Sales 0/ The Anchor Zoom in Attleboro Parish parish as we did,in 1959. And, it means, too, that this year's total of home-delivered subscriptions will be almost double that of last year. Home delivered copies of The Anchor means . A most noticeable increase in enthusiasm good Catholic reading is available for every Mddenced by pastors making orders and reports member of the family. et the' Circulation Department - assures the To see that this reading is available, Rev. new high total of home deliveries will be attained Danjel Carey, pastor at Our Lady of the Isle fDr the fifth straight year. parish in Nantucket,' announced last week that ~Your sales will ~reach. 300' itt our parish," - The Anchor will be delivered to every home in Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa's his parish for the coming year. Church in South Attleboro, reported today. This ,The Nantucket parish is the first of the 107 means we 'will be sending almost five times as diocesan parish!,!s to achieve complete family :QJ,any copies into homes in' this South Attleboro coverage. The day is not' far distant when com. The Anchor today is headed for its fifth ett'aight total subscription record of home deliJlaries. ...
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The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb. 9, 1961
Vol. 5, No.6 ©
1961 The Anchor
PRICE IOc $4.00 per Year
Second Class Mall Privilogea Authorizod at Fall Rivor, Man.
Catholics Ask Taxes Help Children- Not School~
plete family coverage in every parish will be attained., Steadily, subscription lists of home deliveries have been climbing since the first 'issue of this newspaper in April 1957. ~arishes where suba scriptions lagged in our early years have shown continual improvement; The number of parishes meeting ,their 'quotas has increased. Today, a number of those in the quota-bracket are now ready to follow the lead of Nantucket. ' , The number of subscriptions to The Anchor is one of the indices of the zeal of the clergy and laity in each parish. '
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,'Three More Taunton Parishes Achieve School Quotas Three more parishes in the Greater Taunton area joined Holy Rosary and St. Paul's parishes in the quotabreakihg group in the fund rai~ing campaign for the new Taunton Memorial High School for Girls. Rev. James F. Lyons, priest-moderator of the drive, announced at last night's meeting that the total is now $1,020,450. The pastors of the new 'quota-reach~ ing trio exp'ressed their admiration for the zeal' and sacrlfl'Ce manifested by their parishioMrs WASHINGTON (NC) in their work for the new Girls' There is an apparent build- High School. The Rev. Thomas Taylor, pastor of the Immaca up of talk about the recog- H. ulate Conception Church, Taun~ nition of Red China and its ton, Rev. E. S. deMello, pastor admittance to the United Nations. of Our Lady of Lourdes, Taun~ At present it is not·so much talk ton, and Rev. Francis A. McCara about recognition; it is more thy, pa!ltor of St. Joseph's about the problems involved in Church, No. Dight~n, were still recognition. This, however, could working to raise their totals to !FATHER, STANTON be misleading. It favors those new highs. ' who would have us recognize the The lay chairmen' of the three fact that the communists dom- parishes who joined their pastors inate the China mainland; that, in rendering thank/! to all were we ,could be trading commer- William Fagan, Immaculate Concially with Red China and thus ception, Taunton, Edward Fran~ make some money we are pres- co, Our Lady .of Lourdes, Taun. Rev. Robert L. Stanton, ently not getting (this is the ton, and Richard K. Martin, St. same argument used for the curate at Immaculate Con- recognition of Soviet Russia Joseph, No. Dighton, The finai,campaign reportwilll ception Church; Fall River, soine three' decades ag<»; that be given Thursday night, Feb and 'chaplain the Fall perhaps we can lure Red China 16, at the CYO, Hall on High River Naval Reserve Training away from Red Russia. Street. Father Lyons was very Unit, has been notified of pro- , , Up<>J1. even slight reflection, confident in: talking to The motion to the rank of LieutenlUlt Turn, to Page Eighteen Anchor reporter that the final Commander in the Reserve. He •••.- ••• _... • • • •• ••••• • phase- meeting will see the min. was formerly a senior lieutenant. New, Assigmn,ents imum goal of $1,125,000 greatiT Father Stanton will leave 'from Assignment of the three ,newly ov~subscrib~. th~ Boston Navy Ya,rd March'18 The.. ,processed t<>tals of the, for the' annual cruise he is re- ordained. priests are announced quired' to clake. He·' will be today by the Most Reverend other parishes are: aboard a naval vessel bound for Bishop. The assignmen~ will be Dighton Guanta'namo Bay" Cuba, where found on Page Two. of this issue st. Peter $10,470 he will participate in maneuvers of your 'diocesan newspaper. •• a , Turn to ,Pa,ge Eighteeq, $13,300 St. Ann
Propaganda: Move Helps Red China
