02.04.60

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Bishop .Appoints Three Priests To Serve as Administra·tors Appointment of three new administrators, the transfer of two present administrators, thetransler of two curates and the assignment of six newly ordained priests is announced today by the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of' Fall ·River. The appointment of the administrators has been made riecessary by 'the recent deaths of two pastors, Rev. Adrien . A. Gauthier who r-----~~ --~----.directed St..Roch's parish in " Fall River, and Rev. Joseph L. Cabral who was pastor of

The ANCHOR

Our L1\dy of Angels parish, also in Fall River. Another adminis. trator has been ·-transferred to I , ' . . ". ,admin'ister Our Lady of the Isle. .. parish in Nantucket since the .~ ~ pastor. there, Rev: Edward F . ' ~owling! is recuperating from ~' . .• t Sickness. .••. ! <

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An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL

New ~dministrators Rev. Henri Charest, curate at St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford, to Holy Rosary, ,New Bedford, as administrator.. ' Rev. Lester L. Hull, curate at St. William's, Fall River, to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Seekonk, as administrator: . Rev, James V; Mendes, 'curate at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford, to Our Lady of Angels, Fall River, as administrato'r.

F~II River, ,Mass. Thu.rsday,· Feb. 4, 1960 ...• 5 PRICE 10c Vo.I 4 ,'''' o. © 1960 T~e Anc~or $4.00 per Year Second Class Moil Privileges AUlhor!zed al Fall Ri'ver, Mass.

. REV. H. CHAREST

Dioceso'n Ordi~aryRequ'ests Eve~y Fam'ily ,in Diocese Subscribe ,to' .,The A'nch'or

Pastor Transfers Rev. George S. Daigle, administrator at Holy Rosary, New Bedfor.d, to St. Roch's, Fall, , River, as administrator. Rev; Daniel E,' Carey, admin'lstrator at Our Lady of Mount Carmel; Seekonk; to Our Lady of the isle, NantUcket, as administrator.

. A plea for increased parish ·home-delivered subscriptions to The Anchor is made today by the Most Reverend Bis'hop in connection with the annual circulation campaign of this diocesan newspaper. . . " , BiRhop Connolly, strong in his support of this com-, paratively new diocesan newspaper, is most· anxious, to realize a substantial circulation increase in' every. parish in the entire Diocese. His ulti~ate goal is. complete family coverag-e in every parish. Bishop ConnolJy's statement follows: "This is a word on behalf of The Anchor as it joins an annual subscription campaign of the Catholic Press this February. Our Diocesan effort will b~ carried on from February 14th till February 21st· :Renewals and new subscriptions will be sought. '

"The Anchor reflects every facet of activity within the' Diocese. So 'that the faithful in every section are made aw~re ~nd appreciative of what others are doing. We have fine feature writers indeed, but among the best of them are' 'our very own 'Yho have been the past several' years introducing us to one another an<;l presenting. varied sidelights to illustrate 'ou,r faith an~ practice. "The Anchor's friends and supporters are strong in their loyalty. Once familiar with its pages and methods they are impatient to have each week's copy, and painstaking readers of everything from editorials to sports-page, from parish parade to spotlighted schools, with an eye alert to note all social or service activity of Catholic men and women.

REV. L.L. HULL

"Believe me, with a hearty bleRsing for all, DevotedlY in Christ, James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River

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, eviis of communism, but rather But, unfortunately, far too many for a positive apostolate which. have been coldly indifferent to the call." will arise from our loyalty to "In the providence of God we Cnrist and the justice and charhave been placed in a world in which both as Catholics and as citizens we are faced with serious responsibilities," he said.' The changes which have occurred in our generation have been' deep and shaking. These changes give evidence of a world-wide social restlessness, and the social problems which have been provoked must be resolVed not by expedient remedies. but' by decisions which respect the dignity and the eternal destiny of all of God's human , . creatures." .

REV. J. V. MENDES

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REV.D. E. CAREY

HAR1.'FORD (NC)-"Cold indifference" to the appeals of the popes is at the root of today's social and economic troubles, Archbishop Henry J. O'BI:ien 'of Hartford has stated. The Archbishop said the popes "have pointed out the dangers and they have ity 'of :His' teachings," he consounded the warnings." They tinued. have asked not for an apos"They have called for an tolate built upon fear of the heroic effort to meet the need.

"So I am only too ready

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Indifference to :Papal Pleas Fosters Industrial Troubles

to endorse the coming cam<

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REV. G. S. DAIGLE

Turn to Page Two

"That is as it should be. lt makes for a well knit Diocese. The more people read The Anchor the less there will be areas of seeming neg-Ieet, or no man's land. Everyone can and should feel that he surely belong-so And an ,excellent way to achieve this is to become acquainted more and more widely through the, pages of The Anchor.

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Curate Transfers Rev. James A. McCarthy, curate at Holy Name, Fall River, to St. William's, Fall River, as assistant. Rev. John R. FoIster, curate at St. Roch's, Fall River, to St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford. as assistant.

: I'We have' an unusually fine Diocesan Paper. It is newsy, accurate and eye-appealing. It scans the whole Catholic front of activity, national and inte'rnational, and informs us in crisp, easily-read series of items as to what goes on in the world. . .

paign for new subscriptions and look and pray for a wholehearted, enthusiastic l1"esponse.

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EMPlHfASIZING GOOD POINT: February means Catholic Press month for eightand-a-half million students enrolled in the U. S. Catholic' education system. Sister Marie Andre, O.p·, 'explains to her' seventh-grade pupils at St. Augustine's School, Ossining, N. Y., the origins of languages as based on a Press Month Packet distributed by the Maryknoll Fathers. NC Photo.

The Archbishop's pastoral has been issued in conjunction, with , the Hartford archdiocese's annual observance of Social Action Sunday. The neighboring Diocese of Norwich joined in the observance. Msgr. John J. Reilly, administrator of the Norwich Diocese, noted in his pastoral that "two erroneous opinions" have been widely held: that capital and labor are enemies and that the Church sides with lai:lor. He said both are false and asserted that the Church is "on the side of justice." He declared that "only an idiot would defend warfare between capital and labor." He said that both should "clasp hands in fdendship" and "from time to time examine their wnsciences...


THEANCHO,R-QiQCese Qf Fan..Riv~,::-:;Th.,,!~., F~bi'4/,1960: ,', ..

K C Lay Reade... To Meet Tonight

Diocese of Fa II River OFFICIAL CLERGY APPOINTMENTS New Administrators . Rev. H4~nri Charest, curate at St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford to Holy Rosary, New Bedford, as adminis.trator. ReV: LE~ster L. Hull, curate at St. William's, .Fall River, to Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Seekonk, as administrator. . Rev. James V. Mendes, curate at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford, to Our'Lady of Angels, Fall River, as administrator. Pastor 'll'lransfers Rev. Daniel E. Carey, administrator at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Seekonk, to Our Lady of the Isle, Nantucket, as administrator. Rev. George S. Daigle, administrator at Holy Rosary, New Bedford, to St. R,och's, Fall River, as administrator.

REV. J. JR. FOLSTEJR .

Curate Transfers Rev. John.R. FoIster, curate at St. Rochs, Fall River, to St.. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford, as assistant. Rev. James A. McCarthy, curate at ~oly Name, Fall River, to St. William's, Fall River, as assistant. First Assignments Rev. Martin L. Buote as assistant at Immaculate Conception, Taunton. Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski as assistant at St. Patrick's, Fall River. ", , Rev. John F: Moore as assistant at Holy Name, Fall River. Rev. 'Thomas E. O'Dea as, assistant at St. James, New Bedford. ' . ," . Rev. Altostinho Pacheco as assistant at Immaculate Con'. ception, New Bedford. ' . Rev. John J.-Steakem as assistant at Immaculate Conce~ , lion, North Easton. '. . ,

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Assigninents of newly' ordained pri~!l~s, with' ~~ceptiori of "Father Kaszynski, are. ~ff~tiye tomorr9w" ~iday, F.ebruarY:

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.All other assignments, including that of Father Kaszynskl,' effectivl~' ~

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Mass Ordo

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,K ofe· Participate

FRIDAY - St: Agatha, Virgi~ and Martyr. Double. Red. Mass, In'Syzan!ine Rite' Proper; Gloria; Common PrefSeventY"-five m«mlbers of .the '. ace. Votive Mass in honor of Bishop Cassidy Council' of the the Sacred Heart of Jesus Knights of Columblls,· Swansea. Permitted. 1'omorrow is the and Somerset, received Holy 'First Saturday of the 'Month. Communion and attended the' SATURDAY~St. Titus, Bishop Divine. ,Liturgy celebrated by 'arid 'Confessor. D'ouble; ··White. Rev. Vladimar Maselko of St. Mass', Proper; Gloria; Second Joh,,n's Ukr,a~p..ian. Ch~rch, .Fall Collect St. Dorothy, Virgin River.' , , , ... , , and Martyr; ·Common ,Preface. Leo Medeiros wllsthe 'council' SUNDAY ...,.. y.., SundaY After :Epiphany. ': :.Douple. .Green.,., Chairman for' the' event and 'he . was asSisted" by "John Romano- " ~. Mass Proper;. Gloria; Second Collect St. Homauld,. Abbot; vich, a brother Knight and member of 'St. John's Parish. Creed; Prefiu:e Of Trinity. MONDAY-St. John of Matha, A guide book, uMass in. the Confessor. Double. White. Byzantine Rite", was distributed Mass Proper,;. Gloria; Common. , to all members of the Council as Preface. ' an aid in'following the Mass. TUESDAY-St. Cyril ,of AlexA Communion Breakfast WlUJ ander, Bisho)), Confessor and, served by' the ladies' oftbe poctor of the. Church. Double. Parish." . White.. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Apollonia, Virgin and· Martyr; Creed; Legio~ of Decency Common Pre:face. The following films are to be WEDNESDAY--St. Scholastics, Virgin. Double. White. Mass added to the lists in their reProper; Gloria; Common Pref- spective classifications: ace. Unobjectionable for general THURSDAY-Apparition of OUI' 'patronage: Gunfighters of AbiLady at Lourdes. Greater Swan Lake. Double White. Mass proper; lene; .Last Voyage; ........., Gloria; Creed; Preface of the Unobjectionable for adults: . Blessed Virgin Mary. Our Man in, Havana; Purple Gang; Seven Thieves; Third Voice. . FORTY HOURS

DEVC)TION Feb..7--Jesus Mary Convent, Fall River. Our Lqdy of Fatima, Swansea. Feb. 14-St.. William, Fall River. St. James, New Bedford. 'Feb. 21- St. Anthony, East Falmouth. St. Mary, North' Attle· boro. .' Feb.26-LaSalette Seminary, , Attleboro: TOE ANt.:OOR Second-eJasa :nail privileges authorized Q\ FaU River. MBSS. Published ever}' Thursday Ilt 410 Highland Avenue. FaD River, Mass.• by the Catlwlle Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price by mall, postpaid $4.00 p~r y!'Uo -

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Objectionable in part for aD: ~usher (sadism and suggestive sequences); Rise and Fall 01. Legs Diamond (the life of a well-known enemy of society'is presented' in a manner which glamorizes his criminal activities.· LOw moral tone).

Continued from Page (JIne lFirst Assignments Rev. John F. Moore as'allsistant at Holy Name, Fall River. Rev. Martin L. Buote as assistant at Immaculate Conception, Taunton. Rev. Thomas·E. O'Dea as assitant at st. James, New Bedford. Rev. Agostinho ~acheco as assistant at Immaculate Conception, New Bedford. ' Rev. John J. Steakem as assistant at Immaculate Concep-\ 'tion, North Easton. Rev: Robert S. Kaszynski as assistant at St. Patrick's Fall River. ' Father Daigle Born iIi,St. Pamphile, I'Islet, Canada" Father Daigle received his'iea:r;ly edu<;ation at theBlessed. Sacrament School,. Fall River andat'teilded St: MarY's'Semin,. arY', :Baltimore: He was ordained! at' -'St1<Mary'sCathedral' 'by the late Most Rev. James E;'Cassidy' , one May' 26, 1934. ' _ Father Daigle has served as assistant to the pastors at st. Michael's in Ocean Grove, ·Swansea, St. JameS in Taunton, Sacred Heart in North Attleboro and St.· Joseph's in New Bedford. He was appointed administrator of the Holy Rosary church in New Bedford in 1956 where he is currently .serving.. Father Charest Father" Charest, . who takes over 'at Holy Rosary in New, Bedford, has· been a priest' for . 27 years. He was born· in Fall River and 'was educated' at the Quebec Semin'ary. He was ordained to the priesthood in the Canadian' .Seminary chapel .on . May 1, 1932. Father Ch~rest 'has serYedat Notre' 'Dame parish; Fall' River, arid' St'-JOseph's and St. Anthony's pariShes, .both in New, Bedford.·"'· . Father Carey Now serving, as .administrator at Our Lady. of Mount Carmel, Seeko'nk, .Father Carey returns to the parish wbich he served for.8 number of years. It was his last curacy-before he was named administrator ,at the Seekonk parish. ' 'Father Carey was born in Fall River. He was educated at St. Charles College, Catonsville, Maryland, and" St.. Bernard'a Seminary in Rochester. He was ordained in the class with Father Daigle 'at St. Mary's Cathedral_ The new Nantucket administrator has served at st. M~ry"

Michael C. 'Austin Inc. FUNEItAL SERVICE

of the Assumption in Osterville, Corpus Christi in Sandwich, St. Peter's in Provincetown, St. James in New Be~ford and Our Lady of the Isle in Nantucket. " Father Hull

The only Nantucket - born member of the Fall River Diocesan Clergy, Father Hull attended Holy Cross College in Worcester and' st: Bernard's • 'Seminary in Rochester. '. dalned to the priesthood on Dee. Father Hull was ordained by 28, 1958 in the Chapel of the the late Bishop Cassidy in the Iminaculate Conception at the same class of Fathers Daigle and, North American College itl Carey. ' Rome by the Most Rev. MarUa, The new administrator has'. J. .O'Connor, rector of ,the· served as assistant at Sacred college. " . Heart' in Oak' Bluffs, Sacred The Fall. River born curate Heart in Fall River,. St. James, teturned to this Diocese las6' in North Attle!?oro,' Our Lady year and 'w-a's assigriedby Bishop , in New Bedford and his present, Connolly to ,St. ,Roch's parish U.\' station: St. William's in Fail' Fall River. ,Father, ,FoIster ;ww R i v e r . ' - . . O?~ 'QUpe ~roup ~~~ the c,~;,~ '" ··Filther' MCCarthy .' leg~ wfio stood guard around tliQ A Coyle High school gradunte'," body of 'Pope Pius 'XII at CasteI-::,' goridolfo:. o~ .;the'day. of the,,; Fatl).er McCarthy moves from one Fall River parish to anotlier' Supreme ·Pontiff's death.' in the same city. He attended Father FoIster walked in the . Holy Cross College in Worcester procession that carried the and st: Michael's in Winooski Pope's body from the Cathedr8'l. Park, Vermont. He spent one of St.• John Lateran to st. year of 'philosophy at Ottawa Peter's ·Basilica. ' Seminary/in Ontario Canada and He was present at the corona.. completed his pholosopJ1ical and tion mass of His Holiness Pope theological studies at St. 'Mary's John .XXIlI and was privileged Seminary in Baltimore. to be near the Papal Altar for Father McCarthy was or- the ,mass. ' 'da~ned on Feb. 24, '1945 by ,the,· ,The newly ordained priestll,. late Bishop Cassidy, third, B.lsh,. will report to their parishetl, op of Fall River. 'rhe new curate. tomorrow, Friday, Feb. 5, wiUl," at, St. William's'in ,Fall River· the exception 'of Rev. Robert S. has. also served as an assistant· Kaszynski who. will celebra.·, at St. James in New Bedford, his, First, Solemn Mass on Suo-" Our Lady of the Isle in Nan." day a~d will then.,report nelllt,.' tucket,. Holy, Family. in East Wednesday.- . , " '! Taunton and, 'Hoiy Name in Fall,; ,The· otber assignments a... i, River., 'effective Wednesday, ·Feb.' lO.,,, . Father Foister. . ' . , ,f; ;Father: FoIster is among t h e ' : ' : ' U p ' and; Up '.. I small number of Diocesan priests" SYDNEY r ·(NC);.... Australiltll.,.:. who·have attended the American' Catholic population, increased.. College in Rome. He was Or- by 27,289 last year, is now listeci ' as 2,051,1~4. i ;

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The Lay Reader Group, SpOBoo soTed by Fall River Coun~ Knights of Columbus, wilt switch the scene of its activ:ities to st. Vincent's Home, beginni~ tonight. Catholic Action ChairInaQ Norman L. Charland said the meeting night and place we.. . changed to accommodate the larger number of interested knights, to make it more con.venient for Rev. John E. Boy~ home director, who will be the group's advisor, and to take advantage of facilities at tile home. Charland said the sessions ar4 . also open to any other Catholic men desirous of learning the Latin responses in- the Mass. The purpose of the group is to train men to serve as lectors m their' respective parishes. ' Rev. William A. Galvin, chap... lain at Catholic Memorial Homct will speak on "Population EJWplosion" at the meeting of the , Council's First Friday Club tomorrow night at Immaculate Conception Church. Knights will receive communion at the sUI o'clock Mass.

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THE'ANCHOR-Dlocese of Fan River-Thun.. Feb.... 1960'

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NEW DIOCESAN PRIESTS: The Most Reverend Bishop is shown with the six priests whom he ordained Saturday at St. Mary's C~thedral, Fall River. Left to right, Rev. Martin L. Buote, Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski,

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Rev. John F. Moore, the Bishop, Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea, Rev. Agostinho Pacheco, Rev. John J. Steakem. Assignments of the new priests are listed in this edition of The Anchor.

Aims to Halt So'-Called Fashionable' ,Figures Indicate, Victims of Violence in Cameroon Weddings at St. ,'Peter's Basilica Decline of Reds 'I.nclude Two Missionary Priests YAOUNDE (NC) - Cameroon Amadou Ahidjo - blamed the VATICAN CITY (N~~-~ixed marriages ar~ now·out In Milan became Africa's newest indeviolence on an outlawed leftist

as far as St. Peter's Baslhca IS concerned: So are all marriages during Lent and Advent. The ruling has been issued by Domenico Cardinal Tardini as Archpriest of St. 'Peter's. Cardinal Tardini also ruled the territory' of the, ~overeign that all couples who want to State of Va~ican City, the same . t' . t marriage in St. holds true there. er In 0 '. Peter's must applyqlrectly .. ~ay's'

, MILAN (NC) - Communist party. roem~ership in th~ he~vy IndustrIal area of MIlan In northern Italy has

party, the Union of the Cameroon People, which some observers have called communist-dominated. Others attribute the strife to bitter intertribal riValry. _Cameroon is an almost entirely ~allen off b~ more than 30,000 In the past five years. agricultural nation on Africa's w.est .coast, about the size ot. According to' statistics reo to him and must submit the realeased, at' a meeting of the California with a population ot. lIOns for the request. , Milanese ,provincial congress of 3,238.196, of whom only about· ~ope .Sources close to ti?e Cardinal. tl)e Commlinist party, there has. 17,000 are ·whites. Catholics lillY he took his action in an effort 'NEW YORK .(NC)·~ HollyiHso been a steady membership number '607.303; Mosiems total to counter the trend of so-called wood' is using adult themes as decline 'in' the· communist youth acout 625,000 and Protestants ap"'fashionable'.' weddings at St. an excuse for going on a "se'x organization of the area. Archbishop Egldio Vagnozzi,' proximately 350,000. The rest are Peter's in recent years. Cardinal binge'" in movies, a priest told . In 1955 the party had 118,097 Apostolic Delegate to the United animist pagans. Tardini is said to believe that members of the motion picture members in the Milan area. The States announced yesterday that The new country is a part ot. .uch a tendency shOWS' disregard industry at a Communion breaknext· year membership was Pope John XXIII has tranSferred the former German colony ot. for the sacred character of the fast here. . down to 111,207, and the followtwo Bishops to new dioceses: Kamerun, which after -World church as a place of pilgrimage,. Msgr. Timothy J. Flynn, direcing year it was 97,703. Most Rev. Francis J. Schenk, War I was divided between .illce it is built over the burial 'tQr of information for .the New The difference in membership Bishop oof Crookston, Minn., France and Britain. After World place of the Prince of the York archdiocese, said that the between 1956 and 1957-a drop. since 1945, has been named War II the two parts were made Apostles. movie industry's biggest unof about 13,000-may have been. Bls . hop 0 f D U I U th • United Nations trust territorielr Cardinal Tardini has also solved. problem is showing, caused by' the reaction in Italy under British and French adminruled that the marriages of "adult" films with an overemto Russian suppression of the Most Rev. Laurence A. Glenn, istration. It is the French-adminexiles and stateless persons may, , phasis on sex to audiences which Hungarian uprising in October, Titular Bishop of Tuscamia and istered area that has become take place in St. Anne's,. the include children. 1956. Administrator of the Diocese of independent. The British Camparish chutch of Vatican City.' "So long as it is on a sex' . In 1958 ·the party had onlY Duluth, has been named Bishop er~ons are governed as' part ot. In the past, many refugees have bi'nge," Msgr. Flynn declared, 91,935 members, and in 1959 0'£- of ·Crooksto'n. the neighboring colony of. lIlarried in St. Peter's so that "it is fac.ed with the problem of fidal membership was 87,192. 'Bishop Schenk was .conlleNigeria.' . their marriages would have. both the supposedly adult theme in a· -The .significant decreaSe' in crated in the Cathedral of st. First Missionaries • religious and a civil status. medium that plays as much to communist membership between' Pa~l on May 24, 1945 in a joint The Church was established Since St. Anne's is also within the child and the undiscriminat-· 1956 and'1957 was also reflectec;i ceremony, which 'also saw the in the region in 1890 when the , "' ing adolescent as it does to the in statistics released during the consecration of our own OrdinPrelat~ adult."' " . . '. youth, section meeting of the . arrr.~os~· R~\r.; . James L. first mi -ion station was opened r~",ent·,' Msgr. 'Flynn, who is also direc- . federation." "From ·a total: of· Connolly. :Bishop 'Schenk. was .in- and the Kamerun apostolic pre. tor of radio and television activ-' 14,000 members in 1956, the stalled in the See of CrOQkston fecture was established. It wu placed in charge of the Pallotiine VATICAN CITY (NG)-The . ities for the' archdiocese, named youth organization of 'the area on May 30, 1945. Fathers and its first apostolic 97-year-old Secre t ary . ,0f the "The Last-Angry Man" and "The' dropped. to' 8;600 members the Sacred Congregation of Rites, Inn of the Sixth' Happiness" as .. following. year.. Although the Bishop Glenn" cons~crated on prefect was Father Henry Vieter. The first missionaries suffered Archbishop Alfonso Carinci, has recent films' which show· " a youth organization reported a Sept. 12, 1956, has been A!iminseverely from malaria and many gone into semiretir~~nt and recognition of the intellectual; small gain in 1'958, it registered istrlltor of the Diocese of Duluth bas been named secretary eme- capacity of the grown Amer-. another decline .·ill 1959 when since the death of Bishop Thomas of them died, but new missions continued to' be established and ritus. ican." membership was given at 7,600. A. Welch on Sept. 9, 1959. in 1904 the prefecture of KamArchbishop Carinci, who celerun was raised to the rank of ebrated his 97th birthdaY last an apostolic vicariate and Father November, has been Secretary of Vieter was named its first bishop. the Congregation of Rites since Today the Church in Camer1930 and has worked in the ~(ln­ oon is divided among the gregation for more than half a Yaounde archdiocese, four diocentury. ceses-one of which is headed The venerable dean of the by a Cameroonian bishop-and prelates of the headquarters staff an apostolic prefecture. There of the Church was offered the are 1,299 Catholic schoolsred hat of a cardinal by Pope more than half the country's Pius XII. But he refused. saying total-educating 79,634 students. that his advanced age would not The faithful are served by 273 permit him to make full use of p~ests and 214 Sisters. the cardinal's robes he would have to buy.

