their lives DS a bymn of praise and adoration of God. Couhl yotil finance the training of one of them and ,share In the merits of their adoration? ,II tlosts $300 to train a novice.
~'l1earSstOJissions~
FUNERAL SERVICE
549 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
"
"'THAT THEY ALL MAY BE ONE"
This p-rayer of Christ is the inspiration of all Missionaries. One of the specific goals of Missionaries, In the, Near and Mid-> dIe East has been to bring about the return to our holy Churcb of the dIssident Christians of the Eastern Rites. Centuries of ICIness living on the part of our priests, brothers and sisters" ill this area of the world Is now bringing Its reward. In recent years great numbers of these separated Christians have returned to the Church. There are still 160,000,000 of til em, hoW'> ever, to be won back. The tireless work of the Missionaries In bringing about the ' eon versions has been made possible by the generosity of the faithful throughout the world. All benefactors of the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION have II part IIll this special missionary activity. Are you a member of our Asloelation? Write to us today about our work.
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fRAN,CIS C,,ARDINJAL SPEllMAN, President 111l9r.
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Goals Report'
a hostel for university students, eventually plan to erect their own building. By Msgr. George G. Higgins A looked' forward to event ill , Director, NCWC Social Action Department v Rome is arrival of The Anchor, The Report of the President's Commission 'on National said Mother Philomena. She is Goals (Goals For Americans, Prentice~Hall, Inc.,$LOO) is especially interested in. keeping track, through itS pages, as well be ing widely criticized by I, iberals and conservat.ives alike. as through reports from the Fall Many liberals think it overestimates the need for governRiver provincial house of the ment action and that, by and . nation's chief method .of deter.: community, of progress on the large, its statement of our mining wages and working conbuilding of a million dollar addi. tion to Sacred Hearts Academy. national goals is much too ditions." Worldwide Activity vague and rhetorical. Many' '. 'These statements from the text The superior said that activity eonservatives think it dangerof the Report are ·elaborated in F'all River reflects expansion Gusly exaggerates the role of. upon in a supplementary ·essay of Holy Union. 'school facilities government and . written by Dr. CI~rk .Kerr, throughout the ·world. She menthat, in general, Ch~ncel~or of the UmversIty of tioned building projects in many ! t s recommenCahf.orma and a respected aucountries served by the COInelations are too thority in the field. of labormunity. . specific and demanagement relations. Among new Holy Union fountailed. Presum"The role of government," says dations is one 'in Madrid, Spain. ably these. and Dr. Kerr, "should be restricted. said Mo'ther Philomena. Students other criticisms to clear cases of national interest HAPPY AFRICAN REUNION: .Bishop Fulton J. include three ,nephews of Queel1 'of the Report which cannot be served by pri- . Sheen, left, national director of. the Society for the Propa:' Fabiola, new bride of Belgium's lllave . come as vate means, and the government king. She said the boys' chief Do surprise to should withdraw whenever its gation of the Faith and Auxiliary Bishop of New York, was concern, when they asked for the members of· particip atio l1 is nO'longeressen- . reunited during 'a visit to Johannesburg, South Africa, time off from studies to attend theCommission. tial-when. the particu~ar public with the first priest he ever ordained, Father Raymond J~ the royal wedding, was whether -We do not exneed no longer exists or when their school grades would suffer: peet.ou.r recom..; . it can be ade~uate.~~.m';.f by priLorentz, C.S;·P. Father Lorentz, director of the Paulist frOD;1. the vacation. ._ mendations to command un~l11- vate economic actJvIty. missions in South Africa, was ordained in"New York on ~ . Mother Philomena'last made mous acceptance," they told Racial Equality May 1, 1953. NC Photo. an official visitation to the Fall President· Eisenhower in their . (b) These excerpts from the River Diocese in 1958. She ex-l~tter of transmittal. "Rather it.'text of the Report and from Dr. pects to return for dedicatiol1 is our hope that they will evoke 'Kerr's supplementary essay are '. '; . celjemonies.. of . ~e new Sacred active discussion. Under the paraIleled by similar statements . Continued' fr~m Page One roolT'- .to "ca~e for' 'the' young:' Hearts Academy. Her present democratic process this)s the in other sections of the Report. the Most Reverend Bishop Tuessters.