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WASHINGTON (NC) - A question-and-a.nswer pamphlet, written by Russell Shaw, a staff member of the M.C.W.C. News Service, replies to the argument that CathOties have no right "to expect' other people to help them support their schools." Part used to benefit their chUdrenof a kit on education made no matter where they g<> to -wailable by the Civic and school. They believe it is just as Social Action Committee of much in society"s interest that ~heir children be educated t<> be «he National Council of Catho- mature, responsible adults as it De Men, the pamphlet says: ts that other people's ohiidren "'Catholics look at it this war- be. Pal't of their tax money goes ,"Catholics aren't asking any'into a common fund to be used lOr educational purposes. But " Turn to Page Eighteen aifs motley is spent 'exclusivelY •• • • • • • • • •• • •••••••••• " 8upp<>rt schools - the public Lenten Menus iehools - to which they can~ot .Th,.e A,nch,or t.odav publishes In conscience send their chll" dreR. They regard this as an on Page Nine, the first of a weektaju9tlce. 1.Y series of recipes designed to , Emphasis ChUcl aid housewives prepare meals in accCll"dance with the rules and ~bIo, to their way of thinkregulations of Lent. Iftg" it's a mistake to put ~he • • •• _ ••••••••••••••••• tinphasis in education 011 the ~ool instead of the child. The , Taunton Holy Family , one who directly benefits from $ 55,940 . Sacred Heart tax money spent for' education 85,628 St. Anthony, 84,836 Is -- or should be - the child. St. Jacques 64,830 And 90 far as the individual St. Joseph 98,970 thUd bcnefits, society benefits, Rev. John E .. Boyd, Supervisor of"Catholie Charities, repre8~nted the Fan River St. Mary 201,302 too. Catholics don't see wihy C,bei1' tax mone,., shouldn't be Diocese at the Cuban Refugee Resettlemen t Conference held last week in Miami. Father Boyd said that representatives of every Diocese and Archdiocese in the United States were at the meeting, as well as' members of Protestant and Jewish agencies.' Chief result of the conference wa,s Feb. 1 by Abraham Ribicoff of the chief needs, noted Father Bishop Connolly will pr. announced- by Bishop, Ed- the Department of Heaith, Wel- Boyd. He said the. average 'Ex~minations for prosward E. Swanstrom of the fare and Education, President refugee is in his thirties and that sent certificates Saturday pective freshmen will be National Catholic Welfare Kennedy'.s. appointee to the there are many professional men afternoon at 2 o'clock in Sf:. ,' same pOSItion. among those needing aid. given on Saturday, March 1~ Louis Church, Fall River, to .at the closong s:sThe bulk of Cuban exiles have at 9 a.m. at each of the four C:0nference slOn. He saId that all agencIes settled ,in the Miami area, said Of the 50,000 Cubans in Dade more than 100 persons from Catholic girls Academies in Fall repr.esent:d had pl~dged coop- Father BoYd,' placing a tremen- County, where Miami is located, thirty-six parishes who have successfully com pIe ted the River. These examinations are for eratlOn 10 .res~ttlmg Cuban" dous strain upon, schools and one third are children. twelve-week CCD course in the purpose of entrance require- refugees and fmdmg them homes public and private welfare agenOn the lighter' side, Father methods of teaching religion mep,ts, placement, and scholar- and employment. cies. One agency alone, operated Boyd commented that the Miami on the secondary school level. ;hip award. The conference was headed by by the Diocese' of Miami, has ex- temperature was 72 during hIs This ceremony was scheduled far 'fhe Principals at Dominican, Tracy Voorhees, appointed by pended over $256,000 in assist- staY. Cubans with whom he resus-Mary, Mount Saint Mary ex-President Eisenhower to co- ance funds arid has aided some spoke were horrified at his re- last Sat\lrday bl,lt due to inclement weather it was postponed and Sacred Hearts announce ordinate effort~ to assist exiled 35,000: persons., " p o r t s of the chilly weather "up and the program will be coo.. . that all eighth grade girls in t}1e Cubans. Voor}j,ees' was replaced ,Clothing and resettlement aN North." ducted Saturday. parochial and public schools who , ,Two courses' have been In wish to enter these schools in progress' in the diocese since $eptember 1961 must report for October, one at Saint Louis this exam at the school of their Church, Fall River, conducted by ehoice. Examinees should be in Sister James, the other at Saint &heir rooms not later tl}an 8:45. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis. Application forms are availconducted by' Sister Dolores. a'ble in the Principals' offices at Both instructors are Our Lady each of the grade schools and at of Victory Missionary Sisters the respective Academies. These stationed at Holy Trinity Cona Ghould be properly filled out and vent, West Harwich. The gradYafiled not later than March 7. Any tion exercises in Fall River will! further information may be probe a joint ceremon)" for both eured by calling at the AcacJ,.; , groups. ~ Ml:ie3.
Navy Promotion For Fall River Parish Curate to
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Fall River Priest Serves as Counsellor , On Cuban Refugee Problem in Miami ,
Entrance Exams At Acadamies
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CCD Exercises On Saturday
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"Lenten Regulations for Fast and Abstinence .. FROM ASt-{ W~DNESDAY.TO &fOLY SATURDAY MIDNIGHT, '9Q
THE ANCHOR-Dioce;e of Foil River;-Thurs., F.eb.9, 1961
·To foster the' spirit of penance and of reparation fOJP sin, to encourage self-denial and mortification and to guioo . "her 'children' in the' footsteps of. Our Divine Savior, Holy Mother Church impose~ by law the observance of fast anell abstinence. . . . Accordingto the provisions .of Canon Law, as modified through the~ use of special faculties granted by the Holt See, we, herewith publish the following regulations:
",Di'ocese of Fall· River ,.
OFFICIAL:
. 'Clergy Apl)Ointments Rev. James F. Greene, assistant, St. Joseph's Church, Taunton. Rev. James F. Kelley, assistant, St. Mary's. Church, Mansfield. . Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey, . assistant, assigned to· St. Michael's Church, Ocean Grove, but has been appointed to serve temporarily at St. M.atthieu's Church" Fall. Riv~. Appointmen~ effective Tuesday, Febru~ry 14; 1961.