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97-Year-Old I·n Se mi-Reti

pendent country amid continuing. violence that in, recent montl)s has taken scores of lives, including those of two mis!,ionary ·priests. . The new state's. govenment--:.·, h~aded by a 'Moslem, Premier "

Fills Two .Western Sees

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Marianist Brothers To Work in Korea

5S. Peter and Paul Men Meet Tuesday The newly-formed SS. Peter and Paul Men's Club, Fall River, will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 in the Church Hall. Feature speaker of the meeting will be Carlin Lynch, football coach at Somerset High School, and former football end at Holy Cross College. He will speak on Youth Movement in Sports. Two football movies will then be shown and refreshments will be served. The Club is open to all men of SS. Peter and Paul Parish and new members may join at this time.

LASALETTE MISSIONERS: The Most Reverend Bishop ordained these Missioners of LaSalette on Saturday. Left to right, they are Mr. Rene' Gelinas, Rev. Mr. Adrien Francoeur (of Fall River), the Bishop, Rev. Mr. Roger Moquin, Rev. Mr. Daniel Charette, Mr. Efren Musngi. Mrs. Gelinas and Mr. Musngi were made Exorcists and Acolytes; the others were made Deacons All are from th! LaSalette Seminary in Attleboro

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LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Marianist Brothers are preparing to begin mission work in Korea, Father Leonard Fee, S.M., provincial superior, announced. Brother Charles Goedde, S.M., a Navy veteran, will head the first Marianist· mission band, which will open a school in the Columban Fathers' Vicariate 'of Kwanju. Brother Goedde will be accompanied by two Hawaiian Marianists. Before opening their school they will study Korean language and culture at the school of missiology in Seoul.


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THE ANCHOR':""Diocese ofr Fat! River-Thurs., Feb; 4, 1960 .• _ <.'

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Rates Goldthorpe'sNovel 'Distinctly Disappointing'

Parade

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, SACRED HEART, TAUNTON FALL RIVER Mrs. William Lecuyer will be Boy Scouts will receive Holy ,By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy , president of the Women's Guild Communion at 8:30 Mass Sunday Its publishers believe that in John Goldthorpe's "The. for the coming year. Named to ,morning, Boy Scout Sunday, Summer of De.sire" (Coward-McCann, $3.95t they have a ~erve with her were Mrs: ' and will attend a communiOil George Beaulieu, vice president; breakfast afterwards. brilliant new novel by an English' writer just now being Mrs. William Dumoulin, treas- OUR LADY OF THE ISLE, introduced to the American public. Since the characters urer; Mrs. Harold Schofield, NANTUCKET ' with whom the story deals 'who enters the employ of the financial secretary; Miss' Matilda St. Mary's Guild"" will hold • include several Catholics, it health, department. Martin likes Cutner, ,door guard; Mrs, Patrick card party at 5 Liberty Street is expected to be of particu- her and admires her professional McDermott; recording secretary. Thursday evening, Feb. 11. Mrs. Forthcoming events include a Albert Brock, J:r. is chairman. lar interest to ' Catholic competence, and she is more Spring fund raising drive, with readers. I must ,con f ess th a t I seriously drawn to him. Mrs. George Dooley in charge. ST. 'JAMES, found it distinctly disappointing, He has one date, then another, with Jansey. They become inMrs. Thomas Curry is in charge NEW BEDFORD a glancing and creasingly passionate with each of entertainment for the Febru"" Msgr. Noon Circle will sponinc 0 n c I u other. Martin first senses, then ary ~eeting and Mrs. William sor a ham and bean supper ift sive treatmE~nt ' confirms, that, Jansey schemes to Ventura, refreshments. the lower church from 5 to 7:30 of a theme with lure and thwart almost any man ST. JOSEPH'S, Saturday evening, Feb. 13. Mrs. con sid e r. she encounters. She protests that ATTLEBORO Ruth Wing an : Mrs. Helen Pina b 1 e possibil. ,there is, nothing wrong- in all The Ladies of Ste. Anne So- nington are co-chairmen of the ities. . this because she successfully, MISSION BISHOP: Father" dality will hold'a meeting Tues- ticket cQmmittee. It centers in resists the ultimate advances. Ge9rge Bemarding, S.V.D., day, Feb. 9, highlighted by a Mrs. Rita Lacala is chairman Martin Dexter, a han d s 0 m'e ConfesSion, Relapse one of the few I missioners Valentine whist under the direc_ for the social to be held ,after Englishman' in Besotted with Jansey and Per- to remain in New Guinea tion of Mrs. Alfred Pellissey. The the regular meeting Wednesday his forties. Marsisting in clandestine meetings uhit ,has voted $100 to the Bish- night, Feb. 17. . tin, a ,convert with her despite her humiliation throughout the war, op's fund for underprivileged OUR LADY OF ANGELS, to Catholicism, of him, Martin at first convinc~s been named Vicar Apostolic children and $500 -to Bishop' FALL RIVER has bee n ,married for 16' himselfthat he is not committing Mount' Raben, New Feehan High School. A Mardi A malacada supper will be years to Selina, a concert pianist any sin and omits any reference Guinea. NC Photo. v Gras 'whist is scheduled for' co-sponsored by the Women's who; as the narrative opens, is ,to such encounters from confesTU:esday, March 1, in the parish' Guild and the Holy Name Soci,beginning to win a major repu- sion. Then, for awhile, he stops hall. ety at 6:30 Saturday night, Feb. tation. They have three children, going to church. ST. STANISLAUS, 20 in the parish hall. Dancing the eldest 14. Still later, squarely facing the FALL RIVER ,will follow the supper. The Dexters live in a country fact of his transgression; he The PTA and Alumni Associa- OUR' LADY OF PERPETUAL makes a good ' confession, ' but Robert Briscoe, former Jewish tion will hold stanola Saturday, HELP, NEW BEDFORD town, where Martin is chief ad- this is followed by' a' relapse. Lord Mayor' of Dublin, anministrative officer of the health department. He has a side line, Despondently, he concludes he nounced ,yesterday that ,- his March' 19, a~ Polish National' "A' supper and card party wiD the writing of novels which he has no choice but to go on iIi the youngest daughter Elise, 21, has Home- with Mr.!l. Joseph Gro- 'be sponsored by Our Lady' of.' publishes under a pseudonym. grip of his passion until it peters' entered the Carmelite- Convent mada as chairman. Proceeds' Perpetual, Help Society Saturwill benefit the school improve- day, March 19. Mrs. Mary Orlik 'He loves his wife and children, out. ' as a postulant in Dundrum, a " is chairman. A mystery ride imd Meanwhile, Greta increasing- Dublin suburb. Elise embraced ment fUlid. - , enjoys his home, is good' at both bean supper' are, ,planned' for his jobs, although neither, is, ly makes it clear that she would the Catholi<: faith one year ago. OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, OSTERVILLE' '!< members and husbands Satl,Jrwithout annoyances 'and vexa- gladly have an affair with him. The 65-year-old Briscoe stated His wish, however,'.is simply, that the entire family is happy, The Women's Guild will hold ' day night! Feb., .20, with Mrs. tions. . that they should be friends, and with, Elise's decision. a social hour this month 'with ',Adele Pomchtera In charge. Next Has, strong Faith ,when he makes this unmistakMrs. Donald James as chairman.'.regular meeting is set for SUD-' "I ha~e always practiced !Ind : day, Feb. 21.. I:. As for his religion,' he prac,- ably clear, Greta abruptly re'preached the right of private' ST.ELIZABEm's GUILD, tices it faithfully, but the emo- signs and leaves town. ~ , 'ST. JOSEPH'S, EDGARTOWN " . tional excitement which he exThe story approaches a violent conscience and the absolute iibCiergy, choir and altar boys TAUNTON perienced when he was received climax which proves rather eity of' the' individual," he said. The Asswnpta Guild will hold "As a practicing Jew I have were guests at the guild's aninto the Church has long since /' maunderingly anticlimatic. Janalways been accorded these prin- nual buffet supper, served under its regular meeting Tuesday gone. His faith is strong. sey is removed from the scene the chairmanship of Mrs. John night under the chairmanship of He has systematically studied by an American who, knowing ciples by the people of Ireland." «As a parent, and in complete' W. Norton. Rev. William Mc- Mrs. Richard Maxwell. It is an theology. He is said to have a all about her peculiarities, still open meeting and all will be thorough grasp on Catholic wants to marry her and take her accord with my wife, the happi- Mahon was guest speaker. we,lcomed to witness the Frigid_. ness of our children has always teaching. He and the parish to the United States, where, preSACRED HEART, aire demonstrations. Refresh-' priest, Father Gannon, are great sumably, she 'will be -cured of been our main concern." NORTH ATTLEBORO ments will be served. Mr. Briscoe's oldest child, friends, and he goes off to the ,'her aberration. , Dedication of children to A Fashion Show is scheduled Joan, became a Catholic a numFranciscans occasionally for, a, , bel' of years ago. She is married Mary will be held at 3 Sunday for the March 24th 'meeting of visit which is a sort of retreat. , A t Peace Again afternoon, Feb. 7, in the church. the Guild. At the outset of the Summer 'At the' end, with Jansey and to a doctor and resides now in Children from birth to preCanada. 'in question, it comes home to, Greta gone, with Lina back from prill).ary age are eligible.' Mrs. him that his youth is over and a concert tour, and with the Albert Houde and' Mrs. Raoul gone. In appearances slim and Summer gutbring out, Martin Jetter are in' charge of the cereattractive, and with the touch returns, to what one supp'oses is mony for Ste. Anne's Sodality. ,of' grey at his temples merely' his normal, decent, self-conST. ANNE, adding a ,note of distinction to trolled state, and all is peace A Lenten ~forum for young , NEW BEDFORD his black hair, he is nonetheless within his household. adults will be held on Sunday The Ladies of· St. Anne plan a well into middle age. Mr. Goldthorpe evidently towel sale at the meeting set for Also at this time, as it hap- means to show us a man tem-" nights during Lent at the CathTuesday, Feb. 16, in the school pens, his w,ife is preoccupied porarily obsessed. That he suc- olic Community Center, Frankpreparing a concert program for ceeds in some measure is'-, lin Street, IiJlll River. Open to recreation room. Mrs. Frank a tour in Holland. Martin is indisputable. But little authentic juniors and seniors in high Chartier was re-elected president for the coming year. finding it difficult to move a interest can attach to the deinon- school and others 16 and over, the talks will begin at 7 each new novel pas~ a certain point. stration of derangement. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, Sunday night from Feb. 15 Restlessness and malaise affect Of, legitimate interest would NEW BEDFORD through March 15. , him. be an account of such a charac- The Ladies Guild will hold a Under the general title "Youth M«~ets Girl ter's wrestling with conscience, LQoks at Life," teen-age probValentine whist party at 7:30 In such ,circumstances he his response to temptation. But lems will be discussed by panel- , Saturday night, Feb. 13. A rummeets'Jansey Wilson, 22. She 'is of this .there is' almost nothing. ists chosen by the Diocesan mage sale is planned for April . Father Gannon's niece and .is Much of what is said, directfy' Family Life Bureau under the and a 'ham and bean supper and Fall River OS 8-5677 looking after the rectory until by the characters or by way of direction of Rev. Raymond Mc- penny sale in May. the regular housekeeper recovers reflection on their conduct, con- Carthy. 373 New Boston Road The Couples Club will meet from an illness. Almost at first cerningsin, contrition, confesYoung people interested in at- 'Wednesday, Feb. 24. , sight Martin 'becomes infatuated sion, forgiveness is cloudy and tending the series are 'asked to with Jansey, and the girl, sens- could be seriously misleading. register at,.the Center. ing this, and in turn attracted There are some well sketched to him, encourages him. minor characters, In'construction , .. Another new arrival in town the book is by turns smooth and is Dr. Greta Sonnerman, a 'clumsy,' and the' writing is simyoung and beautiful widow ilarly uneven. ' Trude Body Builders Aluminum or Steel

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NEW SOCIETY: First officers of ne\yly-forme~ First Friday Club of New Bedford meet with Rev. ,John V. Magnani, spiritual director. Left to right, Paul Blanchard, treasurer; Rudolph 'Blanchard;': president;' arid Fatlie'r' Mag'nani.

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Hands Off Policy Bishop's Position On Bus Dispute

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Rfver-Thun., Feb. 4, 1960

S

AUGUSTA (NC)-Bishop Daniel J. Feeney of Portland, spiritual leader of Maine's 250,000 Catholics, made no comment after the legislature voted down a bill to authorize cities and towns to provide free rides to and from class for children attending private schools. The defeat in the :ijpuse was by seven votes and tne loss in the Senate was by three. A Senate motion to reconsider produced a tie vote. A clear majority was needed. Before the session began, Bishop Feeney said he hoped the lawmakers -would act favorably on the bill. He emphasized the "hands off" policy he had maintained since the dispute over bus rides began in Augusta in 1956. He said: "We intend no lobby. This question is now in the hands of the civil authorities. It has never been in our hands. It was instituted by the Augusta citizens and the Church has carefully kept its hands off throughout." Argue Both Sides Proponents argued that the ehild, not the school, is the direct beneficiary of the tax funds. Some said transportation Is a safety measure for all children. Others said communities owe parents of private school children a grant in recognition. of their contribution to society. Opponents said transportation is an integral part of education and public funds used to transport priva.te school children would break proper church-state relations. One speaker said passage of the bill would be the .tart of a second publicly supported school system. Another said parents who choose private schools for their children must expect to bear the cost. Among those opposed to the legislation were the Maine Council of Churches (Protestant), the association of Seventh Day Adventist Schools in Maine, the Trinity Episcopal Church, Portland, the Portland chapter of Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation of Church and·State, and the Board of Christian Social Relations of the Maine Conference of the Methodist Church.

Ban on Sunday Sales Vote Due April 19 . EAST ORANGE (NC) - The City Council has voted to put a Sunday closing referendum on the April 19 primary election ballot. Voters will be asked to approve or reject a measure which would halt practically all Sl,lDday business here. A similar law in force in neighboring West Orange has been upheld by the State Supreme Court. At the same time, the City Council has authorized distribution of petitions to exempt publication and sale of newspapers, delivery a·nd sale of milk, and recreational activities from the proposed Sunday closing meas-

ure. A state law banning a selected Bst of Sunday business activities is now in force here. The new proposal would cut out all activities except those covered by the exemption petitions.

Newsstand Owners Get Cleanup Order PEORIA (NC) - Owners of Peoria sidewalk newsstands must stop selling objectionable material or lose their permits to operate 011 city property. This warning was laid down In a letter to the newsstand owners from Peoria city manager Herbert Fritz who said there was no grace period, and that the cleanup order became effective immediately. At the same time, the Illinois News Service, this city's only wholesale magazine distributing organization, announced it would cooperate with the city'. campaign to halt distribution 01. 00jecttonabie publieatiou.

RECEIVE CERTIFICATES: Graduates of Confra- Blessed Sacrament Church, Fall River, congratulatee ternity of Christian Doctrine courses receive certificates Leonora Furtado, St. Anthony of Padua, Fall River. Center. from Bishop Connolly at St. Mary's Cathedral ceremonies. Margaret MacLean, Sacred Heart, Taunton. Right, Lucille . Left, Bishop Connolly, assisted by Rev. Eugene Dion, . Mullaly, St. Bernard's, Assonet. '

CCD Program Must Exist in Every ~P(lrish As Complete Apostolate for Laity "I won't rest and I won't let the priests rest until the Confraternity of Christian doctrine is established and functioning in every church in the Diocese, whether it has a parochial school or not," declared Bishop Connolly at graduation exercises for the Confraternity Teacher Training Course, held at St. Mary's Cathedral. He was addressing 110 graduates ~f the. 15 Bishop, in stressing that there is nity of Cqristian Doctrine," he week course, th~ll' relatIves a great opportunity throughout said. and friends, .following his the Diocese to bring faith to inFather Powers presented the presentation of Certificates different and fallen-away Ca~h-· graduates, representing 34 parin Teaching Methods to them. , I00 k f or an i ncrease 0 f ca te 'I . I ' str .1 ti . the ear chhetidca Idn f uc on l' ;tion ao f eaff atn, °alrl· a m. sh IP I~f the In Di 'parl" es 'd the F a leI RO~Iver ocese, sal prelate in expressing his appre. t'on'of the work of the grad-

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"Wh t bIe ing to 'sh a a s s . .a .parl ~hen, there exists in Its mIdst an mtelhgent, educated, alert group of. men and wo~en ;ea~y. t? bear witness to theJr faIth, said the

olics as well as to those outslde the Church. . Laymen, he saId, can go "into the marketplace" and meet many not reached by priests or nuns. They when needed by • are there . neIghbors In a way that the clergy cannot be. Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan Confraternity Director, spoke briefly, explaining the scope of the organization's work. "It is hard to conceive of a more complete program for lay apostles than that of the Confrater-

ishes of the Greater Fall River New .Bedford and Taunton . . ate. d'as to HIS Excellency. All Jome In recitation of the Confraternity prayer, be.gging the intercession of St. Pius X on . their work. The Fall RIver courSe was given in St. Louis Church auditorium by Sister Marie Charles of the Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart. The New Bedford sessions were directed by Sister James of Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters and were held in St. James Church.

State University Honors Bishop JACKSON (NC) - Mississ(ppi's Catholic Bishop was one of three men honored by the University of Mississippi for distinguished'service in behalf of the state. Bishop Richard O. Gerow all Natchez-Jackson was presented one of the First Federal Foundation awards along with former Gov. Hugh L. White and Rex L Brown, chairman-emeritus at the .board of directors of the Mississippi Power and Light Company. Bishop Gerow was praised. during the televised ceremoni~ here for his spiritual leadership. his "great humanitarian inflllenee," his interest in youth activities and "his intimate understanding of the people among whom 'Ie labors." Bishop Gerow has been spirit. ual leader of this state's 62,000 Catholics since 1924.

Stresses Religious Roots of Thomism WEST HARTFORD (NC) The religious roots of the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas are causing it to lose favor with some philosophers today, according to Dr. Anton C. Pegis, professor of the history of philosophy at the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Toronto. The philosophy of St. Thomu Aquinas-known as Thomism....,. is "distinct from theology,". he said, But it is "nevertheless a Christian philosophy-a philosophy born in a Christian soil," he added. "As such, it seems to have become a source of embarrassment to those Thomists who want to be considered philosophers by their non-Catholic colleagues."

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THE AN~HOR-:-Di~e,5,e of Fall R~:ver:-'Th!Jr5." Feb. .(, 19.6~

Simpler Method

,Weekly Calendar' Of Feast Days

'Fathet~,Forgive' Thein; .. '

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WherEl is the average Catholic to go findbasie, principles Christian marriage, family finances, courtship, old age, problem husbands and, wives?',! , , ' " , , Where can he find the latest inside information on lab'or proposals, management relatio~s, right-tQ-work' iaws ? How (:an he keep up with modern problems and the , penetrating insights, that only trained and experienced mind can discern in these?' ," ' " ' There' are books that contain all this' information:' But ho~ many have the time or inclin'ation or education to find these books and to read them and extract the answers. A simpler method is this:, The Anchor, every week eontains columns by such experts as ·Father Thomas and Monsignor Higgins and Bishop Dwyer. Rea~ what they say -and benefit from thJlir knowledge. ' .