· visit, not o.fficial, wasc occa-, path to.a nation!!l consensus." ., .. and in some of the other. suppleday' evening as thh· attended TJte Catholic school system sioried by a formal tour of HolT .Case in Point . mentary essays: .' opening ceremonies' for the last here' .begins' an archdiocesanUnion foundatipQs in Argentiria. That's fair enough, Accur.atel " For example, in the section of phase of the Driv~t1ie contactwide campaign to recruit lay The United States was so conand . objective criti.cism of the the Report 'which deals with the ing of the general public .for con_~e!lchers ,on February ~, One ap" veniently situated between South Report,is ~dmittedly .all to, th'r subject of. racial' equality;tlIe tributions. to this third regional. peal has already been made to : America· and" Europe that she !Dod. '. .' . , Commission explicitly states t~at . high .'school.. Catholic' college senior students took the opportunity of paying UQfQrtunately" however, some .. "primary responsibility!' f o.'r, .. At .these exercisJs' the men.' and Msgr. McManus said re.:. an extra call on North Americaa oil the· criti.cislll peil'\g levele~.: achieving' the goal of equal rights meeting of the· Catholic' School: sp.onse has beel'). satisfactory. '., ,'foundations.' . agaiQli t ·the Report is so inaccu": "rests· with individuals," not Board., . .,.. '.- !Lay Teache,rs " i Both New York, and Fall River· nte.and so lacking in'obj,ec~iv~ty with government~' , .. ) Operating expenses for CathaAuthorities do.not plan to dis-,. ..co~munities have had gather-. oa to ~ak~ one rat;h~r. peSSlmlSSimilariy inhis.,8upplementary 'lie grac(e', schools, .he. said, are' ~ontin:ue any grades, his rePort ings of Sisters:: to meet Mother ·the posslbIltty . "Th e"D'emocra .' : ·t·· Pr'oc' expected to be. more than 52, milsal'd" b'ut on'e or', two' gr'ade's In' Philomena. Some 100. Sisters ol . ,/ Me about , ..0 . . ' of o.ur,. ' . essay on·. IC. . . evera,chJevmg· a national con-: 'ess'" Professor Clinton Rossiter, 'lion dollars for the c.urrent year, 'a few schools may be disconthe Fall River Diocese met at _nsus. .. . '" a 'leading sp'okesmanfoi the con": while the ·same, expenses for tinued if it is' imposs'ible to emSacred Hearts Academy during The fol~ow~ng ;excerpt from a servative traditi'ori' in American high- schobls are estimated at '. ploy enough lay' teachers.. Christmas vacation for the purrecentedltonal 111 The NaL1ullal . IT . t' th t "th f te . about 14' m'llliOll, a; total af 66 staff all vacant cllissrooms. pose. Re.view is a pertinent'" case in po I ICS, ~all1 democracy ams a .rests e a.In million doilars.. . . Msgr.·M·cMa.nus' report also ex. Summer Christm. of Amencan ' po.~nt.. . . the minds and hearts' of men . Operating Expenses pressed "uneasiness" over the 'Mother Philomena s p ell t Grmdll1g throu~h the l5,000rather than in political machinThe ,Monsignor's estimate of high cost of pubiic E!ducation. Christmas Day itself in Argenword report submitted a. ~oup~e ery" and goes on to say that "the $402.5 million per year as the ~'Catholics in the' archqio- tina, '!Yhere students are enjoying of wee.ks. ago by ~he. PresidentI s solution to most problems of cost to taxpayers if the Cath- cese," he said,. "are becoming ''Summer vacation." She said it CommissIOn on .Natlonal Goa s, American democracy is personal olic school pupils went to public increasingly disturbed about the was hard to work up Christmu ~ felt a ceI'taln bored allger . schools 'w'as based on. operating high ,cost .of public education spI'r)'t )'n th e warm th. 0 f B uenoa -.... .' .' . rather than imtitutional." Not m what the report sald,nor " . . . expelli/es of public .Schools al1!i, and somewhat; skeptical about Aires, until .it came. time for. g in the sodden .way it.said-,it, b¥t In :defe?din the .R~port of .the the C()st of building new cla~ the idea that t,he more you spend .midnight Mass. "Then' I knew it in the assumptions underlying 'it Pres~dent s CQD;1mISSlOn <lgamst was Christmas!" . . we found the cause of our disthe l11accurate"and,exaggerated Di'ive~:i~:l~h~~~s~~tion, the better . The" su'perior has' 'visited eontent., For the report assumes charges of The National Review, every 'Holy Union house in the that in every-ye;;, every-aspect I do not me~n. t9 sugge~t. ~hat: Continued from Page One Willing To Pa,. world in the course of official of tluman life the .governme,nt the Report. IS .. above . ~~It.lclsm. .gathered from aU ~r the 13 ~ar- . "Cll.t1IO,Iics are willing to pay: . ,tours.. There are more than 100 bears responsibilrt.y."