ON FAST
'. Everyone over 21 and under 59 years of age is bo1mcl to observe the law of fast. , .The weekdays of Lent are days of fast. On these days' only one full meal is allowed. :Two other meatless meals, 'sufficient to maintain strength, may be take. according to one's need; but together they should Jdi equal another full meal. . Meat may be taken at 'the principal meal on a _ . of fast except Fridays, Ash Wedn'esday and Holy Saturda](. Eating between meals is not permitted; but liquids, including milk and fruit juices, are allowed. When health and ability to .work would be serious" affected, the law does not oblige. In doubt concerning fast or abstinence a parish priest or confessor should be consulted. .,
AWARD: Father (Lt. Col.) . . Francis X. Murphy, native FALL' RIVER. MASSACHUSE'rrS of Holbrook, Chief of the Persorinel . Division of Air, BISHOP'S OFFICE Force Chaplains, Washing.February 10, 1961 ton, is one of the recipients ON/ABSTINENCE of the Alexander D. Goode "Grant us, 0 Lord, to begin our Christian warfare Everyone over seven years of age is bound to obseMll with holy fasts, that as we are about -to do battle Award of the B'nai B'rith, the 'law of abstinence: with the spirits of 'evil, we· may be defended for 1961. NCPhoto; Complete abstinence is to. be ob'sE!'rved on FridaYBt through our deeds 'of self denial. Through Christ· Ash Wednesday, and Holy Saturday. On .days of complete Our Lord. 4men.". Ash. Wednesday. prayer. Mass Ordo abstinence meat and soup or gravy made from meat rna, Beloved· in Christ : FRIDAY-St. Scholastica, Virgin. not be used at alh I am asking you to approach the keeping of Lent, this. III Class. Whi~._MassProper; Partial abstinence is to be.observed on Ember Wedneeyear, in a tradit~onal Christian spirit. We '~re' living in _ Gloria;' no Creed; Common_ day and Saturday., On days of partial abstinence meat ,and perilous times. Repeatedly we have been remmdedofthat· s:;g:~A:Y-APparition'of Our soup or gravy madEl,from ~eat may be taken ONCE a dar, by the government: We ~ave been advised t:o ask "not what . Lady at Lourdes. III Class. at the principal meal. ., · We earnestly exhort the' faithful' during the Holt' the country will do for me, but what wIll I do for the White. Mass Proper; Gloria; country?" ,., ". . no Creed; Preface of Blessed . Season of Lent to attend daily Mass; to receive Holy Com. I should like to direct such' a qu.estion to those that Virgin. munion often; to take part more frequently in exercises of ,have gone soft on Lenten practices, ahdlive comfortabl~, SUNDAY-Quinquagesima Sun- piety; to give. generously to works of religion ·and charitn on dispensations. Ask not what has the Lord done for 'me day. II Class, Violet. Mass to perform acts of kindness toward the sick~ the aged' and lately, but ask what have I done for God; what in the way Proper; No Gloria; Creed; the poor;' to" practice voluntary self-denial especially 'Preface. of. Trinity. of prayer, fasts. and penance. This is the time to ask that MONDAY-Ma~s of previous regarding alcoholic drink and worldly amusements; and iN» question, as we enter upon a season supposed to brin~ .us. ,day. IV Class. Violet. Mass , pray more fervently, particularly-for the intentions of the to God. Shall our approach be with empty hands, or WIth Proper; .No Gloria or' Creed; . Holy Father. . .. , fruits of penance and prayer? . . ' . Common Preface. Obligation to' fulfill the, Easter duty may be satisfied " Our Blessed Lord preached penance. H~ exacted it of . TUESDAY-Mass' of' previous from Sunday, February 19, the First Sunday of Lent, until His followers. The whole history of Christian approach to Sunday. IV Class, Violet. Mass May 28, Trini,ty Sunday. God is written against the background: either men did Proper; No .Gloria; Second By order of the Most Reverend Bishop enance and grew up' in self-knowledge and the service of Collect St. Vale'ntine, Priest. . HUMBERTO S. MEDEIROS, P and Martyr; No Creed; ComChancei~ . God, or' they brougQ.t ultimate confusiQn and defeat to mon Preface. themselves and their times through selfish indulgence. WEDNESDAY-Ksh Wednesday. We cannot follow the Lenten Liturgy. in Church . I ClasS. Violet. Mass Proper; without being conscience-stricken if ,minded 'to spare No G~oria or Cr~ed; Preface of ST. LOUIS (NC)-More is .ex- Christian living, in fidelity • ourselves' the sacrifice involved in penance. Each day's Lent. In Masses which imme- pected of ail archdiocese that God's commandments." Mass in Lent speaks of the "fasting of the body that curbs. 'diatefy follow the Blessing and' has a cardinal to~head it, Joseph The Cardinal stressed that on~ faults and gains' virtue". To ask. that· "we who .. l,lave.l .. Distribution of Ashes, . the Cardinal Ritter said .at a :pon- Christian principles' can restore mQrtified' ourselves 'by abstinence ,may be refreshed by the Prayers a't the Foot of the tifical Mass in St. Louis, ca'the- .. peac~ and, happiness to· *be ' . .. Altar are omitt~d.