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, "TODAY-St. Andrew Cor'" 'Bishop-Confessor. He was boRa "! 'in' Florence in 1302, scion of . . .illustrioUi ,Corsiri!· family, :a. ..ast~d his. early,' years in diss6. pation, but joiIied the Carmelit. 'in 1318 and began a H'fe - OIl austere penance. He was made Bishop,of Fiesole, a small tow. near Florence, and .was noted for his charityio the poor. 'He ,died ,.January 6, 1373, Pope Clement XII, who was a membelF Gf' the' Corsini family, built .. chapel which was dedica ted to the Saint, in St. .John Lateraa ~asilica in Rome. ' TOMORROW - St. Agatb8. Virgin-Martyr. She was born .. either Palermo or Catania ill Sicily. In the persecution under Decius, her breasts were cut oR According to legend, St. Peter cured her of the mutilatiOil . while she ,was in prison' ill Catania, where she died about 250.. Her name is found in the' Litany of Saints, the Canon 011 the Mass and in all martyrologies. A number of miracles are attributed to her, including' ~he preservation of Catania durina eruptions of Mount Etna.

Signifi~ance

Tuesday's Feast of Candlemas was one day in the Church's calendar. But anyone who has read Ronald·Knox ean never look upon it and candles in the same way again. For Knox has pointed out, concerning Candlemas Day, that a person's face looks quite different by candle light, when a candle is held quite close to it. There' are unaccustomed shadows and high lights; the effect on 'various faces differs; some people appear better looking and some quite the opposite. As Knox says, "We don't all of us light up equally well." And Knox goes on to say that when the Light of the , World came upon the earth, people 'showed up,in differel)t ways as they came close to Him. And ,that is still going

Christian Conduct Involves Man, y Personal Decisions,

SATURDAY-St. Titus, Bisb-

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Herod was a cruel man-but when he thought .of dressed an Epistle included ill Christ and c:ame close ,in order.to .do murdl:lr .the .full extent, By Father John L. Thomas, S. J. ' the New Testament and whom of his cruelty became more evident to all..Simeon, took up Ass't Soci~IOgy pr~f.-St. LOuis University, . ~" he consecrated first Bishop. 01. " the Child into ,his arms, and became a prophet: The Light, _ If this letter sounds confused an? rambles,~t's becaus,e: the island of Crete. St. Titus died of Christ's glance fell on M~ry Magdalen and transformed, rm completely confused. I ~s~d to thmk t?at c~lld.ren came:~0~h:lt1:~~s:4~e~~;~:d tho her into a Saint. The thief looked at Christ and received from God, but now I read m .some .CatholIc per~o(hcals that the promise of Paradise as a reward of faith., this isn't the case· Smart people plan their families, the , SUNDAY-St: Romauld, AbWherever Christ is,' He either light~ up men's' Uyes rest of, us aren't usi?g &:ood with, the intention of willingly bot, who was the son of Sergi~ with His presence or shows them up' in their 'sin' and' sense, and the babIes Just and lovingly accep,ting the chil-. n ,noQleman of Ravenna. ,He Beglectand self-will. :' ;",., , ' ' ! ~ come! Don't these writers dren they may c~nceiye, ' , fou~ded many m'onasteries 'the 'chief of which was at CamaidOli, " So a candle' in Church is more than a'source of light' see that 'they are robbing us . Because of special circum- :. where' he, built'a' church su.Oll' an esthetic touch to the' Liturgy: It is' more than a sign' of .our greatest co~sol~ti~n-that· stances .or conditions, they' ~ay , rounded with a number ofsep.. , f Ch . t th L' ht f th 'W ld It" r ht' ' " , chIldren are God s Will. choose to iimit the size of their', ~ rIS " e Ig 0 .e or; " IS a Ig ,mg up o~ a , I don't know ' , family by restricting' their use' arate cells for tlie solitaries who lived under his rule. He died' ill showing up of men for what they are--it is a reflecti~n of: w hat articles of marital relations, or they may.' his monastery' on .June 19, 102'1. .. . Christ or a judgment from Him. ' you've, bee n decide to trust humbly in God's ,Candlemas Day is one day. Its significance is lasting. ~eading, Betty, help and continue to have cfiil-, MONDAY-St. Jolin of Matt.. • ..' but I rather dren in spite of their difficult, Confessor. He was born ia suspe~t ~ hat situation. ' Provence, 'France,' in 1169, and you eIther read renounced wealth for the priest"With l~ach new discovery our sense of mystery' and them too hastGod Supplies Graee hOod. With 51. Felix of Valoil our need for God grow more profound; and our wonder' ily or you ,have There are decisions the' L. ' 'H' so m e ml'sconChristian must make with full he founded the Order of the .us abandoned to wider areas in which we can get'lo,st,. OW. ceptions about awareness of the serious com- Holy Trinity for the redemptioa can'the idea of an omnipotent God seem foreign or fabulous . Divine Provimitments and obligations they~' of Christian slaves held by the Moors in Africa. He died iD to a ,civilization which holds a kind of ingrown infinity in ,d~nce. ObviouseritaiLGod will supply His helP'" Rome iIi 1213. . the head of a pin; or who beholds in the Milky Way a ly, the Creator: ing graces, but the individual ," 1_ specI'ally I'n': must m'ake the choices' and acmere ou t pos t 0 f f ar-fl ung space. , ... TUESDAY-St. Cyril of Ales" volved I'n everv conception, cept th,e c,ons~q,l;lences. , . These words of the distinguished scientist and i n v e n t o r , " andria, Bishop-Doctor. He wu -. EM' l' . since only He can create an im'What do, we mean when ,we an Egyptian by birth and in, 4~ ~J1omas . urray 'pomt Up a rea IzatIon that modern mortal soul. God is also specially say that children are God's will? succeeded his un'cle, -St. TheophsCience h~s brou,ght with it-with every new discovery of concerned with every pregnancy, In the first place, this statemen,t.' ilus, as Patriarch of Alexandria. science the existence of God is underlined and confirmed. since it involves a person, one implies recognition of the fact J:le wrote commentaries on the Murray has point,ed out that "it has taken centuries' of His children, capable of re- that G<>d created men "male" Holy Scriptures and other n~ for man to discover God's atom." And the very structure 'ceiving baptism ,and the gift of and "female" and commanded able works, but achieved supernatural life. them to increase and multiply. g t t f . h' k 01. of the atom is enough to cause wonder at this creation ' rea es arne m IS wor Further, it ,acknowledges that' overthrowing the heresy 01. But this' does not mean that and the Creator behind it. human choice and decision play each child is the result of a Nestorius, which was condemned ' For man must consider in wonder the fact that' the ,no part in 'the conception of a, special creative act o~ .God, Also,' ' in the Council' of Epheslis, ita atom is so small that one hundred billion billion of them 'child, God creates a soul and is since the child is one of the, 431. Intrigues at Constantinople are contained in the head of a pin-and thaf the nucleus deeply concerned about its major blessings of marriag~, it· led to his imprisonment, ,but of the atom is about ten thousand times smaller than the future destiny even when con-' signifies that God has blessed strong action by the Pope ception -takes place outside of the couple and entrusted them brought his liberation and' be atom itself. If an atom were expanded to the size of a marriage, yet ·He condemns the with the care and training of an' returned to Alexandria, where eoncert hall, its nucleus would be smaller than a house human decision that led' to con-' immortal soul. he died' in 444, Pope Leo XID fly. ditions that require His coopHowever, as the statement is' proclaimed him a Doctor of the 'commonly used, it, seems to' Church;' These discoveries of science are significant signposts· era-tion. In our society boys and girls imply ,that "men :will be men'~' that point to a marvelous Maker. They show that true are aware of sexual drives and in marriage and if wives get WEPNESDAY - St. Schola&science and the true scientist ,discover at every 'step added become biologically capable of pregnant as a result, they must tica, Virgin. She lived in' the proofs of the existence and power of God. Lecomte de Nouy, reproducing at relatively early just accept this as "the will of sixth century and was the sister of St. Benedicta. She is regarded a scientific gen~us who returned to Catholicism after 30 ages, but this does not signify God," as the first nun of the Benedicthat Divine Providence intends There's a kernel of truth in years of atheism" wrote, "Those who, without any proof, tine Order and founded a' comthem to enter marriage and start this view. The Creator endowed munity near Monte Cassino. She have systEmiatically end'eavored ,to destroy the 'idea Qf having babies at ·this time. men' and women relatively pow- died about 543. God, have done'something anti-scientifi<;." ' , In the state of matrimony, the " erful, mu~ually complementary ........_ _~_---:.:..-_.... And so it is foolish for men tOo' build up, a case. of Creator designed marital rela- affective- and sexual drives" ....,; ' mhmacy~ 0f ", to' teO t'th I I f ' ..._.... hosti,lity between science and religion. ~t is foolish for some tions to foster mutual love, and ' that the ' love and: . unity, but this does, not imply marriage. n9rmally aJ;~~se: to ,.' ~pera , a ,e eV,e 0 ~.­ to make the two appear at odds. The business' of religion that they. are to be used,without t" 'th the" 'e ult thai' Instmcts. They re~am rah~nal is God. The business of science is the handiwork of God. '. deliberate choice involving' :~i~~~~n w~re conc:i:e'd e-ven" I:>ein,?s, 'and marri~ge' in Christ awareness of :their 'procreatiye though they may not imme'di- ,r~ulres the observance <'of the function and the' serious, lasti'ng,' a~ely and directly ,be intended.. order ~f reason. ' I know some readerswill'~ . ,obligations that ,this necessarily ~ouples accept them as ·the nor-: ,,' unplies. ' " ' ", mal' consequence of "doing what, ""Dqn't give' us that 'old selJ, . Free to Choose ,c~llie,s naturally.... " .....- '.' ; control ,argument!" 'But ,ther' .. ' Although we are living under Will 01 God : 'shOl;lld reflect that' the dru'nll" the providence of God, Christian' On' the other hand the t~rm" th,e spendthrift, the' quick-'temOFFICIAL NEWS'PAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER Jiving involves many personal "will of God'-' in' this' instani:~ is' ,pered, the' lazy and the unchilPdecision. One is free to choose often used as a convenient. itable 'say the same thing. The Published weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall'Rlv,,-, the vocation of marriage or rationalization for failure' to' "old self-control argument" .. ' , 410 Highland Avenue' , another. He', is free in his choice exercise self-controL No one, based, on the dignity' of man, aocI of a marriage partner. will dElnY that the prolonged ob-, 'more, particularly, on the PaeFC;;II River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 ' In marriage, couples may servance of continency in ma, 1'- ,sion and Cross of Christ.' , 'PUBLISHER - ' choose not to exercise their .marital rir'lts in order 'to give riage is normally dif,ficult, but:' . At 'any: rate" Betty, h~ve._ Mont Rev. James L .Connolly, D.O." PhD., themselves more completely to if man is a rational- creature,hls' many babies as you, can ra_ GENERAL MANAGER ASST•. GENERAL' MANAGER the service of God and, their fel- sex drive must be brought under- properly, but don't ,blame the. Rev.l)ohn P. Driscoll ' Rev. Doni~1 F. Sholloo, M.A. ' on the' "will of God." God'~ . lowmen. 'They may choose to rational cOlitroL enjoy marital relations accord'The, marriage contract is ~oi operates with.. yotir· actiolls, ~, MANAGING EDITOR i,og to their normal inclinations a license permitting the couple it is you" .who chooSe to act. Hugh J. Golde~ ~

Added ConfIrmation

h.

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@the 'ANCHOR,


.S~ggest·' Pr~orifJ For Resettlement ~Qf· H~ndicapp~~}

': :':'q;E~EVA (N.c)~~'Sp~<;j~ , priority :should '. be. given' ito -the resettlement· of, socially 'and physically handic~p~

1 refugees," il" Conference 'held .. 1thder the' auspice$ 'Qf ;th~:'td­ , temational Committee forWdtId Refugee Year has recommeiidEld. Conference chairmen: includ~ James J. Norris of Catholi~ .~ lief Services";-National Catholic Welfare Conference, worldwide reile£ agency of the U. S: C~tbolic Bishops. . '. , •. :' "We deem it morally 'essential," the conference's statement said', "that families should be r:e-. united, even where this meiins 'the admittance o! handicapped ·refugees. ' . ''''I "Furthermore, we deplore'inimigration prescriptions' wWch separate families or deny aamlttance for the rea,son that one, 0, more members are hanclleapped.'" . , Several cJ>nference delegatEig expressed dIsappointment at the apparent lack of interest by some governments in World Refugee Year. Dr. Auguste R. .Lindt, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said that only 4,300 visas had been granted by all the countries participating in:: 'the year. .:, • 'j Low Figures "This is an extrmely .luw ltg;" 'ute," he said, "considering ~t international refugees in E\ir:o~ need some tens of thousands of visas, including those for difficult cases of physiclilly an~: So,dally handicapped refugees." ',I ' ';The conference, disclosed:. :th~t there are about 110,000 refugees in: Europe who need assistarice, 20,000 of them still in camps. The U.N. commissioner set a goal of 12 million' dollars for tbe evacuation of refugee camps in Europe and the resetUement . of about 7,500 European refugees still in China. He said some seven million dollars of this gOQ.l should come frOln contribqti<ms to a World Refugee Year fund. ,;,

c

Hawaii Governor Lauds Tolerance: MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-"IQ~I­ eranee is outmoded like' last era's . dress," Hawaii's Gov; William F. Quinn told the New':' rHan Forum at the University"qf Minnesota. '; I '''Don't put it (intolerance) 'iii the "closet-to wear again un4er a doak. Off with 'it," said the 40-year-old Catholic who headS the 50th State. In Hawaii, there is no effort to recreate persons of one racial ori~in into the image and .likeness of another, he added,. in stressing that racial differences ean b"Ccome a source of sat.is'action rather than conflict. , ':'We're a bridge betweeriEast and West," said Mr. Quinn. '~The races approach a better mutual understanding In Hawaii,,' We think, than anywhere else in·the world. They intermarry and take an interest in each' other's languages and religion. In short, they are good friends and neighbors." The Governor· referred to the ·Hawaiian Islands as embodying Cardinal Newman's idea' of a ".university: "an assemblage of. ,strangers from all parts of·-tb,e .world." . .

'S~rvey 'Shows La'y" .Participation: Greater

. "PORTLAND (NC):-;-The'dla:' ·.ogue Mass is offered' in 70 par-' .shes of the Portland, Ore., archdiocese. . ",' ,Lectors, laymen who aid' the ·congregation in following-the Mass, are used in 33 of these pililishes. ' .' i - Fat~er David Nicholson, O.S.B~, director of the Archdiocesa'n Commission for Sacred Liturgy, revealed these figures in giving 'details of a survey. The dialogue :Mass IS a Low 'Mass at wliich .th~ responses ordinarily g!vEm · by Ule server are' spoken aIoud . by 'the congregation. .

Fatller' Clinwn's Lib,e~atlty and $ympaihy'Leit' .:THE Lq;sting:~!~R~~~~~~:~'~~~:;",$~'ndw~~ :Residents

ANCHORThurs., Feb. -.c, 1960

7

.. Catholic: Director . ." :-,' -:';' .~By:.~~~~:.:comnge ", " . :,.,: ~Hits Farm Gro~p In 1892 the locaLsehool· ''Conunittee deCided to close the Jarve$vfne School' 'in ~andwich and transf~,~t~'e ptipil~,t~,'i:sc~:O:bl some dista#ee "away.~The"jarveSville ;Policy, Sta nds School,· was located neat :the ,glasswoi:ks:in. a section thatwas'chiefly" Catholie~ and . DES'MOINES (NC) -":'x

was attended by most of 't,h~:Catholic'cHild,re~k,Fathet Clinton 'thought: 'the .actiOn of 'Catholic rural life official the committee unwise a'ild,~" u',,:,.· .' ;.,;;,~~,:,":d':'i:':" " ' " , ' '... :"" " ... . has' expre'ssed "deep' diSunfair and had no hesitancy ;,vi(...z· tress" at reCent policy state.. about making his opinion' J'l ' " ihents of the American Farm Bureau Federation. known. In spite ,of hili; o~· ;HI

position the school was -c1osed~ . . it Father Clinton rented a r o o m " in the Catholic' district, moVed t!-il in desks, books, ~nd all.the other necessary equipment and. went to Boston. There 'he found a. teacher who was capable, com_, petent ;md 'willi'ng to go along with hiS plans. And In Septem~ ber of· 1892 some 30.' children were called to order by Miss Mary Murphy-:and the first Catholic School on Cape Cod was in action. . Father Clinton gave his per. sonal attention to the school, making sure that high standards were maintained. Through daily visits and supervision of examinations he saw to it that the school was the equal of any other grade school on the Cape. Closes School This first <:':atholic' school lasted only a year. It had been started an~ continued as a protest against what Father Clinton considered an iniustice. When the J arvesville school was re.op~ned the need for the protest vanished. Besides, maintaining PRESENT DAY 'SANDWICH STRUCTURE it l school would have meant a heavy drain on the parish funds . Corpus Christi Church . .:. -:and· the parisIPoQers just did' . In 1901, when 'the church ";;as the whole building. 'l1te steeple not have the money. The glaSs company was out of torn down,his body' was moved was never rebuilt, being' replaced with a small bell ·tower. business and· ,tb.e other ·'com.. to the Catholic' cemeterY. '.' Conditions Improve • .:, ' . panies could; offer· 'onlY: a few Final Servlee .In September of 1895 Father jobs. Some work. was .to be had In 1887 fire had ruined the with the Keith Car Company of J. D. O'Keefe took over as pasSagamore-but a number of tor and was' succeeded in sanduaryand damaged the infamilies were forced to leave November of 1896 by Father terior of the church and al'Sandwich. And those who stayed J'l\IDes. II, Lqoby from St. Law. though Father Clinton made re.behind were hard put to get the .rence Parish in !'lew B~dford. pairs, the walls showed signs .of 'minimum necessities for ordin- He remained as pastor for three weakening. The s tor m 0 f years '-and made a strong and November, 1898 wrenched 'and ary living. Father Clinton' never lost lasting impression. Tall, hand- strained the battered church sight of the center of interest of some and dignified,he was again, and when -part of the his parish-the sanctuary of his sterrilyuncompromising in his outer wall fell into the street in . June of 1899, the end was in , Church. A· fire had damaged tl\e priestly wo!,k.. sight. - '" , sanctuary and the interior of the ~ During this time conditions Church, and' Father Clinton Improved a little in the parish. After a thorough inspection drew up his own plans and Cape Cod was beginning to be and a conference with Bishop began the work of redecorating known as a "Summer Place~'­ Harkins of Providence, 'it . was and refurnishing. and the visitors and vac~tioners decided that the church must be were providing <' employment. abandoned. On Sunday, July 16, ,Charity' Unlimited SQme small changes were, 'llad.e 1899 the last Mass was celeFather Clinton was most f~ ~ the. mission .church,in :W;a!-"e,:" brated and the' bell tolled for' Ous, perhaps, as. an orator and ham, but . no major improve-' ·the last time at Benediction that he was in demand as a speaker ments to St. Peter's. In 'February evening. Then old St. Peter's fot" all social eventS in thedlo- of 1899' Father 'Looby was trans. was closed forever., • cese. But he av'oided these de- ferred to' North' Easton' .imd . (Read .Part Five Next Week) mands' whenever possible 'be- Father PatrIck F. McKenna tOok cause his desire was to be in his his place. . . parish with his own parishion'Father McKenna had none of ers. 'the dynamic drive of Father During the ,sad times of unem- 'Clinton ....:.. none of the dark ployment his generosity and charm of Father Looby.' But in charity were unbounded. Let me his own quiet way he prepared quote directly from Father far' reacning plans and got great Bourgoin: results. _. CITIES SERVICE "The extent of his charitable . .Shortly after he became pas'\"lorks among the poor of ,his tor, Father McKenna realized DISTRIBUTORS' parish at this time will never be that 'something would have to be entirely known for he works done about the church building. Gasoline quietly even' secretly. His ·per. Erected in 1f!54, it had been exsonal goods, like his income, pected to last indefinitely, 'but Fuel and Range were never very large, but he the continuous' storms of the denied himself in order that he Cape were too much for it; The would be able to lessen the suf- gale of January 6,. 1857, blew fering of others. . down the steeple, -with its bell Oil BURNERS "His liberality, his sympathy and clock, and severly damaged and his kindness manifested so G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS conspicuously during this period, of depression has never been For prompt delivery forgotten in the town, and on & Day & Night Service the occasion of his death called forth this tersely expressive ~ural Bottled Service . comment from a non-Catholic: . 915 Acushnet Ave•. ''We are glad that we were· per61 COKANNET ST.At Weld Square" mited to live in his day.!" TAUNTON New Bedford . Town MOUrDS' LoSll ' Attleboro -No. Attleboro . So it .is not S\P'Prisi~g' ~at .. N61D.• Bedforo/s Leading- Taunton Plumber ':'1, ;, whell, Father, Cl,illtoi!. died' 'oJ1 Aug. 23, 1897, t,here. w!ls..aQ. c)~~7 pouring of, regret 1IDd trIbute .', ,'" from Catholic and' non-Cathoiic. Many f:oll($ do not know As a mark of respect, all busih~ve moved!', Our' 'ness stopped inth~ town during . the funeral service, which was held in Taunton. A Solemn New, lbcation. : Requiem Mas was sung by the ,IS Rev. James 1.. Smith and the sermon was delivered by the Pleasant. & Union Streets , Very Rev. Thomas Doran D.D., New Bedford Vicar General of the Providence Diocese. Then Father Clinton came back to the .parish he lQved and served so well to be LEATHER GOODS since 1877 buried in' the churchyard of St. .~ x' . . . . : .J, ...... ,'. .. '." Peter's. ,....

W.H.RILEY & SO'N, Inc.

OILS

OLIVIER

Plumbing- Heating

"t'

"

.;

'we

G.a!.