· My only pomt IS that crrtlcism of, ishes represented. ~n. ~e D~':'~ 'for good ... education;" he said. ,foundations in France, Belgium. C·t· : the Report whether by conservheard an address y. ev. 1 ·· ..They1have prov.ed.that by what Spain, England, Ireland, Italy .. es 1I1acCura~y.· atives or liberals. should be. ac~ . liam ·A, Donaghy, S.J., former . tJley' pay for Catholic sch~ls, Ar • ,Take,n 111 .context, thiS IS .clear-,., curate' arid objec'tive aQd,.inore ··.president of Holy. Cross Colle~e and they. will ,pay whatever is . thi;e;~~~~r~~d Africa, well_ J,- .m.eant to sugg:st. t~at,' m the pointedly, that critics of the Re,,:, ~nd at. present on .tl;1e Jesuit 'rie~ed . for. public schools, but, o~lI1~on..of th,e .PIesld~nt s Co~- port should take .,the trouble'. to. Mission ·band.. ~ather Donaghy they have to be shown." She and' Mother Anne JoSeph miSSIOn, gove.r~r:tent bear~ p,rI-. read it very' carefully before' is from New B·edford. , will return to Rome Jan. 31.. y :ar r;sfqn(~bl~lty. for deVtlOPi saying anything abou.t.it' il\' the . ·:rhe. spealcer ..~ re!'T1inded . hiS _ g a~.. ur. enng 0tur fna 10na lpubilic prints. . .' " .' ". lillteners., that the investment. h goals \lman "A'.c t'.lVe'. .d'}s~us~non .. 18 .. no . t made that ' c~ontinued from Page ODe AU . Jl1 every aspec 0 . . in this' ' school ' is one . . e. , '., necei'!sari~y . "t,he. path, to a. n,a- ."rCluld .;pa~.: dl,~,~~end.s for time .. "The· goal,''; it added, "is nOlt Paint and .. Wa,lIpaper The followl~lg excerpt;; from' ,tional ,!:onsen.s~s.". In'~act, active ·an,d· ,etermty" JI~saId .that . the to keep. the aging' busy' but· to . Dupont Paint "'~. text of. the Report and .from discussion ba's«:d on .prejudice "'or ~eynote of giving was .n~t ~ help them find in every mO~m~. Qf tl!e backgro~nd essays irllidequate information' is t~e," give ·out ,of one's. superfluI~Ie~ )~ .... ment 'an opportunity for great__ Rear of Store' . pubhshed.as a supplement to the' pabh. to con,fusion rather than .~ ~ith~r 'time or substance but· ness." '" 4IlIiII»' .'422 Acush. AYe. ~port Will clearly demonstrate cons,eilsus. And .goodness' knows "~ giVE! until it hurts.". '. ".Our society, by reason of ita 4.«:.ta'"ot 'eor. Middle St. ~hat .t~isstatement simply. isn't' 'there is "alreadymo~eihait . The'" noted' edu<;ator .pointed ~ preoCcupation ~ith frontier de-. . . . PARKING accurate: . . e~o~gh conf~si'ori:in this courittr out tha~.Cath6lic education takes velopment, an"d economic ad.,. New Bedford . a) Under the' heading of. '.'The about our nationai 'goals a'nd 'into account the. nature of God,.· 'vance, has.' tended to glorify Democratic Economy,", the. ·Rc-. '. purposes. . ." . and man, and the fact. that' mall .'youth a.n d ':,denigrate old age~". port .explicitly states that "gov'., can' never be· replaced as ,the the. statement said. "The time ernmeitt· participation in' the' Freq. Communio~n '. focus ,point and the masterpiece has com'e to recognize that the" economy . shoul4 .be limited to d from~ the 'hand. of God. those instances where it is essenRe~eption "1 sUrge., This phase of ,the Drive starts cult of e~ernal youth is idolatry." . tial to the natiomllinterest and L08 ANGEI,ES (NC)·,--:- ·.The with .