·Tlie·Biessing ·dral.' , ' , '", . ' .world.' .' '. f.r.u.it. of gopd wprks!';' to ask the .Lor? to'.'s~nctify: o~lr ". 'and Distribution of Ashes. The Archbishop of. St., Louis,:'., . '.'."These: are days when ::we: . :(asts" makes sense oply when we mean It, and .lIve up' to It.' . 'THURSDAY':-ThUrsday a f t'e r who recently received bis, Red no longer stand aside a~4 eaIIl be , • "! , ' . 'Christ I;Iimself said, speaking of hypocrisy in His time' : .. ASh Wednesday. 'III Class: Hat in Rome, said h~ is' .p,r.oud ~~re: Observers," he stated. ·"W. on earth': "The men of Nineveh will rise up in judgment '," Violet. MasS Proper; No Gloria to. bring the honor ofthe..5ardi- m}l~ be lead~rs. We mus,t. s.tri.~ agalris~ this generation" and :find 'no reason' to excuse it;·- :::or Creed; Preface ()f'Lent, nalate to the St. Louis Se~.. "to.~ake our llves such an.lpspll'for they did penance when Jonah preached to them, and . ,..' ~_-~-.... But he added: "It .is, an honor .~~~ to. others, ~at they Y'~ll see ,behold a great~r than'Jonah he'r.~." (St. Luke 11 :31) .. ,The, which places a responsibility 1st In us, and because <!( CUI' same';Lord . has :Warned _repeatedly, tlIat all men will be on us' and demands more of ·us example be drawn to Christ." . '. FORTY HOURS', ',; judged according to their works. So if time is running ~out, , all in 'every way. But partic,ular-, DEVOTION ~ . it demands more o!- ·.. ~8 in as we:are told, we ought to live consistently with the prayers", we say, promising to do penance and to amend our lives.' . Feb: lo-La Salette Seminary, Ho~ can such a prayer ring true, if our ~ctions speak Attleboro. Necrology 10Qd~r ,and more truly than our words? Feb. 12--Our Lady of Fatima, . ,Plumbing :..- He~ting THE ANCHOR lis~ the an. I exhort you then, my brethren, ·to do something to _ . Swansea. niversary dates of priests who Over 35 Years prove that you do not lo.ok lightly on the holy season of Catholic Memorial Home, served the Fall River Dioeese of Satisfied Service Lent. Be more attentive to' assistance at Mass and the Fall River. ' since its formation in 19040 with the intention Utat &be sacraments. Be sure that you live with the thought of God StFa:~i~~~.Y. Convent, 8~ NO. MAIN STREET . faithful will. give them a constant in your minds. Pray more 'often,.- more fervently. Feb. 19-'St. William, Fa 11 Fall River 05 5-7497 prayerful remembra~ce." Cultivate the habit of .self-restraint especially' in .your " . 'River. ' , FEB. 10 , ..... dealings with YOul; .neighbor. Try to leave him better ,off ,.; St. James, N.ew·Bedford. Rev. John O'Connell, ..1916, . i' .than you·find.hi~,"But,.toguara;n,teeall this, make a firm "·'·St:Augustine;·Vineyard '. Founder, St. John. Evallgelist,. JEFFREY· E.' .( ~resolve tnat you are going to follow.~tbe patternlof penance,': _ Haven: -. " ,.' Attleboro. ..,. .. , ' giving proof that.you are alive ..andalert to the necessity" ',Feb. 26-St. Anthony, East FEB. 14 . of discip'lining the body,'. and bringing· it into subJ'ection," ',". " . 'Falmouth. 'Rev. Charles E. ,Clerk, )932; . '.' .St. Mar.y, No~: Attleboro. 'wtteral DOtRe. lest :having the name of Christian you might become a " Pastor,Si. Roch, Fall Ri~e~., ..' castaway. . ' -_ _- - _ - - - - - ' 560 LocUd St. · FEB. 15 , Fall River. Mass. . Be sure of' one thing:' We cannot afford to go soft Rev. Joseph G. Lavalle, .1910, :'Newman B'uilding spiritually. If natiQnal lea'ders try to train us in sacrifice, OS 2-2391 KENT (NC) - Some 2,500 Pastor, St. Matthew, Fall River. , as they profess to do, for the nation's good, how are we Rose E. Sullivan James C. Conlon, 1957, Rev. students at Kent State ' Jeffrey E. Sullivan to react to a call to self.,sacrifice for our own good? One Catholic University here, in Ohio will Pastor" St. Mary, Norto~ discipline may be thrust into our reluctant. hands. We had have a $250,000 Newman Club better take the other, willingly and with a sense of deep chapel and student. center next ' CYROURI(E. personal' need, for unless "you do penance, you shall all Fall. Construction will start this likewise perish." '(St. Luke 13 :3). , . 'Spring, Father John J. Daum, Funeral Home '. Let us then, one and all, enter honestly into our Lenten , chaplain said. The building will: 571 Second St. observances, 'confident that with God's help we may improve be located on a two-acre site H~len Aubertine Braugh 'fall River, Mass. our souls from day to day. Let us put off old habits of near the camp~. Owner 1Iond Director as 9-6072 .. self-indulgence, s? we may be clothed wit4 the Spirit and Spacious Parking Area MICHAEL J. McMAHON goodness of ChrIst. Should we do this we may not be Licensed Funeral Director WY 2-2957 unprepared for the needs of our times, nor fOUnd wanting Registered Embalme, on the last day. . 129 Allen St. New Bedford FUNERAL HOME, INC. a. llucel Bo7 - 0. LorraiDe _ Faithf1!lly yours in' Christ, . DIOCESE OF FALL RTVER
Cites ObUgotions Of Archdiocese
GEORGE M. MON.TLE
,.~
"SULLivAN':
. AUBERTINE
·Funeral Home
BROOKLAWN Bolrer t.lI'ra_
~62-:?1;
Bishop -of Fall.