Father James ,L. Vizzard, S.J., acting executive director of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference, took exception to the federation's stand on such issues as distribution of farm surpluses in this country and abroad, unionization of farm workers, and U. S. participatioll in muCual security programs. In an editorial in the February issue of Catholic Rural Life, monthly publication of the Catholic conference, the Jesuit priest declared that the Catholic conference has attempted to be nelltral in regard to secular farm organizations, but "complete neutrality can sometimes become reprehensible." Father Vizzard listed a number of issues on which the policies of the Catholic conference and the Farm Bureau Federation are at odds. Among them are: Farm Surpluses -So-called government "fOod stamp" plans under which U. S. farm surpluses would be distributed to needy families in this oountry_ The Farm Bureau Federation opposes such programs, while the Catholic conference ·has repeatedly endorsed them. he said. . -Programs for distributing · U. S. surplus food overseas. While the federation urges that ·this practice be terminated "811 soon as the farm surPlus situation will permit," the conference supports this form of overseas relief, he stated. '-Unionization of farm workers and establishment of compulsory collective bargaining in the agriculture industry. The federation. ppposes any move iA this direction, but the conference believes farm workers "have the 'right ana the duty to form their' own free . associations and unions," he said.

ACE

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8

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W'omen· . ~... t'0 'Atf,'en ~ d

THE ANCHOR':"':DioCese'of;;fdil'Ri:~er~ Thurs.; Feb,~·.(; :1..9M)· ',: .,.., . , ' .... ' . .' ..•.• : . ' , d J 0:

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Un'usual 'Fire'place" T reat.ments Youth C.onclave·· WASHINGTON' (NC) of five · Home De c o r ·,appointment mpor an, '. n. from the' National. Councii 01. I t t I Catholic Women 'to the White

The delegat~

:,~~

. House Conference on Childrea

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,and Youth to be held frona ~arch 27 to April 1 has bee. .announced by Mrs. Mark .A. ' NCC,," Mrs.. Jacobs Doyle of Nashville, national chairman of the . NCCW Committee on Youth. . Mrs. Emerson Hynes of AfI.lington, Va., national chairmaft of the NCCW Committee OIl .Family and Parent Education. Margaret Mealey of Washing. ton; NCCW executive secretary. . ' Mary Donohoe of Washl'ngton, " staff 'consultant to the NCCW Committee on' Youth. .I Mrs: Mark A; Theissen Mrs " . The'" Issen IS a f ormer . ,·teacher in the Cincinnati publie '~chool system. Mrs. Doyle ia 'president of the Nashville I DIocesan Council of Catholic Women as well as. youth committee chairman and is a former worker with the National Cafu,. oUc Community Service. Mrs. Hynes,. mother of 10 h'ld . a f ormer sc . h 0 01 C 1 ren, IS librarian and senied with com.mittees of the St. Cloud (Minn.) . Diocesan Council of Catholic ,.women. Miss Mealey formerly

By Alice Bough Cahin 'I1Iere are no words to give you the. horrible .picture of the ,."before" and the cha~ming picture of the "after" ·fireplace we've recen'tly finish~d, It was. in a house with ·proud, spa,cious rooms, well-landscaped g~unds, a two-car garage, a deep cellar and ""a ' . ' attl·c. One molding the fIre opening..Use a simple well J·nsulat2..:1 ~ to outline the b~icks. A look at· the ugly fireplace narrow shelf above it becomes dominating the living room, the mantel. Such atreatmeht

however, was enough to diseourage the most courageous d~orator. It co v ere d the en t ire wall t space b e ween' , two windoWS; . t h yawning WI · jliches abo v e • n d ,bookcases at either side ·.of the opening. .The only thing ·:to ,do with the I 'mantel was to remove it entirely, leaving the costly masonry intact. The owners put in a 'new mantel, much lighter in graceful panels . feel1'ng,w1'th It was . decorated with a pair ·of unusua11:)' tall brass Chinese' candlesticks and. a 'rose meaal~

.

:~:;t;:~t. o~h~;v::~on,

gives a strai'!ht-f,orward look . and decorations should be simple, possibly!! contemnorary asymmetrical arrangement. Here are two .entirely different treatments that- may suit you'r decorating scheme.. In one . house the black marble fire':' place was quite low and the wall was' paneled with square bl~cks / ., of mahogany. Two pictures fitted gracefully in t 0 the square pattern of the wall treatment. The absence of a conventional mantel and, the abundance of CHARITiY BALL: Comparing note!!.at Cat hoI i plain, open space. made this Women's Chlb of New B'edford Charity" Ball are, 'left to roomcseem large. There were right, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Motta' and Mr. and Mrs. some massive pieces of furniAlbert,A. Catelli. Mrs. Motta and Mrs. Catelli were chairman -ture, yet they did not seem out of place because the walls were and co-chairman, ·respectively,· 'so simply treated.. ° k'" The ownBeUrislto-lfnasSeeacton'd ho'use" S

e

Sk' , P' t B1. . P k ung nes in , 01' ac. '. ar as T O.Serve at..W"Inter' ' " . 'mpi cs

lion plate. In its lSimplicity It ,rebuilt the fireplace by· bricking y" was beautiful and everyttiing. the wail from . floor to ceilin'g. eise in the room showed off so ContillUing the bricks . along a SQUAW. V f"-LLEY (NC)-Ten Catnolic: competitors from 33 .' was a social Ylorker 'with the ~much .more . than .when dom. ]'og, they m''ade a ·'bu1·lt.1·n seat.." skiing 'priests in black parkas ~ation~l-:Miss Catholic Community '11 '. ',.'nations' and " the thousands of . .Service. Donohoe' served mated by such an overpowering 'W1'th l'tS br1'ght pad and gray WI. be' standing. by-ready. to. spectators who will flock to this . . , . l'd t th "t l' . t" . thO . 11'· . . . ',for many years as a volunteer mantel. pil'llows l't b'reaks the' se'vere ll·nes .. g 1 e 0 e SpIrt ua aSS1S ance en ra lIlg site of outdoor . .f' . t'hI t .... d ' th ; . ". , worker with youth' groups.' .' · . h In 'another small house; w ere of the fireplace, Since there' was 0 any a e e lIl]ure m ewmteI: sports. Ole owners wanted to: keep no mantel, the' owners used "'VIII Winter"· 6iymp'(c Games ,'.fh~r.~,Wil~ be .sunday M,ass~ . Purpose of the White House :ilnodeling to a Ininimum,' 'th'ey .large.pots o{plants on' the flOOr which begin here Feb.. 18. ~ ··'··from.6:A:M. uritil'noon on FeD "'Confere~c!!, the sixtli to be held, \ 'ch8nged im old-fashiont:d li.ving as accessories. ,.. ': ~'Aw~~e.of.thephYsicaI·dangers>21 a~d" 28 'in the Aipine':'styl~ 'is' the .promotion of opporhin}:.. ll'OOm" mantel, ' excessively' _01'- , . perh_aps you wonder what cm~ . ,of vigi'!rous.· wiilt~i: " :sports is '. ;ehap~( "~~ating 372, and Masses .'Ues . forchiidren iind youih "to Date, by removing the ginger- should put on 'a fireplacemaritel. Father' Patrick J. 'O'~eill, pastor· 'ev"ry ··,Weekday'. morning.' Also ';'realize then-' fuli potential for ,. '!bread and covering the chimney Pewter, brass; 'copper and 'iron .of.AssumptiQn Church, in rearby 'there .w,ill·be ~unday Masses'1ft ':'creative' life itt. freedom arid :TDreaSt with plairi sheath panel. beionlOn it. Coionia) or. provin'- Truck~e; Calif., ~n~ administr~- . :three 'nei:g~boring town chu,rches .dignity, - , )lng. The mantel is a simple shelf :ci~l ~oJlle~. Fireplace .~p.di~onl!, :tor lor' the:hewlr ;-const:ru<;te9 ,on·Uie ()lymp.ic Sti.ndays. . and the original blue tile hearth .grates ..a nd Screens are,.a f.ew of .Queen,ofthe. Sn0'-Ys ·Chapel·' 'Som~~hat ironically, some 01. ~';.'. Tau'nton Ball . ).eta the ~oom'iI color. scheme., .the niany .traditionai accessOries here...·,.. . . " , -', 'thes!ci~ng'priests have been ex:' ·.':Taunton_ ~.Queen's: Dau~hte~ Retltylint' Mantel 'made"Of ih'e~~etais.· : " Injured three times asa ·skIer...pell~d·from the l1omelands. by, iwill hold their second annu81 " Yo~ may oorisider·thisan i~,,:, : '.However,"someof 'oUt' iDOSt·F.athe~ O'Ne!ll'y,rill have· Ilis .:, ·th,e So~iet Union, which is send,.. .charity ·ball .Monday; 'April 11 .westing way" of . restyling," • -m:odei'D:' ac·c'is$ories·.. · a~e i 1Il1lio hardy ,piies~ : ready ~ fo~ . "~clt .:.,ring ~ore 'entrants (87) than' an,. ;at ~he. Cotillion ,Ballroom. PI''' iniddI~.aged mariieliri an older' made of pewter, brass' and 'co~calls? on' th~ sl<?~'" '. '.:;. ';:." "9'f:h~r ,Iiati.Qn. . . .... ~s j"ill benefit various Dioc:. .bouse..you Couid remove the old' 'per: .Informal "modern:homel' . ,J:Iowev~r, ~heir"mai.n co~cern "",:,'~!lm~s ~Francis C~rdinal·McID- .' 'esan agenc!e's. ·Mrs:, William . . . ,,,,.' mantel ledge . and . cOver the' often "usea'ccessorit!s . 01. tin, will.be thebasic'spiritual'mi~i:s~' .tyre,.A,rchbishop .of Los AngeleS; 'Powers is geile~al chairman. ' .....• ," t · . , '.J · brickswlth 'wood' 'paneling;- ..while. tole,'is ·proper'ift. trildl:.. trations for the hundreds" of . w~ll offici,ate.feb. 18 at the bless~ .'. _.. ' : .leaving . one row of' bric~' 'Urinal,19th ceilturtt:ooms.:..;.:: . , ,.,.. ;. ..-.' .ing Qf the skis in the 9,OOO-seat, around the f.ire opening. If the ," Becllusey~\ll' f1rep~ace:.n i~ .Wome.n, 5 .College "Plans· .$3.5::miUion,,__ skating pavilion ,'. IT'S ALL'RIGHT TO 'fir~pla~e stands' out from: the the focal pomt of your 'room, . ~S " L' 5" h' n ,built. by. the. United' States ,for· o wall, you might conceal storage '~ 'alin to .use the right acc~sSSorieli, ~m~er, Iturgy .' C, oou~.. the, OlympicS. ,This religious . ~HOP AROUND FOR.. i . llPace on either side, to bril)g . relating the accesSo'ries )on'or . WEBSTE~ . GRO~S .. (NG)-:-, ~er.e.mo.nyhonorsSt. Ullr, patron SOME THINGS. BUT the whole wall out flush w~ 'over ·the· mantel to' the room.·,,·A .Litl,lrgical S~h~!>l ~of MUSIC saint of ,skiers. . , ° I'A " 'Even the ordinary arrangement . t~~e~bed o~e:~~ '1~~,:,e.bS~i' ,Bishop·'Joseph T. McGuck~n ." ~' o IstOriCa ss~clatlon of t~o, candlestiCksflarikirtg" il . _...... ~". urlll .~ s. . . ,um~er '.01.., 'sacramento will· be .in the ',.. H 'po k' ChO - N" dock will have special'look if ~ &eliSIOn: .The .program, , officially 'sanctuary .for the dedication ,of' . IC 5, Icago un ;. you.find "lnteresting' 'candle:'" ,approve4 by,:.the "Coriimisslons'Qtieen- of .Snows Chapel' ~il .".,202-206 Rock Street, . CHICAGO (NC) ...,..·Sister M: sticks,:~lik~·the tallbra~' sticka . for. Sacred LHurgy.an'd. sacred ·Feb.17 and also for the blessini :.:". -Fall River C~therine of the Sisters of the .usedwith the .Chinese· p~ate.··· M;us(c of the 'Archdiocese .of.St. 'of'the skis. ' . . ~esl,l~rection, stationed a.t"'esur- ::if you:chooseto._use.one large LOUis, "" wilL offer. "complEit.e Jj,:: 1S.!!:!,g P\.ACE "'0 '(, rection High, School here,. has picture .for the. wall over., the~urse§in 14 subjects, ~nC1ud.ing 'GET A PRESeRI PTION . , been elected president of the mantel,- be sure it does not over- . the liturgy, Gr~gorj;in' cha~t, , It. .. , . 'f\L1:'ED' ! ','J Polish American Historical As- power the fireplace. Large,sized liturgical singing, and papal de,.. ~. .'~Iectrical . lociation. She . succeeds' Father 'vases or figurines will give your 'erees and directives· on tne ~/i' Contracton L. J. Siekani«lC, 0.F.M., of Cleve-malltel an,important clean-lined. liturgy'. ..' ..' . , ~ land. look.;' .. ' ..." , Webster. ,College. (for 'Yomen) "T.., , • The association. was 0stab- j Keep the' arrangement in good is ~o~ucted ,by th.e Sisters of· ,. . .. (~A' ,...: l1shed in 1942 to compile historl-. bahuice, "whether· formal' Or . in';; '. ·Loretto in Misso\lri.. " . '. T"'~ eal data about Polish'-An\ericani! formal:'11 your mantel' .... high:, , . V~ .' and their contributions' to the use low objects to decouie It! if· ~ ~ American way of life. Its head,. ithe .Shelf , iI,.lciw,. use .high .. ac~s-; " ., A.W~ ,.quarters ar:e at ~t. Mary'. Col~ ,sories.. ;, Avoid. ~ia. imperlO~ . ',944 . ,e.ou.·.nty. Sk SCRAP METALS" .' .. ' :,:Le.•ge,Or.char,·d La. ke, Mich.· .. ;, .' .a.p·pear;ance.' •, '-:.'; .• ' .. W ~STE PAPER ;'f :RAGS" . .. ~wBedford ;.' . AND .TRAILERS.. FOR . TRUCKS l i .- PAPER DRiVES .... , .. , ,',,'. '" i ',CHURCHES. scouTs and CIvic' ORGANIZATIONS' A lOA' CW MONK.. UfAD iI· 1080' Shawmu·t Avenue .~H ENOUGH 10 8. A .... New Bedford' , Wy 2~7828. . . '. 0

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,PLA.N SODALITY' PROGRAM: Del ega t e s from secondary l;chools of the Diocese meeting at Mount· St. . ' Mary Academy; Fall River, to plan the Queen of Peace · Sodality Union program for the second semester included, .. left 'to rig1'it, Pauline Roy, .Jesus Mary Academy, Fall , 365 NORlH ICRONT STI'tIEET: .NEW BEDFORD ~ River; Kevin Tripp, Holy Family High, New Bedford; ~, 0 · Winifred Welch, Sacred Hearts Academy,' Fall River,. and , WYman 2·5534 ., . , _Joan White;,D.Qminican,Academy~ FalLRiv,er. " '" "": ~ ,: ... ~~~~'Qo,-""''Qo,'Qr"u''''_'Q,'''Q,~'''''Qr,,-''''Co.''Q,,'Q. d

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";,Stra·ngersB'~con,.e:Fast Friends -,As Doxie Pu'ppies Are SQld

'THE 'ANCHOR- ... Thurs., Feb, 4, 1960

Sisters Request New Hospital

By :~~y Tiniey Daly "You meet such interesting people!" has long been a recommendation for the newspaper business. We can say the same for pet-selling. A small ad started it all: Dachshund Pups-AKC, Blk. & Tan; m.&.F.; st'd.; 10 w'kS; home raised" followed' by ''Now that's a puppy!" the our phone number· First to young father laughed. "He eome were a couple of knows that he belongs with us.. native New Englanders: I've always loved dogs and want

KETCHIKAN (NC)-The City council has instructed that work begin on .applications for state and Federal aid to build a' new hospital here to replace the one which a community of Sisters plan to close. The Sisters of St. Joseph,' of Newark, N. J., have asked this Alaskan city to build them a new institution, but their proposal has met with controversy based on questions of church-state relations. The City council held a publie hearing ')fi whether tax funds should be used to build the Sisters a new hospital, but no decision was made. Another such meeting is planned, though the date is not set. Despite the indecision on control of the institution, city manager Robert Sharp was told to begin preliminary work on ap. ~lications for financial aid. . The present hospital, Ketchikan General, is a 37-year-old, 75-bed institution which the Sisters say will be closed in a year because it is not fireproof and in such poor condition that "to continue its operation is a 'daily perilous hazard,"

"Doxies for sale?" in crisp, my kids to grow up with one. clipped accent. "Want one for How much?" He took out his wallet. birthday surI glanced apprehensively at prise for our" the girl-mother. Would she be son. Eleven towilling to take on the care of a morrow. Probpuppy-with all the duties she ably spoil him, has already? ''That's right!" she but he's our smiled; tucking the baby under one and only. one arm, kneeling down to Got him an fondle the puppy. "Our house is English racer all set up for babies, and we for Christmas. need a baby dog too." You know how Indomitable, we thought wrap·tis when a ping up Magamus - that's the youngster longs name for young American par!or something? TAUN1'ON OFFICERS: Serving as officers of the ents. Bow much ? " , Taunton Area, Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, are, A visit to the lltter-of-s& in 'Gone!" left to right, Mrs· Oharles E. Hoye, vice-president; Mrs. the basement and puppy "MaNext caller: a genteel, middle· 100" sold herself, going home aged lady--':'fur coat over black James L. Gallagher, president; Mrs. Lawrence Laughlin, wrapped snugly in a piece of dress, accessories carefully car- corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Helen Donahue, treasurer. accustomed blanket, with a bot- ried out in a muted shade of tie of formula. beige. She entered the house as Mama Magoo, after the trans- would a gracious caller. Instincaction, nosed the five remaining, tively, we invited her to have a knew something wflS missing, cup of tea. She would, thank miffed about a bit, then' gave you. Over teacups, we became FLUSHING (NC)-The' stu-' of them revealing a pathetic pre- . 'More Food Production .p.. (We felt a little like slave . friends. Recently widowed, she .dent newspaper at Queens Col- judice against the Catholic .. . drivers of old, but we couldn't :., told us that she woul<l like, to lege "is falling into a pattern ,of Church." ,Overpopulation Solution keep seven dogs;) . ' 'have a dog-a tiny dog to love, anti-Catholicism" similar to tacThree examples of bias in ,.' MANILA (NC)-The world's ,', Next came a red-eyed young "one'tO love her. -. tics the nazis used, the N~wnian Queens College student publi- overpopulation problem sho.uld mother-to-be and her tall hand- ., I " It was'love at first sight, so . Club chaplain at the: New, York . cations previously had been pro- ,be attacked by efforts to devise *>me husband: ,I the~e went "Magatis," tax-supported in~titution, has " tested by the State Catholic War Jlew ..techniques of. increasi~ . ~'Qur doxie was hit by, a, car ~,., By this time, the b,asement charged. ,. . :.' : ,Veterans" the Diocesan,,, Holy' food ,production. Asian Catholie ,toctay," explained the ;young '!was' quite empty-just Magoo ", Father .. Vincent A. ,Brown, Name Union, the.Diocesan Cath_·,doctorswere told here. man. "We had h~ on ~ leJlSb, :'andlitile' "Magant,'; the pUPPY" Newman Club chaplain, has ,.,oUe .Teacher.,.-\.ssoQiation, and :', Dr. Paulino Garcia, chairntall ~~t a car came up on the ,sil;le..: we thought we'd. keep. '' said an article. on birth control . The Tabletj Br.ooklyn diocesan of the National Science Develop, walk • . ." The girl burst ,Into J :Flite decreec:lOtherWlse. Catne . "set up a· number of straw ..men, '. newspaper. .- ' • ment Board of the Philippines, "tears " 'a phone call: .. -.' many of th~ irrelevant to the ,, also told the first Asian congre. "S~ you see," the boy ~ent Oft, ., "My little Nephew has a dog, problem of ,birth control" but all As :- result, th~ conege. adn;tin- of CatholIc .physicians that soluIdmself almost on the verge of . now at the vet's," came a soft istrahve commIttee promIsed'. tions 'based on artificial birth tears, I·We've got to have a voice:. "If we eould get him a ,"po~itive, affirmative action.". ·~t eon'trol, sterilization orabortioa puppy. I don't if thep~ce puppy 'before he learns that his "Foundress Moves Step req~ested a bY-l~w or resolut!on are both imm9ral and imprao. ISn't right!" ,. Reggie has to be put to sleep? . <;:loser to . BeQtification ,WhICh would empower' mUDlciticaL. .. ' We saw to it that the 'May we come this afternoon to VATICAN CITY (NC) _ A pal college presidents to act ,...__'......... _ ~ce was right for wha't' tlie'l' 'see your puppy?" ' , when offerisivematerial' appears ..... woman who worked as, a fQuoded servant in;!hrint . HOwt~ver, thledBoardof. could' pay. WrigglIng '''Magas," Even Mamha Maingoo seeumed. to for 13 years and then ,, " " wrapped in another piece of th,e serisethat er f al 0 sprIng , H '8 er Educa lon ru e no new blanket, .. 801ac'e iIi a' ci.... was going on to better things, a religious community has 'regulation was 'necessary,' 'al·.,SER,VI'C~ """","1& "'1f. ill nd Ma- . moved a.step closer to.,beatifi- 'though' ' ' ...:._ . takea " .. apartment. lUI' ten-year-old By' a no .action'has&ieo:o' ','Magat" went to a gay" .. .i ,"ant· hit it· off. . ...,..'.... cation. at. Qti.,eeos C911e,ge.. c.'.' . ,., .. ,' 'B.·F. GOODRICH, Dist.· Ir;*, a ~eal dog fancie.r,rwhc;;: '\''''80;!into' six 'good 'homeS go :, . The Sacr.ed Congregation'.'of :\ ~It is contrar.;.' to the,\Amer- ,., ~. ~!EOC,lJIA.R,PPfONWGN.DPLAON~...,.· . ~lighted with his purchjlse iand Ma"goo;s' p'uppies and she is on'ce ~Utes has ruled that GeI;trude ican ideal. of fair. play. to ask t h e . ; . n .... expects'to make a show dolr of ':'llgain'queen of the ,rancho, '., Corpensoli, fo~ndress ,.of . , the ::Ne,wman Club to'engage,in this ,,365 MA'N STREET.' ,-im.A })Iue ribbon somedall, for ,.• :..As for us;.;... ,we have' 'en- Sisters of the'Most Holy Sacra- ,kind of.scattersho,t'controversY," . FAIRtiAVEN . ' , ed strangers, an' d ' m'a de ' ment,' 'practiced \iirtue .to " • one of the pups? . counter 'd. .I f this : Ul . WYman 7-4501 ' . . h'e'rOl'c deg'ree' .,.Father Brown sal ,', The basement was gettin'" "fJiiends." , . , , .. i • ' ., ,> , ' .', , , what free speech has degenerated. ....Ieter. Next week-en~ 'a,d 1.,_ nt '.j: "You: 'meet such iIiteresfllng .B,or.n Jan" 10., 1S•.7;,i.n "Bien.~, in th 11 1 I h ~lK: t ! . ' to on e co ege eve; e conthe phone. ringing. incessantl~: ".people!" ". "', ,,;' " ",: Italy, . t.he da1.!gh~r of ,a p,oor ,elUded, it reflects. "a' failul!e"in MEN 17-25 ;"Yo'li got'doxie puppls?" ' 1 " . ," !" \ ':'family, she,w.ent to.W'ork as:' a 6-om eight and nine-year oIds. ·-:,Welfa~e :Patients, Cost, ,!, . d.omestic ' ser'vilnt' at' an ,early ,·our· educational system.~ " :'JOIN :.THE' NEW. "'!low ,much?" !h~h '-Q",~,p. . Hospitals $22 Malion'" 'age. Toge~he~" with' :Fa tiler Society of, Brothen .of -But I mean for Just one . Francis Spinelli, whose. bea,tW!.. NEW YORK (NC) - Volun- ", cation. Cause has ,also: 'been ., Free .Deliver, ,3 T.imesDaily 'Our Ladyof Providence '\1!e explained that these , ere ; tary hospitals have ·demanded introduced, she founded the I!llglstered dogs, but that a good . the' city make up a $22 million religious community. She died For information write to. pet could ~ obtaine~ for less, annual loss which they say is Feb. 16, i903,in Bergamo, Italy. FATHER MASTER even suggestmg the CIty pound. incurred by their care of city ,Her cause was introduced In Complete Selection 01 St. Joseph the Worker, "Magamus" was heard of and welfare patients at less than Rorne' in 1939. MEATS - GROCERIES Novitiate mId through this column (aside eost. PROVISIONS Warwick Neck, R. L to Business Manager: The colIn the meantime, the United 24' Adams St.~ Fairhave" . Dis.cussion Gro~ps ' IUDn was not meant to. be used Hospital Fund said 15 voluntary Jostead of your paid·ads!). . hospitals may have to close for WYman 4-6441 .• Fall River District One, DiOcA young father held the hands ' financial reasons. These 15 and ~ esan Council of Catholic Women, Cli., two ~mal1 1)oys." A'. scarcely- I • seven others:, can~c;>.t Jtleet .thE!ir : will hold' a~ .. opeD;. :meeting f~r ~Trinitarian I, w'/1)~ing .toddler. he!d .:O~lto her i bills, said th~ fund .. 1t 4id not discussion gr.oup· m~mQers 'at· 1Il0ther's car coati,·a. baby slept I, name the hospitals',-'" '., , , 7:4& Monday night,. Feb. ).5 in M' the Youn~.mothe1'll: ,!~,' The report charging a big l~ss .I Immaculate " Conception parlBh . '. , . Pink blanket sUpped off the . by the private hospitals was ! ~~~ . . ,...•... I BOYS WANTED for the baby and puppy Magamus rolled, presented Mayor Robert Wagner, Priesthood and ·Brotherhoo,d. over. in.to . it,. a~ms and legs flay· .,Jr., ' ,~y, the Hospital ,Trustees . lade of. funds NO Impe~ mg, children s~eami,ng,~,Ae-: corltinitte~ and 'by' the New I JOHN ·~~CO,(tO. memo light. '" 'York Archdiocesan Catholic Inc. . Charities, the:,· Federation of Wr~.~ Diocese Produces Own Jewish' Philanthropies and the of Fabricators P. O. Box 5742 -Federation of Protestant Welfare Movie Vocations Agencies. Baltimore 8, Md. PITTSBURGH (NC)-The DiStructural Ste.1 oeese of Pittsburgh has produced and Silent Auction Ms own film on vocations to the Alumnae' of Dominican Acadpriesthood. Miscellaneous Iron 01 The half-boUl' color fUm uses emy, . Fall River, will' hold a local talent against local back- general meeting at 8 Thursday . 753 Davol St., FaA Riv. grounds to portray the lives.of night, Feb. 11 in the convent OS 5-7471 three priests, from childhood to auditorium. A silent auction will manhood, showing why they be- follow a business session. eame priests. The vocations dIm i5 the seeond the diocese has produced. '!'he first dealt with the diocese's tiharitable agencies. The new fUm II entitled "Whom Shall I Send!'"