$675,000 . already realized where private individuals or or- frequent comm~nicant 'riecessari!1 Special 'Gifts and Memorial ganizatiolls cannot adequately ily is sanctified, ,Father William Gifts. The' aim of the Drive is BOYS' WANTED for the meet the need." O'Halloran, 8.S.8., has told the $1,125,000. Priesthood and Brotherhood• . Supplementary Essay West Coast .convention of the The General house-to-house Excavating Lack of funds NO impediThe same section of the Report Priests' Eucharistic League. phase of the Drive w~ll continue ment. . further states that "collective Frequent and daily Commun- for fo.ur weeks-:-untJl Feb. HI. Contractors' bargaining between representaion should be. encouraged by The first r,eport will be made Write to: tives of workers and employers priests among the faithful, the to headquarters at CY0 Hall OQ 9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN P. O. Box 5742 [not compulsory arbitration nor New York priest said, adding next Wednesday, Jan. 2~. WYman 2-4862 any other form of government "Communion is a normal part of Baltimore 8, Md. action] should continue as the going to Mass. Mass is not com-. plete for the person unless he , receives Communion." Present Pap~1 Medal A Los. Angeles priest, Father' .nO:'-..~ 'Bco.lt... .-.. ~ v' '~--...;,.' To Non-Catholic John V.Sheridan, director of the . f-('{\;Pfamous' Reading· HARD COAL MO;RRISTOWN (NC)-Bishop Catholic Information Center, said '; NEW: ENGLAND' .'tOKE . greater corporate James A. McNulty of Paterson there is Ne~ :Englctn~!~' ,'Plqygro.und J,'. ..1 , has .presented the Benemerenti expression of holiness than the DADSP,N. '. OIL B4RNER~ _. ,. ,.~. meda:l, a papal honor, to a' non:-. family at holy Communi'on." . Plar;',Y,o.ur;.~~r.\~~ r,a..,y: .24-Hbur Oil Burner Service '.. Catholic' woman for generosity '. The task of priests, he said, is FashioD'1l ;Shows and " \ .-; to rebu'ild the Christian family. to Catholic institutions. '.' . Charcoal' Briquets· He said disintegration of the The "medal has been awarded ':,:\ ,gCllnquets~·. Mrs. GeraldinE! 'R. Dodge of family is by 'far the ·most dis~. B~g' tO~I.· ~ Cha~coaf at lincolll"il Park'$ couraging and dangerous threat Madis'on, N. J., in ceremonies at to survival of Christian heritage. All Souls Hospital conducted MllUON-DOl~AR here by the Sisters of Charity. He encouragep, the family Com,0. ',BAlLlL~OOM Among the many' institutions munion' crusade' as a means of .. .', :'.: Mrs, Dodge' has' aided are All .family sanctification ·by ..devO,-, Call ,ROLAND. GAMACHE Souls Hospital and Christ the' tion and consecration to the Ho17 '" '; v.iYman 9-6984 Family. ' j ' . , ,: /,,;.. ;•.;. King church, New' Verno»': I~
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A CREDIT TO ANY SCHOOL: A limited potential and' the lack of height are handieaps that the Holy Family High court team have overcome this season. A splendid record is the best ~~idence of their success. Coach Jack Nobrega' (left photo) discusSes fundamentals with Tom Bramwell .
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and Jack Calnan. Center, left to right, are Jerry Robillard, Charley Palmer, Dick Frechette and Al Hughes. Right, Tom Wood, Paul Fredette' and Pete Zajac. The enrollm'ent ~t Holy Family High School includes only 135 ~ys.
Montie Assumes Spirit,Re.~ourcesM~rk Holy'FamilySuccess Nun Throwsl.ight By Jack Kineavy C.Y.O•. Office On· Intruder Rev. Walter A. Sullivan Diolesan and· Fall River Area CYO Director, announced today the appointment. of Donald· R. . Montie as Fall River Area CYO ProgIlam Coordinator. Mr. MonUe, a native. of Fall River; is the Football and· Baseball Coach at . B. M.·C. Durfee High School and Physical Education Instructor at the high school. Mr. Montle is DO stranger to the CYO' program. He was a member of the Holy Name Parish CYO amI played both baseball and basketball as well as coaching the 1952 Diocesan Champions from that parish. Previous to· bis present appointment at Durfee High School, he was Physical Educati.on Instructor; and coach of footbell and baseball at Maplewood, New, Jersey's Columbia High School. He alsio served in this eapacity at Terryville High School as well as being Track Coach for two years. ' Mr. Montle assumes the responsibility for coordinating all ' the athletic J,>r!)~rams sponsored by Uje Fall River Area .CYO.. Special emphasis will' be put on . the avalability of the CYO lentel', 403 Anawan Street, Fall River, for boys of the junior and senior high school age level. Mr. Montie will make the facilities at the center available to interested members so that maximum use of all facilIties will be maintained at all times. Instructions in the use 01. the.' Ilew' regulatioll ·'olympic tram-, poline are now available as well . as a controlled and supervised program of boxing arid wrestling and weigM-lifting in the beautifui new gymnasium.