Riv~
FUNERAL DIRECTORS 11 mVING'l'ON
cr.
WY 7-7830 NEW BEDFOIlD
...
1'88 ANCHOR
P.S.-In virtue, of faculties granted by the Holy ~, the , Bishop dispenses from the Laws of Fast and Abstin, ,ence 'on February 22nd and March 17th.
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D.O. SULLlYAN & SONS
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'Regl.'" emx.1-
. Asks Government To Assist Fight On Delinquency
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 9,
1961
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Asserts HOl"~;,"g Commurllitv Dyty
. WASHINGTON (NC) A bill providing Fed~!,:al assistance to state and communities to fight juvenile
ST. PAUL (NC)-A Catholie priest, appearing before the St. Paul city council, stressed the duty of the community to aid the delinquency has been introduced needy by providing public housin the U.S. Senate. ing. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd of Con"A Christian community must necticut said in introducing the assume responsibility and come bill that it would provide "Fedto the aid of its less fortunate eral assistance for projects members," said Ii'rther Blaine which will demonstrate or deBarr, assistant pastor at St. Paul velop more effective techniques cathedral. and practices in dealing with" He spoke at a city council delinquency. session held to select new pubIt also provides five million lic housing sites. A decisi"n had dollars yearly in Federal funds been deferred for several for the next five years "to help months because of objections states train qualified personnel from citizens in the neighborto work in the delinquency hoods involved. ' field," he said. During a heated five-hour Sen. Dodd is chairman of the session at which Father Barr Senate Subcommittee to Invesspoke, the council approved six tigate Juvenile Delinquency. sites. Among them was one in .toining him in sponsoring the thl: cathedral parish area which measure were fellow subcomhad been recommended by the mittee members Sens. Estes Kepnest. St. Paul had faced loss fauver of Tennessee, John. A. o~ Federal public housing funds I Carroll of Colorado and Philip if it did not approve sites for at A. Hart of Michigan. lpast 428 dwellings by Feb. 8. Sen. Dodd' noted that in the Father Barr said citizens last session of Congress the Sen~ should suppress their "selfisb ate passed a similar bill providinterests" in consldering public housing. ing $2.5 million annuall~ in F~d eral assistance to fight delInHISTORIC NIGHT: Principals in last week's historic evening ordination ceremony, Non-Catholics Acree quency. , He said the community has a left to right, Rev•. Thomas E.'Morrissey, Fall River; Rev. James F. Greene, Swansea; Crimes Increase duty to "provide for the neecU Bishop Connolly; .Rev. James F. Kelley, New Bedford. Testimony since then to the of individuals "'Ito haVe econoaubcommittee has made it clear mic problems, m~llfficient eduthat this lower appropriation. cation or fewer r.atural abYities "while necessary and' welcome, than their fellow men." was only a token recognition· of Father Barr's statement was tile vast problems to be solved," endorsed by three non-Catholic he said. " , clergymen who also spoke at the By Patricia McGowan The Senator cited "an evercouncil session - Rabbi W. increasing rise in the type, numLast week's historic evening ordination ceremony in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, Gunther Palu of Mt. Zion ber and seriousness of juvenile first in New England, was reminiscent of days of old, when young men prefaced their Temple; the Rev. Edward S. crimes, which permeate every assumption of the responsibility of knighthood by a solemn, night-long vigil before the Richards, pastor of Central Park: stratum of our society." Methodist church; and the Rev. Blessed Sacrament. It seems appropriate that the Church' should confer the awful Emery Barrett, pastor of Ep.In the 11 years between 1948 and 1959, juvenile crime il\;'_ responsibility of the prlest. rolled out, all joined in petition of ordination, "the moment in worth Methodist church. ereased 177 per cent, he said. hood at night. So many of for the young men beginning the which that wonderful transfor"Even where· there are instiher great moments have ascent to the priesthood. mation takes place in the soul tutions for the rehabilitation of come in the hours bf darkVisible Ch~rch of the ordinand which makes delinquent children, there is a "As you open and shut with him 'priest forever according to critical shortage of properly ness. . 1 k eys th e VlSl . 'blec h urc•., h the order of Melchisedech.' trained pel'sons to care for these It was at night that the Infant . matena children," he added. Lord came to, Bethlehem. It was let it also be your endeavor by "The bishop imposes both his .at night that He gave us the your word and example to shut hands. upon each ordinand in Commercial • Industria' . Sacrament of His' Body and to the devil and open' to God the utter silence and after him all Institutional nlood. It was ,at ~i~ht that He '. invisible house of G?d, na:;nel y , .priests present do the same; then agonized in the Garden. ' the hearts of the faithful, the the bishop and all priests' raise. Painting and Decorating A ., t· tIt k ' . porters were told. , their right hands and hold them NORTH CANAAN (NC)""7"The nd It wasa mgh, as, wee,. "Receive and be readers of the extended over 'the candidates. 