Newman Club Chaplain ScoreS Bias Of Queens Coll.ege Student Paper

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Nurses to Meet

WASHINGTON (NC) - The 10th biennial convention 01. the IO,OOO-member National cOuncil Cli Catholic Nurses will be held to Louisville, Ky., starting April 18. The theme will be "The Catholic lliurse in Toda¥'.

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Urges Catholics To' Stop, S'prea~ Of .Segregation

THE ANCHOR. Thurs.,·Feb. 4, 1960 ..

Seno'te Approves Bill to Combat Juvenile Crime-

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BALT.IMO~E (NC)-The Catholic Churc;h i~ '''the only organized moraI.force" which c~n. prevent the _,jtrans.fer'~

: WASHINGTON (NC)--:;, :The Senate' has passed an4 sent to the House a bill to provide up to 25 million dol~

of seg'regation from the South to the rest of the' country, a'ccording to Denni's .Clatk, ·vice president lars to combat juvenile. delin-: of the Philad.elphia. Catholic quency. . .. ~ousing Council. The measure would authorize . The race rerations problem hali the government to spend up to ~always be,en eisy.for Catholics ~ve million d.ollars yearly'over. to 'discuss because.it has always 1he next five years for training' been s9mewhere ~lse,".the hous~ personnel and developing pro-. ing expert said. : grams aimed at ending .juvenile "Now the major areas of Cathcrime. olic population-the large cities Under the program to be ad.' -are saturated with the racial ministered by the Department , problem. How will the Church of Health, Education' and Welrespond?" . fare, .Federal grants would be Asserting that Catholics are available to institutions of higher "not doing too w~ll" in meeting': education and public ana prithe problem, he added: "We' vate nonprofit agencies. have a tremendous job ahead of· . Agencies or institutions reus of prayer, teaching and serveeiving grants would be required ice, based upon experience." . ~ contribute "money',' facilities; "The whole problem of race or services" to an extent to be WATCHING HER WORDS: Sister Martita helps six-year old Judy Hulka at St. relations is something alien to determined by the Secretary of Health, Education and' Welfare. Bernard's SchoQI, Chicago,overcome hearing handicap by showing reflections in mirrors' Christianity," Mr. Clark said,' "We must understand that the to learn pronunciation. NC Photo. Undoubted Need . sooner we can erase the tradiThe bill' would establish .a tional patterns of segre'gation National Advisory Council on and underprivileged groups, the Juvenile Delinquency within the Health, Education and w:elfar~·.... . Skies over Asia were clouded.. Kotaro Tanaka of Japan,· all J;lombay,' S~igon,. Manila: and better prospects will be for the Department to advise the HEW.' but c'ahn' as' the 1960s dawned:' Catholics. """. ' Seoul and the national Eucharis- development .ofCatholicism· in' tic c6ngresres in Rangoon' and :' the U~ited States:", .. secret~~y on· administration of ,., 'The red cloud· ofcorrtmunisni 'lvas' .. In' 1953 the second East Asian the program. the mostthre~tening,as it had. ·was named to the Sacred College 'Manila were' of historic signifi:"." ....If we had settled the frontier. . ". at the same rate we 'are solving Acting HEW:Secretary·Elliott'· . been when the previous decade of. Cardinals, Valerian Cardinal cance... . ·The. Clwrch in Asia, .ho~ever,· . ·.t~e raCiiti problem, we would' L Ric.hardson says: .opened. . Gracias, Archbishop' of. Bom"There is an undoubted need . ,In' ·.spite of· that. threat,' the ,bay. In 1958 for the first time 'has entered the new decade' only be at the Ohio River today," for a·, concerted attack on the Church grew in large areas' of, ' a Chinese. and an Indian cardinal bearing deep wounds' infli(;tedhe commented. . . mounting problem of juvenile Asia during the past 10 years. voted· in the conclave that 'or aggravated since' January,' ,1950. . Diocese Starts Plan delinquency." He pointed out· . It gained in stature and frl.litfulelected' a pope. that the number of juvenile de-" ness by' gaining members; locally Public CelebtatloD:s 'Northern .Vietnam,home. of ·To Aid Immigrants .the heroic Tonkin Catholics,. was· . . linquency. cases has' increased born bishops, priests and' Reli':'~every .year for. the last hine'gious,' foreign' missionaries and" .. During . the. '50s' magnificEmt .I).;tnded . over tothe.communists ..... NELSON (NC)-The Nelson ." ,0 .' . . ,'.'. '..'.:' puplic celebr~tions .took place,' by ·the Geneva armistice, of 1954.,: .diocese in British Columbia has. y.ears.. ·The increase in ·the, num-: prestige; ber ;of, j';lvenile deli,;quen.cy , In :Korea, in spite .of 'bitte~ manifesting the faith and fervor' In north Korea, one of the two ,', joined in a program for assisting eases commg before Juvemle: war ·from. 1950' to 1953.' the of Asian Catholics and evoking , Catholic bishops died in prison ref~gees. courts w~~ almost five times t~e' Church. has grOWIl marv,eiouslY" e.xpressions of. reference from the other disappeared in com~: CaIied the Pari!!h - Adopt - a'Increase m, the ·number of chIlo_. since ,January 1950. Among the' non-Christians. The great Ma- munist hands. Every external Family program, it was intro· k t ' rian Year demonstrations hi sign of· Catholic life' has been duced by the Catholic Immidren in the.lO to 17 age.b rac e.' free Chinese in" Taiwan (For-_ abolished. No priest is known to' grant Services. Its purpose is . Se~'" Th~m~s C. ~enmngs Jr.' 'mosa) and Hong I(ong,Catholic' be alive in. north Korea today" to end the need for refugee of MISSOUfl CIted fI~u:es show-· growth h~s been extraordinary. · even as a captive.. camps and to h.elp make World log that some two mIllIOn. youths In Japan it has been much slower ~ Schism in China Refugee Year a success. : in the.tO to 17 age g~oup-about but still great!:!r than in,any pre-' one out of eVerY}Ive.- have vious decade in mc,>dern history.' HOL~YWOOD (NC)-John E., In Mainland China the eorft-' • Bishop Wilfred E. Doyle of . appeared before a Juvemle court. Elsewhere in' the free countries: Fitzgerqld, a Taunton native, munist persecution moved from Nelson has appointed a commit-' · of Asia,' the Church lias..grown at, entertainment editor of the na-' , restridions, 'expUlsion of foreign . tee of cle~gy an~ .laymen. to' varying r~tes.:. . . . , ... . ,tional Catholic newspaper, Our 'missionaries;' harsh ''iinprison-; .org~n~~.e the pJ;og!'am J!1. the di.._ , .qo~er~ent Res~d:," I ' ,:Sundax,.yisitor, y.'ill,z:eceive the. -ment',ia'nd-· brain"::washin~f .'to 'a. "ocese. P~rishes. hav~ b~en ,as~ed 'Critic's Award .for 1959 of the greater, malice..Beginning "in" :J~ pr?yide foo~, clotltipg, shel-_ 1In 'general, all 'the free' gov-' 'Directors Guild of America. 1958, ' the. 'cQmmuriistshave '. ter l;W.~.·" .other., ,a.ss.istanc~ for CHICAGO (NC)-,-The ,·Cath- ernments.in East Asia show :re-: " J , ' olicInterracial.Council of Chi- spect-for ChristIanity; in'a 'few' ,,:,Mr. Fftzgerald, a' New York. forced .a few bishops .to,. conse- , .. refugees. cago :has charged: th~t'-therie';"':lyI 'cquntries, the Church' is 'ham-' resident, will receive 'the award :crate n~w bi!!hopS-26, according < ., orgailized Park Fore~~~elli,d~p.ts 'pered by restrictions' on' the at a banClu~t here l1 ext Saturday. ,to, c0'nmunist sources~in defi-, Awards for film direction will ,ance of Rome. This is, an effort .' Association . is ,"obviously, a UYh~ F~mily entry of foreign ·priests,Broth-.· also be presented... .. . . · to creat.~ a schism in. China, a racist organizailon; not 'group ers and Sisters,' . Prays Tog~ther formed to solve genuine' city.' or Christian citiie'ns are' recog';' . Announcement of Mr. Fitz- typical: piece of Marxist strategy, . . , wburban ·problems." ;,' . nized as an impQi'tant part of the gerald's selection was made by. to destroy the Church. It is a Stays Togetheri Acting after a spechilmeetirig population. Among: the Asiai'ts Hollywood director Frank Capra, · perverse tribute to the strength of its board of directors,' the of high rank and prestige in' the' president· of the directors' guild. of the Catholic. religion in China. The enemies of the Church do ," council attackl~d the social boy- annals of the 1950s are the late . Mr. Capra said the award is THE' cott policy, of the suburban President Ramon Magsaysay of given on the basis "that con- not resort to schism where CathFIRST NATIONAL group. the Philippines, President Ngo structive and enlightened criti- olics are few and feeble. So far there is not sufficient A spokesman for the Park Dinh Diem of free Vietnam, cism is' an important factor in Forest association said recently Vice-President John ·M. Chang encouraging higher standards evidence to show that the Attleboro-South Attleboro schismatic bishops have enough that its members would boycott of free Korea, and Chief Justice for motion pictures." Seekonk followers to' form a schismatic socially any rE~.sidents who minMr. Fitzgerald writes a weekly "Church" in Chipa. gled with Negroes living in Park column, "Looking and ListenNixon Bans Religion ing," Forest. on the entertainment media The only Negroes known to be As ~ampaign I~su~ for Our Sunday Visitor. He is a living in the suburb are Charles CHICAGO (NC)"':'Vice:"Presi- graduate. of Stonehill College, Z. Wilson, his wife and two pre- dent Richard M. Nixon said here' North~Easton, Mass. . school childrE,n.· They moved that if he has .his way religion He did graauate work in cominto it ranch style. house in early: will not be raised as an issue in munication arts, 'at Fordham January. Mr. Wilson is an as~~st­ , the coming presidential" ~am­ University, New York.' His 'ar-' ant professor of eCQnomics at paign. ticles and poetry have appeared DePaul University, Chicago, an He told a press conference that in more than a dozen. Catholic institution of the Vincentian . 1f he.is the Republican party's magazines. Fathers. presidential nominee, he will not tolerate such a maneuver. He Asks Govc~rnmentAid also said 'neither the Republican Quincy College Has nor Democratic party should Two-for-One Tuition For Priva1l'e Schools QUiNCY (NC)-Two members WINNIPEG (NC)-The Mani,,; pick a vice-presidential nominee toba School Trustees Associa- on the basis' of religion, geogra- of the .same family can attend tion has urge'l the provinchtl phy' or other "ticket balancing Quincy College now for the price of one. . " , ~ government to give sympathetic devices." "I share the views of the ma:F:ather ,Julian Woods, O.F.M., .. consideration to a report recofu': m'ending financial aid to private jority of Americans on this- president of the coeducatiofilll there should not be a considera-. college,' now marking its censchools. The association is a 51-year- tion .Qf religion for either office,~ .' tennial year, said the tuition old group representing trustees' the Vice President said.' He action taken by the administra.,. of more than 1,200 school added: "I am sure that this coun';" tive council is intended to ease districts. It was referring in a · try has matured since ··1928.~ the financial strain on families resolution' at its convention to That year the Catholicism :of. with several members in col-' recommendations of a Royal Gov.. Alfred ·E. Smith, of Ne'w lege.' Quincy College had 720 York, the Democratic presiden- students. , Commission on Education. If two members of the same The commission said in late tial nominee,' became an issue . . family attend the college as fuiINovember that Manitoba's gov-, in the campaign. time students at the saine. ,time,' ernment should provide some Stamps on Display each is charged only 50 ,per cent aid to private, nonprofit schools. MUNICH (NC)-Prizecl'stamps of the regular tuition.' Manitoba and British Columbia Also, sons and daughters of are the only two of the 10 prov-,,; from the collection of Francis inces in Canada which'do not ·a'id Cardinal Spellnian, Archbishop full time employees of the ,college private schools. A commission of New York, will be on display now have to pay only one-third similar to the one sponsored ·by here' during 'International Eu- tuition at the college, which is .the government here is studying charistic .Congress, . July 3i to the oldest Catholic institution of· · August ..'1. . education in British Columbia. higher learning in Illinois.

. Church in Asia Gaining Stature Des'pite Red Threat

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rlIE ANCHOR-Diocese of 1"011 River-Thurs., Feb. 4, 1960

J MARYKNOLL MISSIONER: Sister Rita Mar-Ie leads ;1 varied life as a Maryknoll Missioner. Left, picture taken when s~e was in China. She sits in front seat of bu~ filled with prisoners of war. Center, she

Priest Warns False Charge Is Grave Sin

.. "Fairhaven' Mp.~yknoll Sister /Distributes Host Expect Cong reS$ To Crack Down . .To Fellow PrisOners"';df Communists ,-,~,. ~ On Obscenity 'l

QUEBEC (NC) -'- It 's a. . ,..' . , '~By Patricia McGowan ,.'" WASHINGTON(NC) -ave' sin to accuse faIseI~ or " " Very. few ~isters. haye .had the pri'vi!ege of ~istrib\.!.ting Holy Comml,mion. Sister New a,nd tougher anti:: insinuate that a oliticaf ·Rlta Mane, M~ryknoll. Mls~loner .!rom FaIrhaven, IS one who has. When she was under obscenity measures have. a: .. t ' 'c p "'t i "house' arrest m CommullIst·Chma, consecrated Hosts were smuggled to· 'her from better. than 50-50 'chance of opponen IS a ommullIs ' Ford an. d sh,e d'IS t rl'b'ut e d.' th em .' t'0 th e t'h'ree S'Isters . radical or anticlerical a priest~,.' M,arykno II' s f amous B'ISh,op 'FranClS passage by Congress this year, has charged.. " ' :who ". were ' her feIlow-prisol1. d a t t'h'e. Mary k noII 'ghy, a 'Maryknollcr ·and natl've observers believe. But it is not . " . .".'."" - . remame yet clear what form the new The warnmg to pohtlcians lB" ers. The daughter of ,Mrs~ . Motherhouse until 1953 when of New Bedford,' . legislation~if any-will take. . contained in a pamphlet-HAd Mary M· Regan" 120 'Chest-, she was assigned to Taiwan Fav~rite Hobby Indications are, however, that Usum Sacerdotum" ("For the nut Street Fairhaven she (Formosa), as superior of the'