"A typical Holy Family team" was the candid appraisal of Somerset's Shenn Kinney , who~e talented Blue Raiders, had just Wrested a' hard-earned 73-65 decision from the hust... ling Parochials at Kennedy Memor:~~l C~I}~r. This wal:!' p.raise 'i~'deed for coach Jack' Nobrega's relatively inexperienced ,quintet for th~ sports annals ~f Holy Family High are replete with the historic been "l,lssumed b ··... N'or'm", T.....,"m'' enager, the only Y ·J~nlOr .. om, achievements of its athletic Br&mw~ll. senior on the starting team, is ieam~, notably. those of the Reservestrenglbably carrying on the family tradition 'at Holy Family where Ed Lowney era. Actually it's Bench strength is essential to brothers Donald and Roger hung I .
'PHILADELPHU_ (NC)-Some- ' where 'in . Philadelphia hides l:\ man . with a very sore head' . caused by' an encounter with tw~ Sisters and their .flashlight. Mothers Mary Aelred and Mary Charlotte came. across the man in a dormitory at Rosemount College for· women here, '"I won't harm you," the intruder told the Sisters, they said. Mother Charlotte then swung an oversized flashlight the pair had been carrying, striking the intruder 011 his head. Fleeing, he then jumped headfirst through a lower floor window.
the success of any team today not quite accurate to infer Ull~t and in Norm Lague, 6-2 junior up illustrious athletic records ·the genial Tubba's influence is pivotman and senior Roland before going on to greater fame ;·B H 1 F 'I bo ts at Assumption College in W 01'at an end. V ~ ourque, 0 y ami y as a cester. Both are _now in the tually all of the relief tandem that would be coaching field, Donald at WorVarsity weI' e starting with most clubs in the .nurtured I'n the ' . 't La . db' cester Trade where he is athletic Cll'CUI . gue enJoye a anner director and head coach of Lowney system night versus' Somerset against h h' h' ht d st th basketball and Roger at New and it. I'S wI·th w om IS elg an reng Bedford High where he assists e h a r act e r off the boards proved advan- Stan Grabiec with the Crimson , is tic modesty .tMecius. Seniors Jim Dufficy' that Coach Noand John O'ROUrke, junior Alan varsity. . brega' bastens ,Hughes and sophomore Gerald The Somerset - Holy Family to acknowledge, ~obil1ard complete the reserve tilt afforded rival coaches KinPlumbing - Heating "Ed left me" corps.. . ney and Nobrega an opportunity to renew acquaintances on the w)'th a sound On ,the season to date Holy., Over 35 Years . nucleus, " Yet,' the popular young F amlly has· posted a fine 8-3. field of friendly strife whieh of Satisfied 'Service mentor in 'his flrstyear at· the record,losing to Vocational and '. oates' back to their playing days 806 NO, MAIN, STREET helm .has infused in his sq~a~ . Worcester Trade but defeating .. at Fairhaven and New Bedford; more' than a litUe' of the spuIt the Alumni in pre-Narry tune- 'respectively. Each had nothing 'FaD River OS 5-7497 and .determination ·that marked. '~ps.The only league loss came but praise and admiration for his own career' at New' Bedford '. at the. hands of pace setting the. other's club. Most, notable High. Somerset whom Coach Nobrega among the legion of Holy Family supporters at the game was His A FAMIL:Y TREAT . " It 'must be conceded, that and bis cagers feel they can take Excellency' James J. Gerrard, .', ' .. bringing spirit to 'Holy Family next time around. The teams V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the BARaB-Q CHICKENS High is something akin to haul': tied ill floor. baskets at Kennedy Diocese of Fall River. 'NY '1-p' '1 ing coals to Newcastle-though but the Raiders won it at abe, . foul line. How to account for tile splenthe analogy tends to be weak'did reco~ds of Holy Family ened somewhat as a result of the Holy Family is at Prevost to- teams oown through the years? general unfamiliarity of your morrow night to begin secolld The time tested Latin adage FARMS youth with that former universal round play. "The Leafs were "Aniinis opibusque parati" is, 14li Washington St., Fairhaven mode of fuel. Be that as it may, very .impressive against WI in we think most apropos. Liter.Just off Route 6 unflagging enthusiasm is the .. ~ew ~edfurd;" remarked No- ally I ira~slat~ it means preWatch for Signs hallmark of the tremendous Holy .brega, and we look for· another "pared in spirit and resources the While out for ~ Drive Family, rooting section which, close' tussle' at the Boys', Club!" " ',greater' 01." which is the higb Stop 'Ill this Delightful Spot Father. J:ustin Quinn, the schQol's , The New Bedford Parochlals bad 'calibre young men and women' ~ ., athletlll director, regards with .a 57-51 edge over