135 Franklin Street first "letter" sent out f~om the that three young men of the d f G d" was the message All is husheci: in silence~it is as Diocese became other Christs. wor o' 0 , ' . .. l:all River OSborne 2-1911 new U. S. post oUice here was . Al . th t" f for lectors; whIle exorcists were if the heavens open('cJ and the ways movmg, e emo Ion o . . .'i ·t f HIS . 't . I addressed to God. .'. the rites of ordination seemed . re~mded to. cast lmqUI! rom . 0 y pln came down in vislb e Father Francis A. Hale of St. t I"t d k . their own mmds and bodies that form to take possession of His . ht . d b th joseph's church gave the invoca- h elg en~ y e ~ ar I aI', might be fitted to command elect." tion in the form of a letter at the ness outSIde St. ~ary s. Cathedral, evil spirits in others. A.colytes What a moment for memory! post office dedication ceremonBefore the climactic moment were to walk as children of the In the words of' the Easter Lit-' ies. o~ ordinati?n came the confer- '. light in virtue of their duty to urgy, "0 vel'e beata nox" - 0 '''Dear God: rln~ o~ mmor orders and' the light the candles of the church. trUly blessed night! ~We your devoted children in· or.d lila tlOn of a deacon: All conFor the deacon as for th'e' new the C;naan lands of your vinetrlbuted to the solemmty of the pries, . ts th e g I ' LI'tany ' of the h orlOUS yard, would send up this letter of A. our. Saints was chanted, with all prayer today as the first letter As the' lovely Latin of the priests present joining in petiInc. , from our stately new post office. pra!ers for Porters, Lectors, Extion to God, through intercession MOVERS: "You' are ever and, always ill orclsts, Acolytes and Deacon. of the Blessed Virgin and all the. SERVING loving and unending communicasaints, for protection against all tion with, us. And, we pray that. Fall River, New Bedford evils of body. and soul. "The passing through this beautiful NATURAL GAS Cape Cod Area whole Church Triumphant is buildit\g our communicationa Agent: called upon to intercede w'ith BUZZARDS BAY with our fellow men will bear God that' He may give worthy AERO MAYFLOWER GAS 'COMPANY something of that same love that A special course for nurses . ministers.to the Church Militant." Hyannis....,.Spring 5-1070 TRANSIT CO.' INC. unites you with us. . employed in hospitals and vari-' Moat' Solemn Momen. "We pray that the 'Dear Sirs" 'ous fields' of public 'heaith will Nation-wide Moven BUJ:Zard~ .Bay-Plaza 9-47 During' the chanting of the and 'Very truly yours' will be . be' offered at Stonehill College WYman 3-0904 . Litany, the ordinands lay prosmore than mere words here in beginni.;g next week: . 304 Kempton S•. New Bedford trate on the floor of the sanctuary, BOTTLED GAS Canaan. A first-semester 'course ill as·8 symbol of :their unworthi"We pray that all our messages. LIGHTHOUSE will help to bind all of' us, English composition will be of- , ness. Following the Litany came the through ch~rity, to you God, our fered to nurses who wish to be, GAS COMPANY Father, and to Christ, our. gin work toward a bachelor'!! most solemn moment of the rite arniouthport-Forest 2-3~9 Brother. degree. Credits for this course WILLIAMS PROPANE "Very truly yours, The people will be acceptable for later' 'of North Canaan. Amen." transfer to the collegiate schools GAS CO., INC: of nursing in Boston, it was anFalmouth -Kimball 8-4515 Olt BURNERS nounced by the Rev. Aloysius Also complete Boiler-BurDer E. Cussen, C.S,C., vice- preside'nt NELSON L. P. Everything 'or Furnace Units. ElTiclent and dean at Stonehill. GAS CO, INC. low cost beating. Burner and in UNION CITY (NC) - The Registration for the special Hyannis-Spring 5-1190 fuel oil sales and service. Photo Supplie.s Lenten drama "Veronica's Veil" course will be conducted Monwill open its 47th consecutive daf evening, Feb. 13, at Holy SUPERIOR FUEL CO. 245 MAIN ST. 480 Mt, Pleasan¢ Street season here in New Jersey on Cross Hall on the Stonehill camWareham-Cypress 5-0093 Falmouth Ki 8-1918 Kew Bedlprd WY 3-%66'7 Saturday, Feb. 11. pus. .further inform~tion .is More than 21,000 persons available from Father Cussen or' viewed the 21 performances in the College Admissions Office. 1960, and more than 1,500,000 have seen the drama since it was first staged, according to Father Hubert Al'1iss, C.P., the producer. IN NEW BEDFORD He described the playas AmerDIAL 3-143~ ica's original and oldest Passion play. More than 260 volunteers are 273 CENTRAL AVE. preparing for the production in the "Veronica's Veil Theater," NEW BEDFORD built for the play in 1916. The . IN FALl RIVIER Passionist Fathers produce' this D1AL '2-1322 Of 5-7620 WY 2-6216 playas one way of fulfilling their vow to preach the Passion of Christ.