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Use of the Clergy")-prepared '.. f St J' h' .convent in the town of Miaoli. What is Sister Rita Maric's new anti-obscenity laws will by Abbe Gerard Dion, director was a' mem e~ o. '. osep s . . , favorite hobbY? Baptizing pag- give Postmaster General Arthur of th~ department of industrial, "parish,attendmg, Its gram~ar At M.laoh, Sls~er heads a 'ans, said hcr ,cousin, still a Fair-. Summerfield long-sought adr I t; t L I U' · t · · · 'school and Fairhavm 'Hlgh commumty of 20 nuns. In small haven" resident.' "Like any ministrative powers in his came':hlOpS a hI a~a n~versl 'School. After graduation . she groups they go to <native vil.. woman," he. said, "she likes paign to keep pornography out "T e.,pamp c ~a'Yis, In ~a~ • b' attended secretarial school and .lages, rent houses and establish pretty 'things." :But 'the pretty of the mails. f H I 0 accuse a s~ y f a~ , pu - 'did office, work for a while convents. Then they do cate- things she wants are discarded Congress may also act to incyan. 0t~ponen o. em~ .a before Maryknoll called her.· chetical work among. children lace curtains (wonderful for crease penalties for distributing. t ms··. commums IS a grave sm a g a . " and adults F truth a sin against veracity Her chOlce of commumtIes . .', irst Communion dresses and obscenity. A comp.osite bill beca~se a more or less' larg~· was influenced by her' brother,. ~ist~r found, upon arrival at veils) and holiday "extras" such· which would both put new Dumber of readers or listeners Rev. Joseph· W. Regan, Mary- Mlaoh, that many of her new as Christmas tablecloths and punch into the 'Summerfield are misled... knoll superior in the Philippines, ch.arges' ..w.e r e actually ~ld' napkins, Easter decorations and drive and provide stiffer punish"To defame an opponent' un-" who celebrated his 30th anni-' frIends-~efugees from mam. even Fourth of July acce.ssories. ment for violators is a possijusUy, to take votes from him, , versary 'in the priesthoo.d last land C~ma ~ho ha~ sought . The 'children of Taiwan love bility. to attempt to make him lose his . year. It was a happy occasIOn for refuge on Talwa~. ~Ince s~e the surprises the American election by unqualifiable ineans brother and sister, for Father already knew theIr dialect and Sister prodiIces for the1ll,' thanks I - d ' ti" dl in t I·' :,. 'Regan's fellow priests arranged' many of the"npersonally,..work·" to her' Fairhaven' family. ~ un ou ",e y a or a sm .. , f s;si R'ta M" t was 'made' u h· s'er ' ,., . , . The':pamphlet;states that ~he"::~ or 1, er I ..arIe 0.-' come , . " . mcea ~.. ' " ·..·Sister is due for anothei-'liom'e . uSPECIAL MILK 0r k an great" maj'ority of 'the French- . 'fl'o~ fonnosa, where. she Is'now ... ·,The S~sters on 'Tiu:-v w. . visit in' 1962. Meanwhile she ,From· Our Own BPeakhig, Catholic people' of' statIoQ~"for a ,reumon.. ' • under"'Blshop 'Fred~rIck' Dona- . k¢eps per family ,in' touch with .Tested Herd" Queb(!c' are solidlyagairist " ' Wor!ls With' Refugees' " : "her busy.;. apostolic life by Marxism. ,""""~Sister entered-the 'Mal'yknoll -, 'w,eekly,let.ters. , Acushne., 'M~ss.. WY 3-4457 "In the USSR to say one is a community in 1931 and was pro.ST. LOUIS' (NC)-The ninth' ,... -" Special 'Milk communist may be good form fegsed in 1934, the same year in synod 'of the St.' Louis archdioHomogenized Vit.. D Milk and merit favors from' authori~ Wllich she was sent tei China, cese will be neld Nov. '22 at NO, ·JOa TOO BIG ties. " .But among us it is dif- where she worked until 'she was Kenrick Seminary in subUrban Buttermilk NONE TOO SMAU ferent. Even before the courts placed under arrest in 1950. For Webster Groves, Archbishop Tropicana Orange Juice the ~pithet 'communist' is con- almost two years she' and her Joseph E. Ritter has announced. Coffee and Choc. Milk aidered defamatory," says the fellow-prisoners existed in the' The last synod was held 10 Eggs - Butter pamphlet. . hall of their convent, sharing a years ago. single office book to say their _ - - - - - - - - - - - _ daily prayers. They had no other PRINTERS reading matter, Mahl Office aDd Pl",In 1951 Sister was returned to : FARMS WINDSOR (NC)-John Cog- the United States. She visited LOWELL, MASS. :145 Washington St., Fairhaven ley, editor and author, has been her mother in Fairhaven, then I Telepboae Lowell named for' the 1960 Christian BAR·B-Q Chickens Culture Award of Assumption OL 8-6113 alul GL 7-7500 CUT·UP Chickens OIL BURNERS University here in Ontario. .Also complete Boiler-Burner DAY. OLD Eggs Rev. William J. McMahon, The gold medal, given annu" or Furnace Units. Efficient Diocesan Director of Lay Re: . CHICKEN Pies· Auxin.1')' PlaDta ally by the university to an outcost heating. Burner .and low TURKEYS standing laymen exponent of treats, will be the guest speaker 'fuel oil sales and service. &05TON ChriStian ideals, will be pre- at a meeting of the Catholic •• ROAST CHICKENS OCEANPORT, N.J. Family First Friday Club to be senh~d to Mr. Cogley on April 10. •• BAKED BEANS held at the Taunton Inn, Taun480 Mt. Pleasant· Street PAWTUCKET, R. L Mr. Cogley, a Commonweal • (week-ends) New Bedford. . WY 3-2667 ton, at 6 Friday evening, Feb. 5. mag~zine columnist, is a directo.r ~~~~~~==~~~~ ~ for the center for the study of . Father McMahon, a native of Taunton, will give an illustrated demqcratic institutions of the talk on retreats and the Our Fund for the Republic at Santa Lady of Good Counsel program. Barbara, Calif. He is a native of Chicago and an alumnus of Loyola University, Chicago and the A Delicious University of Fribourg, SwitzerTreat land.

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Casey Urges Seniors" To Learn English MANCHESTER (NC) - Casey Stengel, manager of'the New· York; Yankees, who, among other things, has been called "th' 'Ole Perfesser," was given an opportunity to demonstrate his classroom ability at Bishop Bradley High School here. Ht; came here for the annual baseball dinner of the UnionLeader Fund, Inc. and stayed to lecture a class of seniors in-of all things-English. In a 20-minute talk to the students, he advised: "Don't copy my Stengelese. Learn to speak English the best you can. It will help. you greatly in later years, People will understand you bet-

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/ THE ANCHOR-Diowse of Fall/ltiv.. ,.*'.. lhurs.; Feb. 4,. r'1960 \ •

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By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen,

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, .In ' this column ,an~ in MISSION magazfue, ~e .have .often stressed the fact that there, should be a novena of sacrifices,; as well as a novena of prayers; that is, sacrifices should be added to prayers. We have received 'many letters containing ',offerings .to ~the Holy Father's' Society, for the Propagation of the Faith in gratitude for favors received. Here is' a very unusual letter of thanks: Jll)~ar Bishop Sheen:

When I was a senior In high school, I was not unpopular, but

nn~ither was I swamped with dates. During' the summer before ~ntered

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college, I made a novena for a successful college life

tlod also promised a nickel or a dime to the missions for each

G!late. On the night of the ninth day of the novena, the first call came and since then I have had more dates than I know what b do with! In fact, my promise grew too expensive for my budget f.lnnqJ[ so I have had to give up this particular form of sacrifice _ce I began going steady with a wonderful Catholic boy. Sincere1y~ . ,

C.F.

The point Is: always add a promise of sacrifice with every prayer of petition.' ., If you want so~etIiing frolll God, can YO'll, not do, without. Some o,ne' of 'His .gifts? ' ii$, , Would you not do more readily a favor for ~I~ , someone who has 40ne a, 'avor, ,tor you? Ht Do you not think, Our Lord looks more· rtM' f~vorablY on 'those ~Iio h~.p His Vicar 00' l% earth, than 'on those,who ipore him< in his ~, '" " plea for the Missio~s'l Your novena ,prayers alone are not worth as much as your novena'prayers added to a novena of sacriticCf , ,ID the Name of Christ. tbelDivine.·Missionar,.; Tr,. 1& aDd seel ": lP.

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GOOr,.9~.Yo,u .to,J.A.N. for $3 "I,am"a ,cOnvert.. There Is · not money enough in, the world"'to eqijiU' the 'meafiiilg that my C;ltholic Faith has given. my life. This iii but sinan donation tor the' pOOr of tli~. wor1d.~ .' .. to R'.C.It: for, $2~5 "I promised that whatever, I got for se~ling, my atit9mobile w~tild' be given to the ~~ety fox:, ~he .~ropagation ,pf Uie' ~aith .. E~clol!E!d 'pleilse find the amo,unt of ~e ,~~.~ ." •• to M.T.C.,for ~$W'~W~,li!lv.e been .watchlDg 'rV more and g~l,ng to tbEl ,movies less for the past few 'months. aere is the mQ~~Y 'Ye, h~ve..saved." '. ... to A.lt' for $5 liThis iathe · ~ouf!.t I ~romi~d tQ the l"oly Father for the Missions if 1 WH accepted in medical sChOOl. i :have just ,finished my first ~."

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ityUnion Newsheet, :,to be !s, sued, this month., M8ry Beth I'ALL RIVER ', A religious vocation section • Reilly will 00 ed~tor in chief. bas been added to the guidance National Honor' Society mem.1 library as a sodality project. 1886 PURCHASE ST. Senior members wrote to reli- bets' submitted ' the ,'Jiam~ of. NEW BEDFQRD " gious communities throughout Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton as the ,cou~try 'to obtain :itlateri!U a nominee for 'the Hall of ,Fame WY 3-3786 ,of Great Americans. ' lor the section. .'" ". ~---._----~, A whist party will be held in " the auditorium Saturday, Feb. 6, , to benefit the school fund. DOMINICAN ACADEMY.

DAHILL,CO.

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, ST. MARY'S. 'TAUNTON : Senior Joyce Gamache Is 1960 , Homemaker of Tomorrow. for St. Mary's. She has been. awarded • pin in recognition of her accomplishment and her examina,tlOD paper on homemaking will be entered in a national contest !or future homemakers. St. Mary's sodality win edit tile second. number of the Soda!-

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Rabbi Op'poses Religion Test In Politics NEW YORK (NC) - 'The president of the New York Board of Rabbis has warned against making religious

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Traces of Ancient Solemnity -in 'Absolvin.g·

Found in Sacrament of Penance Today By Rev. Roland Bousquet st. Joseph's Church -New Bedford

A physician is called to the bedside of the sick not merely to keep the person alive.. We 'expect him to use his medical knowledge to restore' the bedridden to a useful life in the community. He may alleviate the man's suffering by administering the proper medication. Still we feel that this is not enough for the physician's function is not a negative one. The football player .who just fractured his arm hopes to play again. Thus the physician's pri-

THE ANCHOR-, Thurs., Feb. , - 4, 1960

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Catholic Bishops Urge Rejection Of Pre j ud ice WASHINGTON (NC)-A

spokesman for the U. S. belief a political issue. Rabbi David 'I. Golovensky Catholic Bishops has called declared that "consideration of for a "vigorous and public one's religious affiliation as a repudiation" by all "rightqualification :for elective office" minded citizens" of the recent is a "serious threat to the unity widespread outbreak of religious and harmony o:f the American and racial bigotry. mary role is to restore the people. Archbishop Karl J. Alter of A religious test :for public person's health. Cincinnati released a statement The soul much like the body office threatens the "traditional here as chairman of the adminisAmerican pattevn o:f separation is subject to disease. Our Blessed trative board of the National of Church and State," Rabbi Lord understood the weakness Catholic Welfare Conference, Golovensky told more than 200 of man. He sought to heal the ·voluntary coordinating agency rabbis attending the board's souls paralyzed with sin much o:f the U.' S, Bishops. . I annual meeting. The J;>oard rep- like he cured the bodies of so "We deplore any revival of resents some 700 Jewish spiritual many of His contemporaries. The Divine Physician gave His the anti-Semitic prejudice which leaders in New York State. in its earlier manifestation culMeanwhile, the debate on Church the Sacrament' of Penminated in such terrible disasreligion as an issue in politics ance. We sometimes think of .ter," the Archbishop declared. fiared up in three Protestant Penance as' a spiritual laundro"The fact that a malevolent magazines. The Christian Cen- mat which washes and bleaches 'spirit of hatred has found extury, The Lutheran, an4 the the fabric of our souls of even pression not only in one country, the stubbornest stain 'which is United Church Herald. 'but in various countries simulmortal sin. But 'the primary purProtestants Divided taneously, would seem to indipose of Penance is to restore The Christian Century and t1 soul stricken with the cripcate an organized plan of actioR The Lutheran said they believe pling disease of sin to a full . or some common origin." that if Sen. John F. Kennedy 01. . vigorous Christian life. This He added that "the danger Massachusetts were elected pres- sacrament restores the friendshould be immediately recogident, he would, be subject ~ ship with Our Heavenly Father nized and effective measures pressure :from the. Catholic and .confers a special grace of taken to eradIcate the infection Church. perseverance in the service of before it· can spread." The Rev. Roy Pearson, writing God. Thus Penance is a SacraREV. MAURICE E. PARENT' "We call on all citizens, in the United Church Herald, a ment o:f Reconciliation with God St. Michael's, 'Ocean Grove whether Christians or Jews,bi-weekly magazine published so that we may serve Him by Archbishop Alter stated, "and by. theJUnited Churcho( Christ, participating once again il) the The archqeacon came before the formula of absolution. This on all those who love truth and said that a candidate's religion life of the Church. the throne to beg the bishop to abbreviated imposition of the ,justice, to protest privately and is "an inescapable element in the Positive A.sPeClt 'absolve the penitents and' to hands, however, retains its publicly against further manievaluation of his competence for The . early 'Christians were" 'reconcile them with the Church. 'old symbolism. Sin separates us festation o:f bigotry in all jts political leadership," Dr. Pearfrom God and from our fellow aspects and in whatever form i& .propably more aware of the .He explained that they had son is dean o:f the Andover New~ Christian. It is the reverse of may ·be expressed." positive aspect of Penance than performed their assigned penton Theological Seminary. the dogma of the Commuilion and were truly repentant He was writing in reply 19 an we are today. ·'the Sacrament o:f ..af\ces' :for their sins. o:f Saints. The Sacrament of PenNew Yankee Penance or the Sacrament of article in the Jan. 21 issue of the TOLEDO (NC)-Bob Meyer The bishop' would leave his ance restores our friendship ~ith United Church Herald in which Reconci~iation,as it was often God and makes us once -l:lgain the Rev. Dr. Howard R. Burkle, called, was administered with throne and deliver Ii short ser- 'share fully in the fraternal bond of ·St. Agnes parish has signed a New York Yankee, contract. all' the solemnity the Church mon 'to the penitents on divine dean o:f the chapel of Grinnel~ o:f charity that binds Christiana The 2.0-year-old· lefthander i. .. (Iowa) College, declared: "AI eouJd 'm.uster.. L~st 'Ye~k, .~. de-. -mercy. He would then give the .to 9ne ano~her.. '. ' .. ~~' ~ei>orte4 .1,0 have re.ceived. a lar as I can see, ther~ ill no rea- li~ribed bri~fly the manner•. .ill. kiss of peace to the penitents $4~,00Q !;>oQUS from the .b~seb~Ii which the early Christians were 'and taking each~ Of them by "the I The con:fessor·. traces a' sign, lion 'why a Protestant should. ol. the 'cross over the penitent· club. Dot vote for a Roman Catholic.- enrolled in the rank o:f the 'Pen':' .hand lead him acrolls the thre.shitents. On Holy ThuJ;sday·, the· ~old of the church. . while he recites the essential He will report ·to Richmond penitents. who had faithfully . ' The penitents would then part o:f the formula of absolution~ of. the. lriternatio.nalL«:ague ai IS '.' performed 'their ·assigneli.. pen,:,kneel before the bishop. He The' sacrifice of the :Cross was .Lake Wales, 'Fla., training.camp. .ances..gatbel'ed at the cathedral. 'would impose his hands on their of:fered to obtain the :forgiveneSs .Richmon<! is 'a Yankee farm club. But they. did not ent~r the' heads. arid say the formula of of the wOJ,'ld. But Our Lord did LONf'ON (NC)'-:'A group 0< church. They; all knelt;outside ,absolut~on'.· The bishop would not die for sins in general. He. about ~,OOO promintm~ clergy. the door e~hholding an, un- 'sprinkle them with holy water gave up His life :for each and and laity in the Church o:f Eng- -lighted candle. . .• .. .'andall would prepare themevery. sin.. The. penitent is thus land has launched art attack 011 t Meanwhile, the bishop and bis'selves to participate in a special reminded .that the Sacrament of the increasing use Of "Romish' ministers v.ested in the distinc- mass of thanksgiving to be Penance applies to 'him here and practices." , tive insignia of their rank.' The . celebrated by the bishop. The DOW the merits. and the forgiveThey s~bmitted a formal pett-. episcopal cortege made its. way reconciled penitents would re- De,:;s wrought by Calvary. tion to the Archbishops of C::an-., to the altar. Here all knelt to eeive Holy Communion from the .. . .. terbury and of York and .to the recite the seven peniten"tial hands o:f the bishop. CHARLES F. 'VARGAS other 41 prelates of, the Anglic~. psalms and to sing the litanies 01. The introduction· of the -con254 ROCKDALE AVENUI .Church asking them to put all the .saints. :fessionaland of private confesNEW BEDFORD; MASS. end to such rites. . When the" bishop' and his sion simplified the ceremonial The pet~tion said that certain assisting clergy began to ,sIng of the Sacrament o:f Penance. Anglican leaders seem deterthe litanies, two sub-deacons Yet today simple rites still conmined to impose thrQugh a rewere sent, by the bishop to an- .tain traces' of th~ old and elal:>Bowling & Skating vision of the canons the very nounce to -the penitents that orate ceremonial' of the earl,. :form· of religion which .had God does not seek the death of church. . . Million Donor Ballroom driven so many to form other . the sinner but :his conversion.: The priest in the old ceremonAVAILABLE' . denominations or to stop going. ·Two'other sub-deaocons, each lal imposed. his. right hand on .to church altogethe~. It asked carrying a lighted candle, were the head of the' "Penitent while For Your. for an end to (he use' of clerical, again' dispatched to the door 01. saying' the :f6rrtlUla of absolu• :rESTiMONIAL DINNERS vestments as being '''inevitably the church. This. time the penition. This symbOiized the puri• BANQUETS . associated in the min~s of many : tentl were reminded of the fication' of: sins" operated by l' ordinary folk with t~e. Itoman, . .words of St. .John the Baptist: '.Penance: It also represented the . • FASHION' SHOWS Mass and the, aCCQmpa~ying. ·~Repent;. for the kingdom is 'at '. renewed'. friendship established • ANNUAL DANCE PARTY doctrine of sacrifiCial p~iest. hand" (St. ·llJIatt; 3, 2) .. ' with God. Our Heavenly Father • CHRISTMAS PARTIES . '. . hood" and fQr the Bible to be " '. . . .. tak th:f' i n r nder 'ta''blished' ·asthe:fina. i . Plaee ol Jadl'emeot es e org1Ven s n e u i For information ~c:in agan .es 'I , . . h d' His protection.o!,\ce again. "supreme author.ity. in all matThe oldest deacon, 01 109 a Roland Gamache or ten of faith and doctrine." tall taper made his 'way. to the Today the confessor can 'DO Frank' Collins . penitents. Here he lighted -their 'longer iinpose his hand on the candles. Meanwhile the bishop head of the penitent. The screeD WYma,. 9-6984 President in Tribute and his ministers made their separates the penitent :from the To Jesuit Jubilarian way to a special 'throne set up priest. Instead of the impositipn WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi- in the middle of the riave. While of the hand the confessor merely DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL dent Eisenhower joined in a the bishop sat facing the peni- raisel} his right hand while saying Iavite young glr" (14-231 to lobo. .. tribute ·to Father Fraricis E. tents, those assisting lined Chri..•• vci.. vineyard as an Apa.tIe afthe Lucey, S.J., regent of the eitheir side of his throne to EditiOfts: Press, Radio. Movies and 'oleGeorgetown University law the back door. BONNER FLOWERS villioe. With the.e modem mean.. theae center, in the observance of his "'issionary Sisten bring Christ'. Doctri..., SpectalistIJ m 50th anniversary as a Jesuit. 10 an, ..gardl... of race, color or "oed. Formirig' of National Speci41 !"Zorlit At-rangementIJ Father Lucey was :feted at a For information writ. to. dinner. Thirty Judges, including Conference Possible REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR • Funerals. • Corsages SO 51. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MASS: CINCINNATI (NC) -A naAssociate U. S. Supreme Court • Weddi;;gs • Hospital Justices Tom C. Clark, William tional Citizens for Decent· Lit2082 Robeson St. erature group may be formed J. Brennan, Jr., and Charles E. Fall River OS 5-7804 Whittaker, and some 800 lawyers during the' second two-dl;ly national CDL con:ference beginning together with Stanley F. Reed, IN NEW BEDFORD - IT'S ' retired Associate U. S. Supreme here Friday, Feb. 26. Spokesmen for the civic orCourt Justice, attended. A telegram from President ganization pointed out that local Eisenhower, read at the dinner,' CDL units now exist in comGEO. ARA,=C=H=EV=R=O=L=ET= said: "It is a pleasure to join in munities throughout the country the observance of your golden and a national federation is a jubilee. In your 50 years of faithlogical development. FOR THE FRNEST. TRADE EVER ful service to the Church, you Cincinnati attorney Charles have added strength to the lives H. Keating Jr., founder and first SUCCESSOR TO .LOUGHLIN CHEVROLET We iJive S 8. H Green Stamps of your fellow men. A~ a teacher, chairman of the pioneer Cincinodministrator and counselor, nati Citizens for Decent LiteraCOlI'ner Ro(kdlt»~e Aveli'llUBe 565 Mill ST. Open Every Evening WY 7-9486 you are an example to the high ture group, will be keynote & North $t~ei&t . calling of law and charity." $p~eker.