Prevost on that attend Holy Family High. justif~able pride. The group is ....openingday but· the Leafs are ' ,I' - incomparable. .' ,coming on strong after a' slow Over 33' Yet.rs Experience start 'and could prove troubleBut what of the young men some.' SUBURBAN who have made Holy Family a Trude Body Builders Tb:isis Nobrega's first ventUN prime contender in Narry com- in scholastic cQaching ranks and GAS CORP. Aluminum or' Steel petition? Only two were starters be's enjoying it immensely. "We iOnLED AND BULK GAS 944 County St. last year, junIor backcounterman have wonderful youngsters at GAS APPLIANCES NEW BEDFORD MASS. Richie Frechette and senior forHoly Family," he enthused. "The WY 2-6618 4 Show Rooms to serve yov ward Norm Lemenager. Up from spirit is great; the boys don't Hyannis Falmouth the Junior Varsity came play- know the meaning of the word Eo Moin St. 696 E. Main St. maker Charley Palmer and cen- quit," This indomitable desire SP 500686 KI 8-1560 ter TOOl Bramwell, the tallest was never more evident than in Orleans ProviDcetown member of the first five at 6-1. the Somerset game when the Iiiouto , liS Commercial St. Rounding out the quintet is di- burden ·of fouls on Family regu585 858 minutive John Calnan a boy who lars led most observers tli believe Harwich - 1494 came out of obscurity at the that the Raiders would win ,0-. season's outset. ing away. It never happened. Balanced - scoring bas made' CoaebiDt Stafr ' A member of the Southeastern Holy Family a difficult team to -MANNY" SOUZA SEE contain. Calnan, tabbed by Pre- Mass. Board of Basketball offiYOSt's Cbarley MellaI'd "the cials and a noted baseball arbiter, ' • PLYMOurH deadliest outside shot in the Jack Nobrega brings a wealth of • OIR,.", league," loosens the defense. sports experience to Holy Family Lemenger's floor generalship Higb. He was ... outstanding • VAUAland hustle stamp bim as the boy basketball and baseball player NEW CARS and a fine line 01 Reconditioned Used Can at New Bedford where he bad who makes the club go together COMPLETE MODERN SERVICf ON ALL MAKES Of CARS with Palmer who brings the ball the singular honor of captaining down and drives effectively. the hoop squad in both his junior Frechette, a southpaw flinger, has and senior years. Assisting Notwiced paced the oHense this brega is Jack Curry, former Holy FAIRHAVEN ,32 Retch Street-eor. Washingtoll )fear, while the' bulk- of the re- Family and Stonehill College IMMuldilll aod inside scoring has luminary.
GEORGE M.MONTLE:
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,Cardinal Cushi~g :Commends'l'~ixon' For Good-Win Man 'of Year .
UrgesAmer,icG-:'I_' To Ask Guidance For President
BALrIMORE (NC) - Richard Cardinaf Cushing believes the recent presidential campaign shows that Richard M. Nixon ought to be named' "Good Will Man of the Year ~ ,1960:" The Archbishop of Bo~ton said the former Vice President, despite the heat honor to the vi.ce ' president. of the campaign, "never exDuring the recent campaign ploited the religious or any which tested 'and taxed all his other issue that would tend powers, physical and mental, he
WASHINGTON (NC) , Americans ,are asked to offer special prayers on Inauguration Day for God's
~ divide the American people."
never exploited the religious or · Boston's Cardinal also praised any' other issue that would tend Protestants and Jews who help- to divide the Amer:ican people," cd Cathoiics "put out the many he asserted. ' little fires of prejudice," a feat "When he lost the closest nabe said Catholics could not have tional election of the past cendone themselves. tury he was magnificent in deCardinal Cushing, speaking at feat," he added. .• luncheon of the Baltimore AdUniversal Applause vertising Club, t()ld his audience On Jan. 6,continued the Card-' be had always b~lieved in good inal,. when Mr: Nixo~, as Yi.cewill dinners, brotherhood meet- ,P:-esldent, fulfilled hiS offICIal !ngs and inter-religious insti-' duty' of announcing to a joint .~Ites, but' after ,the presidential session of the House and Senate eampaign, he believed even more the, results of the election; "he firmly in their value. acted and spoke with such digRelations Improve . nity and sincerity, that he won He said that volume of anti- universal applause from his diseatholic propaganda that flood- tinguished audience and univered many areas during the cam- ,sal acclaim f,rom unnumbered paign was a blot on the Ameri-' citizens of the nation.".; , " ean scene, but added: The Cardinal regaled his aud.. · "As I visualize the overall ience with anecdotes, many picture of relations between d!f-, about the campaign and election. 