Evening Ordi.nation Historic Event in Diocese; Echoes Great M01nents in Life of Christ
DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE
Post Office Gets Letter to God
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Nurses' Cou'rse At Stonehill
47th Straight Season For Lenten Drama
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YAKIMA (NC)-For a twC)year old, the weekly newspapelf of the Diocese of Yakima took a mighty big step. . , By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenn.edy. The usual circulation of Our A novel which did not attract the attentIon It deserved Times jumped slightly more than was 'God's Frontier', by, a young Spanish 'priest, Father 10,000 a week to almost 94,000But it was only for one week. Jose Luis Martin Descalzo. Another book by the same au\hor, Ray Ruppert, managing editor, is now published. Calle~ 'A Pri~l:lt Confesses' (Academy explained that a sample copy of Guild Press. $3.95), it pqrgins to fill with dust and their the newspaper was sent to every ports to be an account, some cassocks to hav:e, hole~ in the,,?, , household-non-Catholic as well of it in diary form, of his priests ought to remember theU' las Catholic - in the central Washington area comprising the ., th . th . ordination as subdeacons. Yes; last few m~n ,s m e Semlthey also dreamed of a warm diocese. inary and hIS fIrst few months house supper ready on the table, Main purpose of the huge In the priesthood. ' some'children to kiss, a pair of mailing was to invite non-Cath"Purpo~ts," ~ say, because, al- warm slippers on getting up ill olic families to take {lart in though It IS the morning." "Operation Understanding," conpres~nted from , Alm'ost Hysterical sisting of open houses a.t every the start as a The matter of children tempoCatholic church in the diocese personal recor.d, rarily obsesses him. It is in a on Feb. 26. ' there occur~ ~~ man's natut:e to long 'for fatherThe Yakima Diocesan Council ,the very ofp pasg hood 'of Catholic Men and the Yakima a couple . ' to be perpetuated in oHDiocesan Council of Catholic hi ch sprmg. ,88ge~ w, The' author quotes w!th gushWomen jointly are sponsoring y startm.gl co~ing admiration' 'a poem. written the project. It will include' a t r a d I C t ,thIS by one of his classmates, in 30-minute tour of the church ~trongl~ ngIVen which this young man sees in following a reception at the llTIpresslO. . th fancy the children he will never parish hall. TROOP RECEIVES FLAG: The Boy Scout troop of' A second purpose of the mail-' . have, calls, by. name, and presented a 50 ~tar jng of Our Times, explained t to another priest, the author mouqls over theIr beIng doo~ed St. Michael's Parish, Fall River, Mr. non-Catholic Ruppert, wascommunity to introdu.ce :~s that he'is writing a book to.liOthingness.,The poem strIk~S flag Monday by the :Frank Allen 'Wilco?C P ost 126 ~ A merlcan Ute to nd adds "It's a ,strange book, thIS reader, at any.rate, as hee.tic , Legion. Left to right: Henry Letendre, sco~t master; Msgr. the newspaper, particularly :_ a b t the' priesthood. It is called and almost, hysterIcal, the ~IV Humberto S~ Medeiros, ,pastor, and ,Frank Cambone, a memits coverage and comment OIl aA ou ' d even over Priest 'Confesses and I d 0 no t ·109 to excess, an . mto the abyss of the nonsensIcal, of ber" St. Anne's Parish, Fall R~iv.:e:::r::.:....---.:_ _.....:.._·;;.st..;,a..;,te,;...;;a_n_d_l_o_ca_l_i_ss_u_e_s_. '_ h t it is myself. On one know w a it seems to, be a nove, lan 'Ide,a,wI·th some interest. hand '(sic)
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on the other an autobiograp}ly and then again it could b~ a sermono T~ere. is .r~,ther a htUe, of everythIng In It. Composite Charaete~ He also writ~s, ."T~ere IS very little fancy or fICtIon. In t~e ~oo~, but not everything IS SaId ~n It relates to me. The ,Jose LUIS of , the book is not L He is a' p~oduct of adding Jose Luiz plus RIcardo plus Manuel plus Alfred plus Julio plus Fidel plus ~t~. ' "This is a book conJoIn~I~ ,experienced and almos,t COn?Olntly written as well. All that IS here lived has been lived by us, but not always by me. And even the letters that are transcribed we~e written to some one of the;,e m the group, but not all to me. At any rate, .t~e ~somew~at' synthetic Jose LUIS IS, III the fIrst pages, making a ~ra\n j~urney ~o his home town III Spam. He ~s coming from :ftome, W:lere he I! attending a seminary. He has been away for two years. Ordination to the ~rIe".thood is approaching, but hIS wI~1 have to wait beyond that o~ h~s classmates, since Jose LUIS IS under the canonical age. }'eels Cut Off On leave from th~ sheltered life in his Roman colleg~, Jose Luis dressed in clerical attire, has ~ chance to mix with his own countrymen again. B~cause of his garb; they think him already a priest. They regard him as one apart. and withdraw from easy contact with him: He is tormented by the recurring question: "What do they think of me, that is, of us, of priests?" He concludes that priests are generally regarded as queer birds. In some cases, the opinfon has a bitterly hostile -tinge; in others, it is dispassion'ate but firm conviction. Thill saddens him, for it mak~s him feel cut off, solitary, and 'unable to reach people and do for them what he is meant to do and' wants to do. Lonely Life Later he is overwhelmed by realization of the loneliness of 'the priest. He dramatizes (in-deed overdramatizes) this, whe~ he considers priests'graves. "It has always been terrifying for me to go to cemeteries," he says, "and see that the only ,graves that no one visits, the only one without flo~ersare • . . ours. We give ourselves to all men to such 'an extent that no one feels it is his concern when he sees' our forsaken graves. ' "And who loves an old priest? When their mothers and their sisters die, and the house be-
'l,700th Meeting 'PORTLAND (NC)-Meli1bers of Holy Redeemer parish COITference of the Society o~ St. Vincent de Paul conducted their 1 700th consecutive weekly meetj~g here. All past ~resi~ents SInce 1927 attended.