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,Potato Is" ye'r.,satile Veget:a~Je:, ·D.elic.ious .1. n.. Count·less Forms

·Priests ,to Serve I'n Argentina' '" .;.<

·'Fbe :r'American';Province :iof ·the'Mission·aries' ofO'ur :Lady ·:of· LaSalette.:hils· .' assiirtted

Mea~ows: "'.:'" '.':'''''''' 'Tis not the meat, but,'tis·tlie.·appetitS"'·\'·)'" 'J-' Makes "ei,tiiii'ii delight.' "':'" " ~ .. ,,":,', - .:.,: : ,,:'F . .'.,' " .:'j', , : ';'\ ' ~ir John· Suckling ",' ;. " " :" How would you'li~~ 'A GiJatelliilliui delicacy such·sa"fried ' : 'q':lee~' ants as an. aP'i>~.ti~er.? \ ~be Ughtly' covered; OncEl you Father. James P•. LaGol:\~e, 'have tasted. the delightful flavor M.M., in the very inter.est- .. of a potato cooked in' this manlrig .magazine, '~M;·al-yknql.l/· . ner you ma~ ~711 agree,that it is

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·two·priests"towork'·ht :Argentina. ·''1lhey ;a.re the community's firit to go to that'country. .... Provincial headquarters here in Connecticut said that to alleviate Argentina's shortage Of clergy .Fathers Kenneth McDonald, M:S.; and Anthony . writesth.at ants are ,~i~p,\e,' to worth the millal small investM<>rin, M.S., will join La' Salette · priests from other centers at the ,.prepare. Wash. them in !:>oiling ment. .: . -:-water, the n . , Potato Soup Hungarian mission center in Pila', 40 miles · south of Buends Aires. toast them on What is so good and filling as a . Priests of' the 'congregation" hot griddle. bo~1 of hot potato soup on Polish vice-province have been Eat them while . cold Winter's day! Simple to working 'in Argentina since they ~re hot!, He make, easy on the pocketbook, .. 1938; Father William 'H. Crane. ,says you will this is a soup memories'are made , M.S., provincial, said. He added have a meal fit of. ' that "the dire need for additional for a king:--and 3 cups diced-potatoes, raw priests to minister to the people he adds, signifi'% cup chopped onion. of Latin America" necessitated 'eimtlY, "so he is ; , 2 cups water • the sending of additional memt6Id." There is much to be' Said. 4 tables~ns. butter Ill: margartD8 · bers of the congregation to that is prepared ''oVith diced area, . ~ . definite att~mpt toward eye . (canned) A' ~I 10nS . In addition to the mission 'appeal; food that is well pre,2 tables(1Oons flour r~ I~O . pared and served in pleasant 1 quart milk, hot " ST: LOUIS (NC) - Catholic said interest in the work has center, there is aiso a novitiate surroundings by pleasant people. Combine' prepar~ raw vege- I schools tend .to "pretend there bee n heighteQ.ed by Pope. at Pi1aJ;' and toe La Salette Yet it seems to 'me that all' tablEis with pimiento, salt, pep- are no other religions" according .John's action in removing from' Fathers are planning a minor seminary. The missioners mainbeauty (foodwlse) remains in per and water. Bring to a boil to a preliminary report on a Catholic prayers certa:in rElferthe eye of the beholder. ' and simmer until potatoes are three-year university study of. ences which could have been ·tain parishes and mission chap. els in Cordob~ and Santa Fe. lFavo.rite Food tender. Blend flour and butter; raCial and religious bias in eduoffensive to Jews. On the American scene,' a Add hot milk gradually, stirring cational material. , " favorite· food is the white' constantly. Actd to tender vegePQtato. It. has a longa'nd' im-. tables and cook at low' heal' five' . "What we really have found hi pressive record for' de.liveririg: minutes longer. Serve piping hot. a. weakness of omission in Catholic curricula, rather' than con't,he goods, recipe-.wise.· . .. Serves a to 8. tents that' were detrimental to - SACRIFICES by very roOd per~DS ARE ~V9LVED in the ., F~Te is an excelleQ.t basie HJgh . on the, popularity list • . . adoption of a child. ~YET WOULD~BE ADOPTERS FAR OtT'~lad made with potatoes. Hereip. right along'with potatoes. reigns other' religions,'" defl~red"Father , S t' n.,. '., N~MBE,:\,T~~O~1,'ABLE clin.'the secret ot'good potato.:s~U1-4 tlie, All-American. hamburger. Trafford P. Maher, S.J.. !,IJj>. DlUi:N. ;bddespde the. sa,crifices, lies: start with' a good' baSIC' Here is, a recipe combining the'I!'ather :M~~er,. is' .c~aiflJlan, 01 . .r.. 09 those wllo' do adopt' feel THE REo'· f,ecipe, then each time you make two that is mighty goQd' eating the depar.tment of psychoJogy \ 'ttli ~';C-' WARDS ~ FAR GREATER THAN ".' ,#, experiment just a lj.tUe ·bit 'served along with a tossed a~d' educatiOn at St. LOui,s tJni-: '. " Q I " O ' THE sACRIFICES: THE SAME' IS' • ·#> find the favorite combination. vegetable salad. . versity, which is carr'ymgoll ..the. .~ ;"TRUE !»(t~o&e.wllO'make sacr:tJlClal' '.' .. tor your family , " ..... 'T <- B : ' research program,' jointly ..with· .' :' " ' . ". ,.. '. a~.r- urgti~" Yale University. and:riropsle ! rifts· to adopt a novice or a semina·Ii BASIC "POTATO ~ALA~':' , '~pound h a m b u r g e r ; i College,Philadelphia~ Sitllilar . rian'.·' TREY 'ENJOYTBE REWARDS '. 6 metedum long white polotaes", . 1 c~p shredded raw potato : ' s.tudies are, being prepared at the ·of'God'. jrrace and the satisfaction of ., coo . . 2 tab1espoo~ finely chopped onione oth·er. two 'schools of' Protes'tant 11 worthwhile aceompUshment.. .SIS· ,% cup French dressing " 1 tablespoon fat TER CLOTD..DA AND SISTER GEN;1% teaspoons salt _ % teaspoon dry mustard .and' Jewish educational mate11JtHo/yPathtnMisJionAiJ EVJEvE ARE ADOPTABLE. AS ARB , JA, teaspoon paprika I teaspoon chopped paraley. £reaL "rials. " fi'tht 0ritntaJ SEMINAJUANS MOUSSA AND AN. cups finely chopped celerr . or dry' ." Father Maher has been direct,. , Chtmh TOINE. $150 a year for two years will • "% c'up chopped parsley 1 teaspoon s a l t · ing four doctoral candidates in take care of the girls and the seminary tuition Is: $100 a year for ,radishes" sliced Mix together hamburger, ~. the survey of C. a.tholic schools. 3 hard cooked eggs . -tato onion and salt. Form into slx years. IF VOU LIKE, THE BOY'S GIFT CAN BE IN BON- . teaspoon dry .mustard " 4 ~ttie n-f . ht fat 5 Two of the studies-,-on science OR OF ST. ANN, since they wW be attending SL Ann's Sem.' I cup mayonnaise p . s. a ry In ? and English lesson mater~als-;Inary. " '1 medium onion 01'.8 gl'tleil oMons to 7 mmut~s on each mde. Re;- 'have been completed, while the Dice potatoes while warm move pat.hes from pan. A~d .remaining two--on social studies . FoosiI WiTH A FLOURISH · into big, bowl. Sprinkle with mustard and' parsley to fat . ,In . and religion-wi~ be finished by, ~ONSIGNOR JOSEPH T.. RYAN of the ~_...-_.... French dressing and seasonings.. pan. He::"t and pour .over pathes. ,August, pe said.. Albany Diocese Is ENDING HIS TOUR OF :: Let marinate one ar more hours, .Serve .not. . . .Father Maheriwho has worked DUTY as the representative of Pope John ~.Q' stirring occasionally. Mi~,' in . Buymg Tlps: ·~way.~ buy closely on the project with Prot': XXIII with the Catholic groups· working ~\ef~~n ehopped veget:.bles andsli,ce4 or . :hamburger tl~a~ 18., #,eshly estant and Jewish ':scholars at · among THE ONE. MILLION' PALESTINIAN pj .' ~iced eggs. SUr in mayonnaise. :g.round. Stof~· lightlr cover;,<i' 'Yale and Dropsie, said,the work ARAB 'REFUGEES 'in the Near and Middle. ; Chill. Garnish -as desired, with (~amb!Jrger)lk~ ~o .'breathe) has been carried out· ~'hont!stly ;' East. 'A 'GENEROUS STRINGLESS GIFT !perhaps;' .bright red" tamilto ,with ':vvaxed' pap~r 'In' coldest .. and objectively, with. tne chips' .~ 'WILL HELP HIM FINISH WrrH A 'FLOUR. ,: wedges, pickle fans, radish roses, p~rt . of the· refrigerator. Use ~lling where. ~ey. may." He. · tSH."MONSIGNOIt STEPm:N' J. KELLEHER. of the, Archdio-. '. , "sliced stuffed 'olives, etc.'. wlth3n ~wo d~Ys.. '. , .. . · ceseof New York wui succe~d'Monsignor, Ryan., : I Potato 'Facts.. ..:. ' Buy chuck, round, flank, plate.

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brUiket, sl1,!nk, or neck meat and '"drowns" potatoes.'Too 'ofteil out have ground. If meat is very . ! choice vegetables are subjected' lean~ add 2 . ounces of. suet. per "to that vegetable fate. They' ar~ pound of .grounli meat, if deslr~d. ; boiled in too much water 'and . Store hghtly. C9vered With " : then that very water, so rich ip. waxed'~aper 10 co1des~ ~art ,of · minerals and vitamins is poured the refrlg~rator. Use Wlthip. two ,. down the sink. In order to re- days. -, ,tain fullest food value, potatoes ~nib Thrifties ;. should be cooked in rapidly boiII pound ground lamb : ing water with their skins on 1 cup grated raw carrots :, or scraped off. Only eno~gh I egg I teaspoon salt . ; wa ter barely .to cover. the po% teaspoon pepper , ) !. tatoes should be used. Pare skins 2 teaspoons grated onioDll ~ very' thin if you want to peeHhe Co~bine all ingredients and .'. potatoes and drop them at' once shape into patties. Put on broiler · into boiling water. .' b ' ler so tha t . ' .salted ' d tatThe rack and'p I ace In rOI ' '. water In whl.ch ~are po oes top of meat is 2 to 3 inches from :liave been bolled·ls excellent'~'\'heat Br '1'6 t 8' . ' tes' 1a liquid ingredient in gri',yiell. . each' sideOla o. _ mmu. .011 ; soups or bread.' It is rich in '. servm_ . ,. . ~ minerals!. . " .: . Steamed' potatoes bring out Steamed Potatoes

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. MISSIONS. REMEMBER THE NEAR. EAST MISSIONS IN . YOUR WILL. .

"(JNA PICCOLA C-"PPELLA ED UNA SCUOLETIA"

REYNOLDS-DEWALT

Since THE PRESENT CHAPEL IN TELLSAKRA in Syria· seats only thirty pers011l and IS NOT SUFFICIENTLY . SAFEWOR. THY FOR ·THE RESERVATION OF THE BLESSED SACRAMENT can you give a little toward the building of "A LITTLE CHAPEL AND A ·LITTLE SCHOOL." A gift in honor of 'OUR LADY OF LOURDES. .

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West, Newbuly, Mass. Conducted by 1807 Brothers of Charity 1959 . Private Boarding School for Boys, Graclles', 5-6·7-8 ·Write. Call or come fOt: • . Informatioa Tel. . HOmestead 2-4663

Sturtevant &, Hook

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the prized possession ·of the'.. ' . ipotato. Potatoes prepared.in. this.. lmanner are so good ~naturally ~ that they need onlY,Ca little dab ICE ,CREAM )0£ butter and salt to be fit·f0t;. LEO B.>BERUsB~'~l:.;~ : ia kin~. Here's .how:· -~ tAllow 1 medium pO,tato per 951 Slade St. TeL OS 1-7836 ; serving . . ' ;" ',.• (~~l,,~, ,,- ; .7'....... ;:;..~ .. ,,;, • ..;.;;,;,;,,;';._ _....1 .! • __ . 'I - . ~ : Pare potatoes 'very thinly. Cut ~ih quarters. Leave in fairiy i large pieces.' ' . ~ , ~ : Place potatoes on rack' over: :' · rapidly boiling water.· Cover: i *ghtly. " . . . . , - :" .':, ·1.. CarbonCa..... l Steam for about 2(f minutes or, "veras..' : :. I ~btil potatoes. are ·,tenqer: " ! . P. S. Stewed potatoes are not,' ~~~-Distributed by ., : i.so common as. boiled .potatoes.. : l: think this is due to' the fact' j that. to cook potatoes in this' Bev~rageC;:9~ ~ J;Danner a special pan is needed; : that is a.pan large enough' to. . '331 Nash RdI.,.New~df~rd i accommodate the boiling' water; . , WYman 7.9937 '.0!1e that ,has a rack and that cJln

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Advocates Laws To Insure Peace' Among Nations NEW YORK (NC) - Dr. Edward Teller, known . u "the father of the hydrogen bomb," has called for the

1esus · Mary ,'Actid~myPresiderit Plans Ca.reer In, Field of Dental Hygie~e

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs.,

FE~.

4, 1960

1S

,S~lon Deplores

, JJy Patricia McGowan' " .l~aders/,Apathy Hazel-eyed, Patricia LaFleur is Jesus-l\fary Academy's' school president. The Fall . ·.To, R,ed, Menace River school, which accepts students· from primary grades through high school, has known Pat a·long·time. She's boarded there since she was a seven year old second NEW YORK (NC)-U. So grader, and she has two. younger si!'lters also students. fat, from Hartford, doesn't Rep. Francis· E. Walter deusually go home for. week" . . , plored here .what he called ends, ~'becau8e I'd' svend the "appalling, gullibility" of most of my time traveling," free world leadership in the face but time never, hangs heavof the communist menace.

U. S. to continue testing nuclear w' - pons by exploding them ill lPace and underground. Such testing, the world-famed physicist said, will not leave any trace of radioactivity in the at, mosphere. He suggested that the ily on her hands. As school U. S. should permanently discon':' president, she presides over stutinue nuclear tests in' the atmos- dent cOuncil meetings and is phere, as opposed to space, and responsible for much planning challenged the Russians to do of class activities. likewise. The atmosphere Is the She's president of the honor mass of air immediately around llOCiety,' in the glee club and a the earth. sodality leader. In addition she The 53-year-old director of the teaches catechism at Notre Lawrence radiation laboratory at Dame parish to a sixth grade the University of California said class of girls. She, graduated there is need for "an interna- from the 15.week Confraternity tional authority which can wield of Christian Doctrine course in moral power and physical preparation for this project. "It's a Hyphen" power." He added that the world Pat considers Jesus-Mary's must find a way to eliminate the causes of war by establish- student council "a hyphen being law which will insure peace tween faculty and students" and an important factor in the and justice among nations. smooth running of the school. Gets Fordham Degree A recent undertaking of the Dr. Teller was awarded an group has been the beginning honorary doctorate of science of work on a school manual, to degree on behalf of Fordham University by its president, Father Laurence J. McGinley, S.J. Dr. Teller said that the Soviets have refused to recognize the difficulties of controlling Other activities for the darktests in interplanetary space and haired student are membership underground. in the Junior Classical League "The Soviet government boasts and Quill and, Scroll, classical about a new and fantastic and journalistic clubs. Once a their quarters, even as stay-athornell do. Saturday afternoons weapon," Dr. Teller said. "We week she takes art lessons from are free' for - trips downtown, do not know what that fantastic her aunt, Mother Marie-Eymard weapon may be. It could be any a ' member of the Religious of shopping, movies, maybe dinner of a dozen possibilities,.of which Jesus - ¥ary, the community out, and Sunday's usually biken liP by homework and recreawe have thought and it: could be staffing the academy. IOmething of which w~ did not She studied art for years and tion., Pat's enthusiastic abo u t even think. It is. dangerous to especially enjoys working in disarm in the face of Soviet tech- oils. She'll continue it as a boarding life, a necessity in her nological advances simbolized hobby after graduation" she case if she were to have a Catholic education, since there by Sputnik. It seems hopeless to says. Her goal, however, is not an are no Catholic high schools in control disarmament' at a time when we do not even know what artistic career. She wants to be Hartford, although some are fantastic weapons our control a dental hygienist, an interest now being built. sparked by an exhibit on teeth "Anything is worth the securshouid try to discover. she prepared for the schooling of a Catholic education," she Moral Power "Through preparedness we ean science fair last year. She declared. buy peace for a limited .time. visited several dentists in the How we use this time will decide course of her preparations and became most interested in the the great issues of the future. We must find a way to eliminate field. She will probably attend the causes of war by establish- the University of Bridgeport, ing law that will insure peace , which offers it hygienist course. What Goes On and justice among nations. We What do academy boarders do need international authority which can wield mor~l power ' bt after-school hours? There are few idle. moments, says Pat, and physical power. among the 15 high school age "To accomplish this seems imboarders at Jesus-Mary. Homepossible," Dr. Teller said. "It is work accounts for weekday the great challenge to the pres- nights, and there's no TV except ent generation, which can be for educational' programs. "I achieved only by the devoted never have time to watch it, efforts of all of us. We must anyway.": succeed if the Ideal of human Weekends, the girls .dean dignity is to survive in our 1:81 idly changing world.· NOTRE DAME (NC)-John C. O'Connor, Indianapolis attorney, CHICAGO (NC)-Edward J. has been elected president of the Conrad Sr. of Cleveland has University of Notre Dame been elected president of. the Alumni Association. He was National Association of Catholic ·president of his senior class in Publishers and Dealers in 1938. He succeeds William E. Church Goods. ' , Cotter, Jr. of Dulut,h.

The Pennsylvania legislator, who is· chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, said such groups as the American Association of Univershy Professors, 'some justices of the U. S. Supreme Court and highly placed policy makers ill the executive branch of government either "do not or will not understand" , the communist threat.

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Addressing a meeting' of the National Society of New England Women, Mr. Walter compared the "'appalling gullibility of the leadership of the free world" in the face of the communist technique to the tech": . nique of judo. , It is, he said, "the principle of making use of an opponent's

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infiltrated some Congressional lobbies and "gained entry 1I1tO the legal profession here." He did not mention any names.

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16

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oft:on River-Thurs., feb. 4, 1960

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THEY FIGHT COMMUNISM: Dominican Academy students, Fall River, prepare and broadcast weekly radio program exposing dangers of Communism. Left, at tape recorder, left to right, Judith Dias, Claudette Michaud, Barbara Arruda. Center, doing research, left to right, Anne Mailloux, Elizabeth Donnelly. Right, at radio station, Anne Marie Levesque

Says Communist Strategy Exploits Cuban Revolt WASHINGTON (NC)-A Central Intelligence Agency official has said current communist strategy in Latin America is to exploit the Cuban revolution. It 18 being described by the Reds as "an example of a successful 'liberation struggle which should be emulated by 'antiimperialist' elements in other Latin American countries," the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee was told. This report came from Gen. C. P. Cabell, deputy director of the super-secret intelligence agency, in testimo'ny before the Senate unit made public this week by the subcommittee. Gen. Cabell told the Senators that the communist drive has been intensified in Latin America because Red leaders "realize that the United States is more susceptible to hqrt in this area than elsewhere." The current program, Gen. Cabell said, of exploiting of the Cuban Revolution is aimed at influencing non-communist liberals, nationalists, and intellectuals, as well as non-communist youth and student groups. It has been paralleled by an intensive campaign to strengthen the internal organization of the various Communist Parties in Latin America, and to' train party leaders, Gen. Cabell said. Continuous Training "The training of Latin Amerlean Communist Party leaders at the higher party school of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union has been going on continuously since 1953 with an increase noted since 1956. Beginning in 1956, the Communist Party of China also undertook to give training to Latin American .Communist Party leaders. They emphasize, among other subjects, the special contributions of the Chinese Communist Party in the field.of clandestine work, agrarian reform and peasant affairs, guerilla warfare, and the manipulation of the bourgeoisie," he said. He said that the number of Latin American communists is estimated now at about 220,000 to 240,000, which is about a 10 per cent increase over the 1958 estimates. The number of sympathizers he estimated at about 650,000 to 700,000.

Taunt(jB1 Meetn!rnsg For MeS'll Retreall'ClHl'Ilh Men of the Diocese are invited to an open meeting of Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat League to be held at 7:30 Sunday night, Feb. 7 at CYO Hall, High and Winthrop Streets, Taunton. All men who have made retreats t the Diocesan Retreat House, or those interested in doing so will be welcome. Rev. William J. McMahon, Retreat League director, will conduct the meeting.

of Fan

River~Thurs.,

Feb. 4, 1960

with, left to right, Armand Penha, FBI counterspy and producer of "Dangers of Apathy" series; Hillard Nagle of the - Fall River Men's Mission Club, sponsors of· the Dominican Academy program; and Dr. Robert F. Brown, Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty member and program g~est.

Students at· DomilJican Academy Expose Red's Smear Tactics Aimed at FBI

New Bedford Knights To Conduct Contest

A project possibly unique among the nation's high school students has been quietly going on at Dominican Academy, Fall River, for nearly a year· It began when the Men's Mission Club of FaIl River invited Dominican students to speak on weekly radio program carried by local station WSAR. They discussed missionary endeavors among the Indians of Western Canada on five What it had come to mean to weekly appearance. It has paid occasions and also did two them. dividends in improving their programs on Advent and Penha has subsequently lent debating ability and general Christmas hymns and cus- the girls tape recordings of his poise, says Sister Ignatius.

a

own programs and these have . toms. And that was that, they thought. . been incorporated into the local But last January Hillard project, now a weekly, Instead of monthly affair. In this way Nagle, in charge of the radio speakers such as Cardinal Cushprogram for the Men's Mission ing, Louis Budenz, Herbert PhilClub, asked the girls, all membrick, Madame Chiang Kai-shek bers of the schoolpebating team, and numerous others have been to be responsible for one proheard on the Fall River station. gram a month on the series. Five seniors' at Dominican Schools Should Help What should they talk about? Academy, Barbara Arruda, JuSomeone remembered a priest's ·dith. Dias, Anne Marie Levesque, declaration that schools ,and Anne Mailloux and Claudette school papers should take part Michaud; and a sophomore, in a drive to expose Communist Elizabeth Donnelly, form the efforts to smear the Federal group responsible for the dozens of programs that have by now Bureau of Investigation, its chief, J. Edgar Hoover, and the Un- been broadcast. They're vitally interested in American Activities Committee the project, says Sister Ignatius, of the House of Representatives. Here was a made-to-order Dominican Academy principal. opportunity to expose Red tac- They were even willing to foretics. The girls sacrificed hour go attendance at the school's junior prom in order to appear upon hour of precious afteron a program for Penha. "A school and weekend recreation time to pore over books and prom seems a little thing in comparison with what others have magazines giving facts and figgiven to fight Communism," said ures on the Communist menace. one girl. By March they were ready and their first program went on the However, the sacrifice wasn't air, outlining Communism in necessary, since dates were general, its current smear camchanged, so the girls had their prom and the program appea'rpaign and the real threat to ance, too,' much to everyone's America of Red domination. Subsequent programs probed happiness! more deeply into Communism They've remained generous, and used extracts from the 1958 however, in giving their free Un-American Activities Comtime for the preparation of their mittee hearings in Boston. Without mentioning names, -the girls quoted testimony of Communists in Fall River and other New England cities. SHEET METAL-' Concrete proof that their efJ. fESER, Prop. forts were noticed came last RESIDENTIAL June when Armand Penha, unINDUSTRIAL dercover agent in the Communist COMMERCIAL party for the FBI, who now pro253 Cedar St. New Bedford duces a radio series, "Dangers WY 3-3222 of Apathy," visited Dominican Academy. Penha exhibited great interest in the students' pr<:lject and took with him tape recordings of several programs. He has been enfeaturing deavoril1g to arouse school inter- . liThe Gaslight Room" est in the Communist threat and has on several occasions cited Ideal for Communion BreakDominican Academy as an edufasts, Organization Banqu~ts cational institution actually 386 Acushnet Ave. doing something to make stuNew Bedford dents' and others aware of the Call WYman 2-] 703 problem. Turn About Turn about is fair play..Penha appeared on the Fall River radio series and, in turn, two Dominican Academy students were Paint and Wallpaper heard on his network program Dupont Paint explaining their project and PARKING· Rear of Store at Michigan 422 Acush, Ave. ANN ARBOR (NC-) - There

And. of course, they are six young women who will go into the post-high school world very much aware of a situation which many of their elders-ofllY dimly realize. Equipped with knowledge, each of them will be able to fight Communism with the weapon it hates most: truth.