'erent religious groups, I would' '. Costly ,Itivitation ~J:lhesitat'ingly.say it has great-' Noti~g he, fwo,ul~, offer ~h,e loy improved as, ~ ,result of such invocatI~>n at the, mauguratI<~n .. ';ood ,will that was in evidence of.. Pre~ldent J{ennedy, ~~ .sald , ' . on the part of many outstandingh~ orde~ed a' formal 101lg coat eiti'Zens of all faiths during th~ ~Ith satm' lapels for the occasrecent national political cam- Ion. ." . pai~n,'" ' , The :Cardll~al said the tailor · "If the extremists on all sent him a bill for $325 and h~ aides," he said, "will be a little qujppe4: "He mu~t have thought Lnore moderate a little mo're Kennedy was gomg. to pay for eharitable and ~ little more in- it." . flormed in -the future, the picture He als~ joked .that "~uring the will continue to improve." pre-electIon period, With all the "Disagreements 'there will be phone c: alls I got,' I came to th,e IIOt only in matters about faith conclUSIOn that I was Kennedy s and morals but in politics, in . campaign manager." business, in' every walk of life. Let those who ,are interested in them discuss them, study them as human beings endowed by God with the faculty to think, NEW ORLEANS (NC-Optito rationalize and to laugh," he mistic planning for the 51st condeclarcd. vention of.the Catholic Press , The Cardinal said that relig- Association to be held in Vanion is no longer a problem "as couver, B. C., was made by the an effcctive national political association's'board of direcors at Issue." The election took care a two-day meeting here. ef that for Catholics and an . The ,association's convention others as well, he noted. in Canada, May 16 to 19, will be , "But there are still many its first held, outside the United "eas of American life where States. equal citizens are far from equal Under the guidance of Father and where prejudice and bitter- Albert J. Nevins, M. M., CPA ness exist in abundance. president, the board also received rep.orts and 'furthered the More Opportunities announced project of the asso~What -We have .done once; we can do again; if we reduce ciation's strong cooperation in the rcligious. prejudice in one plans for, the advancement of area, we can do it in other the Catholic presS of Latin 'Meas ,,,!s well. But we must America. ' work," hestiessed.' Press Responsibilities The Boston prelate warned, Bishop, Albert, R. Zuroweste against ridicule of good will of Belleville, 111., honorary president of the CPA and Episcopal dinners or awards. "None of these affairs call Chairman of the Press Departfor compromise of belief, nor ment of the National Catholic do they suggest that our reli- Welfare Conference, told the gious differences are of no con- lr..eeting of progress in preparl!equence. They 'teach us to un- ations for the ecumenicai coun. derstand these differences and cil of Church and of press resto understand, too, the conscien- ponsibilities involved. The bo'ard of directors of the tious commitments which under\ gird them," said the Prince of Catholic Action' of the South, edItion of Our Sunday Visitor,. the.... Church. Of Mr. Nixon, the Cardinal New Orleans archdiocesan newsooid that if he were asked to paper, were hosts for board Dame the "Good Will Man of' members at a dinner at Antoine's lthe Ycar," he would give the restaurant.
Press Convention Plans Begin
. GOVERNOR ENTERTAINS CARDINAL~ GOv. J. Millard Tawes of, 'Maryland '(right)· chats. ,with, Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbish'op;of' Boston'.' (left) at the afi~iral~G()()d ,Will Luncheon of ,·t~e Baltimore Advertising Club. Rear:' Rt. Rev. Noble C. Powell, Episcopal Bishop of Maryland, '(left) 'and Rabbi A-braham Shusterman. NC Photo.
Egypt's' CatholicsF~(.r Governm.eri. Starting Anti-School Campaign ~'
guidance of the United States 'and the new President. The appeal comes from a group of religious leaders of the nation's capital who form the Religious Observance Subcommittee of the Inaugural Committee. John F. Kennedy will take the oath of office as President in front of the U. S. Capitol tomor-' row. Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washington represents the Catholic Church on the religious observance unit which plans a lengthy statement before the inauguratton. Other members are Rabbi Joseph M. Brandriss, president, ,Washington Board of Rabbis; Episcopal Bishop Angus Dun of Washington; Rabbi Norman Gerstcnfeld; Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord of Washington; Dr. Clarence T. Nelson, president', National Capital. Area, Council of Churches; Dr., E. C. ySmith. vice president of the Council of Churches and Rev. John T. Tav-' ' larides, acting dean, St. Soph~ Cathedral.
Montreal Auxiliary Marks 84th Birthday MONTREAL (NC)-Auxiliary Bishop Conrad Chaumont of Montreal, a priest for 62 years and a bishop for 19, quietly observed his 84th birthday at Hotel Dieu Hospital here. 'Bishop Chaumont, who was born Jan. 6, 1876, has been at the hospital 'since last June. He ,offers Mass daily, attends to considerable correspondence and takes short walks. One of his most frequent visitors is a man he is privileged to call "Paul Emile," a student ~hen Bishop Chaumont was a professor at St. Therese Seminary. The friend is now Paul . Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal.
CAIRO (NC)...,....Egyptian Cath- Rite priest ahd20 lay teachers,' olics fear that the government both Christian and Moslem. . ' takeover of a Jesuit school her~ Accusation is\ the first, of Ii new series' of 'l'h h 1" tr bl tart' d measures against Catholic educa-, . e sc 00 s ou es s e ,tion in the Egyptian province of last year when four lay teachers, the United Arab Republic. one of th~m a ,Moslem, accus~d , . the Jesuit Fathers of "antl( Last year 20; CatholIc schools 't' 1" t' 't' d' I in Asyut area of Upper Egypt . ~a .IOna a,c IVI les an '. prose ywere closed by the government, tI.zll~g. As a result of theIr denunand the province's Minister of clab~n, .the s~h~l was closed . pendmg mvestIgatIOn. Educ~tIOn, El Say~d Ahm~d At that time the Kolali school NagUIb Hashem, saId CatholIc was opera t e d y b e th C a th 0 l'IC schools throughout thet MU .AI .R. A ssocla . t'IOn 0 f F ree E gyp t'Ian · d may os em S c h' 00 Is, W h'IC h main . tams ' . 105 . be 0 b lIge to accep directors. . schools in the villages and cities Jesuit School of Upper Egypt. These institu'l'he Jesuit school here was tions have a total enrollment of Bulletin-Missal seized by the government fol10;000 pupils, mostly thp childr~n..... lowing charges, by lay teachers of'farmers, workers, mercha~ta ..... oW vailable that the priests there are "anti- or petty officials. ST. PAUL (NC)-The Catenational," have tried to convert " No Grounds chetical Guild has announced 0 Orthodox students.and have disTh . t' t d new "Bulletin-Missal," a series . . t d . t MIt e aSSOCIa IOn reques e ,an of pamphlets for congregational crlmma e agams" os em s uin'(estigatlon'/by the Ministry. of dents. . ' " ., Education' after the Kolali use which contain the Ordinary The Jesu~t ~ath~rs' have ~mce school's closing to est blish' th of each Sunday's Mass' and a brought SUit m the Councl1 of ' a e space for parish announcements. State-Egypt's high adminis'tra- . .f:cts ,of, ,the. case. It said, that: The guild said the new series tive court-against 'the Minister' ,t, ere ~re no grounds f~r the' . is now being tested by selected of Education at 'whose order ,co~p~amt. The lay teachers, it pastors across the country. their ',school ~as taken over. ad~ed! only hoped .to obtain a The Jesuit school is located in raIse In salary '>y thiS affair. the Kolali quarter of Cairo. Of New Volumes its, 80,aOe inhabitants, some NEW YORK (NC)-Two new 30,000 'are Christians. The teaching'staff of the school 150-volume "Twentieth Century . BUSINESS AND hit by the government takeover Encyclopedia of Catholicism" DUPLICATING MACHINES includes three Jesuits, a Coptic have been published. They are "The New Testament Apocrypha" Second and Morgan Sts. by Jacques Hervieux, French FALL RIVER Negro PD'elates theologian and author and WY 2-0682 OS 9-6712 "Christian Beginnings" by JacNow Serve Church E. J. McGINN, Prop. BAY ST. LOUIS (NC) - A . ques Zeiller, history professor compilation has disclosed that at the Sorbonne i,n Paris. 35 bishops who are' Negroes now serve the Church. Wh'iteOs F<arm Dairy OI)e is the first Negro to be named a cardinal-Laurian Car"SPIlECiAL MilK dinal Rugambwa, Bishop of From QUII' Own Bukoba, Tanganyika. There are CO. Tested Herd" five with tce rank of archbishop and 29 with the rank of bishop. Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 I All' except one are stationed in the missions in Africa. The one • Special Milk is Bishop Remy Augustin, S.M.M., • Homogenized Vlt. D Mille a native of Haiti who is now NORTH' FRONT STREET • Buttermilk administrator of the Archdiocese • Tropicana Orange Juice NEW BEDFORD of Port-'au-Prince, Haiti. • Coffee and Choc:: Milk WYman 2·5534 The survey - was made by • Eggs - Butter Father Carlos A. Lewis, S.V.p'., fOJ.: the current issue of St. Augustine Catholic Messenger ma'gazihe published by, the Society of the Divine Word here. .
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