The McMahon Council No. 151 of . the Knights of Columbus, New'Bedford, will choose a Miss Knights of Columbus at the Valentine Dance to be held on Saturday night, Feb. 13, at the Council's Home at the corner of Pleasant and Campbell Stroets. Refreshments will be served.

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18

Pontiff Deplores Plight of Church In Li,thuania

THE· ANCHOR-Diocese of F911 Riv~r:-Thurs'i Feb. 4, 1960

Ass.erts ·Pope. Pius XII One Of WC~~d'S Gregt Teachers

VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope John has expressed his sorrow over the plight of the Church' in Lithuania and

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.O. .

Bishop of Reno

I The world, as Wordsworth remarked, is too J!luch with us. If he felt its overpowering presence in the relative quiet of his times, when the 19th century was young,and under the ideal calm of his sequestered life, how much more right have we to voice the same of his achievement, an approach complaint. Hardly have we so fresh .and vigorous that its time to ponder the signifi- significance was hardly grasped caHce of an utterance before at the time and is only now be-

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other claimants to our attention ing recognized in its breadth and distract us with their stridency.. scope. Here preeminently he was But when a the teacher, pointing' the way gr e a't teacher for Catholic scientists and theodies there is logians to plumb the depths and I . to scale the 'summits of human .••,need for a long pause. to measknowledge. ure the worth There was a great realism of his message. abou't him, and if he' lacked the .Pope Pius XII technical equipment and the exwas one of the . perience of a man like Pere great teachers Teilhard de' Chardin, his firm of all time. This . grasp of the essentials of the is not to say ideas with which he dealt intti~t he was' an sured a precision of statement original thinkand a perfect clarity of outline er, 1 ike t he which contrasts strongly with mighty philosophers of the past, the haziness which sometimes men like St. Augustine' and St. makes the priest-scientist's work Thomas Aquinas, or that he was almost impenetrable. able to enlarge the boundaries Yet all this was essayed more of our knowledge, whether in or less as a by-play, almost as physics or cosmology. A teacher a I recreation from his central is not necessarily an inventor. interest of guiding the Church or an explorer. His task is to through the mazes of modern transmit and to clarify. The confusion. He rose to his responPontiff whose 'reign spanned the sibility as the universal teacher mid-passage of the 20th century with an unflustered realization was magnificently aware of -his, Uiat he would have to speak out role as teacher in the school of on ,many -things, on many aspects Christ.' of the contemporarysituati~~., ." Ran~e. of Interest. ' . : Followed High' Tradition ,As ,we lo.o~. back !It)!,tis si,n~le::, . ',There are, of course" h.is pJ:tase .of hiS a.ccom.pb~h.m~m~, w~, ". grea~' .encyclicals, addressed to are almost aI??a~led at I.ts v~rIetr·· ,:. the cardinal p.roblems of the age, ~h~re l~sser ~en prl<le th~~-;,,' but for all' "their urgency to an~lves ' on,. their .compe~nce In. swer the immediate need. of an ~e restrIct~d .fleld ,or In .some ' authoritative Christian response a~ea- of specialIzed,' knowledge, to the-- challenge' of 'Uie new PIUS XII ,encompassed nearly heresies there is no hint of haste the ,whole .range of. human 'inter- .or anxiety' in' their measured est. . sureness.' He remInds ,one of those men , . ' .', '. ' . ' . '.' of the Renais'sance whose enorH 7 .chose to c()ntlI~u.e the high mous appetite for knowledge traditIon. .o! . pontIfical proreached out for' "~ll things. nouncements, aloof and almost, knowable. and... a .. few, others' ~lYll)piac,.. but.. as .our. ears are be~id~s.'" But .where, for the assaulted by the clamor of the most part, this ·..very· urge for" current debate .we can onl! universality entailed the penalty' app!aud the WIsdom'. of hiS of .superficial· learning, there 'is ' chOIce. no trace of this weakness in the He might have attracted sure confidence of the late Holy greater attention for the moment Father. by 'using the language of. the 'There were 'some thi~gs. it is market-place, but. he could true, which he avoided or never have ~u1filled his role touched on lightly, as it were in as ,teacher by shouting' like a· passing. He:felt no special comdemogog. . pe~ence in judging the arts, and: . It is to be hoped that Ii defin!;»eY,ond . layjng, .down· general itive edition of his writings 'will principles of pruden.ce,. and 80- be forthcoming soon. Aside from, . btiety, especialJy where tpe,arts. imy question. of his inflillibi.1itY· were. to be ell)ploye~ in.·t~e' as the·successor of Peter, it will !Iervice of relig~o!1, he said v.~ry . ',be the:record of one 'of the most little abo,~t them: " ' .. \ remarkable 'minds of"th,is 'or anT. \ ' Lonl(:.Standing 'Quarrel age., .' \', 'But he :was' deeply conce'rned For all the variety. of its' witli the totai"problem 'of recon- 'absoq~tions' it was qualified by' ciling the long-standing quarrel that excellence wliich· is God's between science and revelation, best gift to the human intellect. or more exa'ctly, between scienConsidering the rarity of great lists and theologians. His particteachers we have been blessed ular attraction seemed to be in in our times. , , the field of cosmology, and his allocutions to the' Academy of" Stresses Importance Science- which he established are among the most brilliant and Of Catholic'l nfJuence . LONDON (NC) -Catholics highly-wrought of all his writshould build up their positions ings. There was a strong vein of in England's universities instead' of trying to build a university of poetry in the Pope's makeup. their own, a prtest has recomThis was not confined to his "prayerful effusions, which occa- mended. It would be a tragedy if Cathsionally, be it confessed, verged on the lush, in a manner charac- olics withdre.w to a unive'rsity of their own, because Catholic teristically Italian, but was disinfluence on national life and played with fine nobility when thought would be reduced, said he rose to the consideration of Msgr. Gordon Wheeler, adminthe magnitude of creation. The passages in which he istra'tor of Westminster Cathespeaks of the cosmos, in its tow- dral. He addr.essed a Newman el'ing heights of grandeur and in _ Association circle in Nor'th'Stafits multiplicity of' infinitesimal fordshire. detail, are great literature. But . The' experience of clergy at it was never poetry divorced Oxford and Cambridge univerfrom exact understanding or full sities shows that· Catholic' mastery of description. He thought is both acceptable a?td knew precisely what he was welcome in the university life talking about, a scientist speak- of. England, Msgr.. Wheeler ing the language of his peers. stated. Pope as Leader He said C"atholic influence in This was the unexpected side existing universities would spread if chaplaincy grants were Facts ·on Fa'ith , . increased. He also recommended ANSWERS: 1 (b); 2 (c); 3 (c); the building of chaplaincy' cen4 (a); 5 (~); 6 (b)~ 7 (a); 8 (c). .. ters at more universities.

f

COMMUNION LUNCHEON: Ann u a I Communion luncheon of Catholic Young Adult Organization of New Bedford followed attendance at Maronite rite Mass at Our. Lady of Purgatory Church. Left .to right, Laurent DuhameJ, president; Mart'ha Daprato, luncheon chairman; Barbara -Lavimoniere, publicity chairman.

Montfort Missioners Ready to Work' Among 'Cannibal$ in New Guinea .

WINOOSKI PARK (NC) _ sympa~hy by h~man ways. a~d Two priests and a Brother of the then, httle by httl~,.tea~h them Montfort community soon will the message of rel~gI?n. . leave St Michael's College to The Montfort mISSIOn area 111 work ~~ong cannibals in the New. GU,inea is. mostly s,,:amps New Guinea jungles. and .Jung~es. The weather IS hot . . . and humid. To reach Daru,' the Fathers· Gerard Deschamps, missionaries will have to travel S.S.M.~ of Ottawa and Jeanthe Fly ,River, which is 500 miles Claud,e Beland, S.S.M., of Three long in a 50-by-16 foot boat.' Rivers! and, Brother'Rosaire ot 'A~other difficulty, they will La Bale-d~;'Fevre, plan .t~ spend face is- the great variety of' the ne~t,slX Y7 ars ,orgamzIng the languages· spoken by the natives. .nev.v .(\postohc. Prefecture of . There' are' hundreds of dialects' Daru ~n New: G~i~.ea. This Sum-sp.oken ;U1iongt~e_~rea's pOP!1ia-,: ~_~r. they. WIll JOID ~hree other, .tion_ of appi'oJ!:imately 75,000. missioners .there. .l'he, island has citotal population' . "We shall begin .with hospitaI8; of. ·,four. millio~' 'people, about· 'and schools," declared Father, one .million· of' whom are 'canDeschamps, ,,!'win the .people'.,:' nibals.; ., .'

urged parents in that Red-ruled nation to educate their children in the Faith. The Pope spoke in a letter to the Bishops of Lithuania-none of whom is still in his See written to commemorate the ,350th anniversary of the death of Prince Melchior Giedraitis, Bishop of Samogitia. Pope John told the Lithuanian Bishops that "We are well aware of the calamities which have befallen you and this fills Us with sorrow." , He noted that Bishops have been driven from their Sees, that priests and Catholic laymen have been imprisoned or exiled for their Faith and that all the 'Church's means for fostering and spreading Christianity have been attacked in recent years. Urges Constancy The Pontiff urged Lithuanian priests to follow the example of Bishop· Giedraitis, especially in "his constancy in affirming the rights of the Church and its teaching." Speaking to Lithuania's faithful, the Pope said: "We again exhort fathers and mothers so that, mindful of their very serious duties, they will diligently educate their own children by word and example." He 'added· that because "priests are forbidden to teach catechism, ~ children, parents must take the place of the ministers of God to pass on the lighted· torch of the Faith ot.'iheir forefathers." ,; .The Pope's message was issued.' , . a short "time after a Moscow' periodical admitted 'tha~ the ': Church - continues to hold the' loYalty.of the peopie of Lithu~ ani!! and. to: ()fier strong opposi-..: lion to Red efforts to spreacl , atheism.

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A PICTURE YOU MUST NOT MISS. Th'e scenes in the ·Holy City are among the most wonderful' ever screened I" -PefJfJY Cotler, YounfJ Cotholic MessenfJ'"

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FRANZ WERFEL'S MASTERPIECE

BE~ZlfD NEa* * .

1363 Pleasant St. ADULTS 90c

Fall River

CHILDREN 35 c

Free Parking Rear of Theat...

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In COLOI

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, M 'ANcHoR-D1oceM of Fan

River-Thurs., Feb.

4,

1'960

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EXPANDED CYO PROGRAM IN FALL RIVER: In left photo, wrestling instructor Roland Banville demonstrates basie holds on Joe Magriby to Tony Davis, Mike Considine, Bill Whitty, Ron Cote and Ron Banville. In center photo, boxing instructor Len Nicolay watches as Paul

Di,ocese I~ Rightfully Proud Of New Gym in Fall.River,

Gibson, Paul Mooney and John McCormick test the durability of training bag. In right photo, Director Paul Bogan tells John: Sullivan the proper manner to lift one of the new barbel sets as Bob Maucione, Jim McMahOll ,and Bob Machado watch. All seem to be enjoying ,new ,facilities.

Plan Obse,rv~nces Athletes· Must Meet Every Academic .: For Scout;Sunday Standard at Catholic ColI~ges

Boy Scouts throughout t h e , By ,John Corrigan,' , , Diocese:w~ll mark Boy, Scout ',C/)yeri~g'the sports activities,of, the Catholit colleges, , Patrons of the old, bov.:ling alley to the rear of CYO Sunday, Feb. !T, .. with ,varied in :.. N~w England requires a good ,bit, of roaming-to Hall on Anawan St.,' ;Fall niver; wouldn't'; re..cognize ,'the obse:rvanc~s;In Mansfield Scouts Worcester for Holy Cross; to, Vermont or New Hampshire : place today. The area, long, ,in disy.se ,.has .be,enrenovat~d will gather' at ~t. ,Mary's Church for St.Michael's or, St, Anselm's, and" 'so on. You get & and completely refurbished and now .houses .the, finest ;and at ,3., SUnday, to .wit-,: good view of each in turn; But. ,it 'J ",,', J , . afterno,on , points,up another'side, 2\,':" most modern gymnasiuin f~cilitie~ , ,~efe,' designe4 . ness p~esentaiio~ ofParvuli Dei, '!' and, with a' little time, you "positive side',' ,which is worthy, '" facilities that are to 'be and' set" up by a ,committee of Awards 'to' three Cub Scouts, b ec'<> m e aware" 'of some' of mention and seldom, if eveJ!o found in this area. ,The three with the advice and con- , Francis' Faria, Paul E. Lemieux' geJ1eral trends in all of rec~ives any., formal opening of the gym, sent of Fr. Sullivan. Committee and 'Jay Maddock, Rev. Edw~rd them" ,Everyone is, I suppose, To, curb the natural enthugj.., eagerly awaited by CYO mem- members, each a former Durfee L. O'Brien and Rev. Edward O. fa~ilia~ wit? the hue and cry asm of alumni eager for year ; whIch InvarIably follow one or after year of undefeated seasons, bers, hinges on the arrival and sports luminary in his own installation of right, include Paul" Bogan" a Paquette WIll conduct the cere- another disclosure of over-zeal- and to insist that the academie " special Yo r k physical education major at mony, Joseph Murphy is area ous recruiting practices-giving standards of the college remain exercise tables the University of Massachusetts; . lay chairman of Scout activities. Cadillac convertibles to fresh- high, as high for athletes as fOl'l' New Bedford S c 0 u t s will man football players along with others, is well and good and fine. and the 'wrapLuke Urban Jr., varsity football ping up of sevand baseball standout at Colum- march in procession into Holy no work.big pay campus jobs- .Buteven better· than that is 00 eral minor'debia University and Bob Har- Name Church at 3 o'clock, Ad or of the "double standard" supplement the varsity competitails which are graves, a freshman at Holy Altare 'Dei award winners will which, unfortunately, Still pre- tive schedule with a broad and " leg ion in an Cross where he co-captained lead the line of march and mem- vails in some schools, whereby .general intramural sports proundertaking ,of the 1959 Crusader grid fledg- bers of McMahon Council 151, a liice' guy who' happens to be gram that' offers each student Knights of Columbus, will fur- an important athlete is ~ased the chance to develop the sound " this nat u r e • lings. nish a guard of honor. Rev. Leo through his four years of hIgher body to go along with the sound However, Fr. Along the schoOlIxlY front, the Sullivan will welcome the Scouts education without a whit of mind he is molding in the classWalter Sullispotlight this week focuses on and Rev. Walter Sullivan Dioc- intellectual stress which might, room. This is to be positive, and van" director of the annual State Indoor Meet Fall River c.Y.a." anticipates which opens tomorrow 'at the esan Boy Scout Chaplai~, will result.in hi~ ~e~ng declared ,is thus even more commendable. Sorrie examples: one schoO'i that the gym will be in full Irvington St. Armory where the preach. Representatives of all ac~demlcally melIglble. But you operation early next week. field events will be' staged. The branches of Scouting will be in rareJy hear the troubles .of the 'supplies' basketball; squash, ten-' attendance. The event has been, pOQ.l'but honest coach In the, I nis,' swlinining, boxirig and Extensive planning bas gone extravaganza ",hich attracted a, ~ planned by Anthony Lima and rOOd ~nd honest college who h~s, wrestling,' softball,' touch foot-·" into the three phase program record total of 82 schools and Frank Sheehan area chairmen. oat hl~ ~st quarte~b~ck, or hIS ball,.' golf alid' so on for all' ibJ' : that is offered members from 1099 athletes will conclude , 6' 10" center, or hIS fastest students: ,:A ri'o the r maintaiN! ,i junior high age through adult- Saturday at Boston Garden. Taunton boys will attend serv- pitcher, to the books~ There 'are' ' t many'' such, and proportionally, ,among others tilings, a skating hood. Qualified instructors will Among the defepding cham- i ces at "S acred H ear t Ch ,urch a rink 'and 'opens it to the student 4 o'clOCK. The observance will New England probably has more ,body whenever the hockey team be on hand to supervise activi- pions returning is Class D mile ties in both senior and junior titlist Ed Meehan of Oliver include Benediction and recita- than elsewhere. H;aIipily, the Catholic colleges . has no need of it. All of these groups which will be scheduled Ames. Somerset .. which ' has tion of, the Scout Act of Conse- wI'th 'which I've become famI'lI'ar programs are organized,' some, at separate intervals. The jun- pulled up third in D.,£9mpetition crati!>n.. Rev. ..James Lyons is -wI'th one exceptl'on Whl'ch 0 f course" b etter th an others. B ut, th e essential point is that iors will work out afternoons, the past three years is expeCted area Scout' chaplain and Jobm shall remain 'nameless-'have the seniors-those of high school to make its stro~gest showing Flanagan is lay chairman. beena« forthright as any in in- a II ~f th em are d emons tr a t'Ive age - will be schedul~d eve-' ever according to Coach Bob In Fall River, Scouts wiD sisting on' equal acaaemic work of an awareness of the function nings. Adults will have unre- .'. Slm~iioi\.· Also' in the Meet will attend numerous parochial Ob- for .' their student-athletes. This of sports in the natural growth t' stricted time. 'be strong contingents from' New 'servances. Swansea" boys ,will policy bas hurt the immediate to maturity of each and eve17 At the outset, seniors' courses Bedford, Dartmouth and Fair- gather at St, Michael's ,Church, athletic success of some of them;' student, ,be he Greek major of instructil)D will incllide phys- baven. Swansea at 2:30 for ceremonies, in the long run, it will payoff. baseball captain. ical conditioning, wrestling, judo The biggest upset of the bas- on invitation of Troop 40. Walter Now this is only one side of This awareness of the true and collegiate boxing. Carlin 'ketball season was engineered Wilcox is Fall River area chair- the coin. This is the "negative function of athletics is a healthy Lynch, CYO athletic director by coach Luke Urban last week m ~ side," the minim~ necessity. thing. What college students need in this age of flabbiness ill and head coach of football at when his youthful Hilltopper a game they can play to keep Somerseta High, has outlined in contingent checkmated the powin shape, to enjoy, and to profit detail the physical conditionig erful Crimson of New Bedford, from. And in terms of developcourse which has proved so 34-32 before a howling partison -ment of character, a fast gamo popular and achieVed such great crowd at the Bank Street of tennis with a good opponent results for high school grid Armory. Diminutive Barry Mais as challenging as a varsity aspirants. chado, a sophomore with the basketball game; or,for the The juniors' program will be poise of a veteran, resolved the acquisition of teamwork, touch basically the same as' the sen- iss~e with ~ .40-foot set w~ich , football or intramural basketball iors'. However, it will be modi- split the twmes as the fmal offer as much as, say varsity fied to suit the needs and abil- buzzer sounded. baseball. Attleboro, unde~eated in eight iUes of youngsters of that age This is not meant to knock group. The gym equipment runs league starts appears far and the varsity competition, for it ill the gamut from jump ropes and away the County's best. Yoke, as right that we should g'- '-"d medicine balls to an official one game back, ,surmounted a the, outstanding athlete as the collegiate ring for wrestling and big hurdle Friday night by outstanding scholar-anu v .....r boxing. downing third place FC\irhaven. Catholic colleges in this area Five complete sets of weights Providence College posted its have a multitude of both. But are available. Two heavy duty 8th straight victory of the season the real point of college is more training bags have been installed Monday night defeating Niagara, than either 'scholarship or athat the east end of the gym and 68-43, at Alumni Hall. Captain letics taken singly; it is both 01 there are three striking bags Lenny Wilkens shackled the these together,' with a great deal mounted on platforms. Also visitor's high scorer, Al Butler, more thrown in. Our schools are among the permanent installa- whose 11 point contribution was aware of this,' and it is to their tions are two pulley sets. Regu- 17.6 of his seasonal average. credit. Perhaps the mid-term lation mats have been provided; Wilkens, meanwhile, contribPHYSICAL EDUCATION: Fall River CYO Physical break, when athletics cede for existing locker and shower ae- uted 12 in his own right. Holy Education D'irector Paul Bogan,' right, shows Bob Harcommodations are designed to Cross took Niagara by 26 OR graves, left, and Stan Kupiec, center, proper Y/ay of locking a week or two to examinations, is as good a time as any te service up to 60 members at a Saturday; that P.C.-H.C. date on mention ibis in print. time. tl'ie 22nd should ,be a sreat one. new barbell equipment at Anawan Street center.

By Jack Kineavy

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HfE'ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 4, 1960

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,IThe Anchor Is Newsy and Instructive for All Age Brackets

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