In Eternal Record, But then Jose Luis com~s· to appreciate something of ,the spiritual fatherhood of the PrI~t, of the very' real, profound, 10comparably strong, ,and ~ver~a~t 'ing relationship whIch hIS mlmstry effects, with all manner and any number of people. ' Through his priesthood, he peoples heaven, and if his name does not go down in the gene~ ations' of men, it lives forever m the eternal record., " . Further observation and medltation make Jose Luis perceive vididly the role of the priest as~, another Christ (the actuality, not the cliche) and the qualities which the priest must have. In a series of paragraphs well worth reading often and d~el~ I iog upon thoughtfully, It IS pointed out that the priest ~ust love must have exceptIonal 'faith and should enjoy an altogether singular happiness. It ,is brought out as well that, far from being on the sidelines of life the priest is in the midst of it.'
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Board Pr~poses Subsidy"" Plan For Students
ALBANY 4(NC) The, New York State, Board. of Regents has, proposed that ..... 'not less than $200 a year be granted to stude.nts .enrolled in private and publIc hIgher learning institutions in this state. The board. did not attem~t to fix a' specific pay scale but unofficial :figures showed the plan would involve an outlay of $41 million' a year in tuition: grants with $25 million go~ng to. st~ dents who attend pnvate mstItutions. More students in the state are attending private rath~ than'public institutions. Bypass Provision The regents' proposed plaft 'would bypass the Constitution?l provision against .use of P?blIC funds for sectanan purposes. The plan would make the grants directly to each student rather than_ to the institution h«;: attends. The proposal was adopted unanimously by the regents and was forwarded to James E, 'Allen, Jr., state education com~issioner, who made the proposal public. The plan w01}ld be restricted to New ,York State residents. It would exclude stu,dents for the miliistl:y or the priesthood.
'Honest' Book As for the actual ordinati~n, it was intensely emotional for Juse Luis. He had Jhoughts, fee!ings, the shedding of tears which the more stolid among us must confess we did not e;xperience on a like occasion '" But 'we know something of what he meant when he says, "It was ... the most complete moment of my life, the moment in which I understood ,the world, the explanation of thi~gs, the marrow of existence itself." . His first solemn Mass, home in 'Spain, coincides ~ith 'the St. Patrick's Conference, St. fiftieth anniversary of the first Mass of a priest-uncle. It is Vincent de Paul Society, will be host to the Fall River Particular movingly depicted, as is his Council of the' organization at giv'ing of ,Communion for the '7:'45 Tuesliay night, Feb. 14. A first time to his parents. ' meeting in the school hall on This is an honest' bOOK. one which will stir up any priest and Slade Street will follow Benewill ,afford any lay p<~rson in- diction in the' basement chapel of St. Patrick's' Church, South .sights which .:ould heighteD his" Main Street. 'esteem for the priesthoodaAd Returns of tickets' for the his sympathy for priests. , Bishop's Ball should' be made at the meeting and members are reminded that Sunday, Feb. 19, the 'first Sunday of Lent, is a , AUSTIN (NC)-Four central festival of St. Vincent de Paul day on which members Texas Catholic colleges and uni- and' attending Mass, and receiving versities will take part in closed circuit television instruction Communien in their ' parish churches'may gain: many indulnext fall. The pilot project is a three- ,gences. A requiem Mass for deceased campus network now operating 'members will be offered at 6, in 'Austin. Courses originate at the Uni- 'Saturday morning, Feb. 25 at versity of Texas and are beamed 'St. Vincent's Home,. North Main to St. Edward's University; op- Street. . er:;ted by Holy Cross Fathers, and Huston-Tillotson, a college fm colored students. Bishop Cassidy Council, SwanPlans to extend the network 'sea Knights of Columbus, will , next Fall will add eight colleges hold its annual Mardi Gras party and universities. Included will at 8 Saturday night in the Swanbe St. Mary's University, Our sea Council Home. Dancing, a Lady of the Lake College-and In- buffet and awarding of prizes carnate Word College. all of San will be 'featured, with, proceeds, Antonio, in addition to St. Ed- to benefit the unit's Charity ward's. fund.
Vincentians to Meet At St. Patrick's.
Texas Universities ' Plan TV Courses
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",DORMITORY, REFECTORY, CHAPEL ODe room serves this triple purpose lor the CARMELITE SISTERS of EDAKUNNA in INDIA. Their ODe room house II called 001' Laeb' of 'Perpetual Hefp Convent., .The SIsters, have occupied, UJis dwelling since 1944 when t.hey began teaching' in the parochial' &Chool. Converting the room dally from one use to another is not only. fune-consuming and inconvenient but .. It Is not fitting that the room 11180 has to serve as II Chapel. It's multi-, purpose use was to be only temporal')' _ixteen years ago! Unless financial Tilt Hrl..'Fathtrt MiIsion AiJ help is forthcoming from outside lRJ llOurcea It will sUD be in use "temfir tht Orimfa/ Church Porarily" many years from now. The Cailiolics of the village have been saving money since 1944 and they have accumulated about $1,000. It wlU take $4,000 more to build a Chapel and put an addition on the present building to make better' living quarters for the Sisters. Any help t.hat you . might give will be appreciated.
ONE QUARTER A WEEK
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put aside during the six weeks of Lent would make a fine gift , for 'the Missions at Ear,ter time., If enough people would send us at Easter, as a strlngllls.q gilt, six quarters saved during Lent we would be able to start building up our "Urgent Needs Fund." Needed repairs to, existiJ11r Novitiate buDdlngs and the necelllity of erecting new ones is a great' drain on any Religious Community, particularly on Communities In Mission territor')'. MARY'S BANK is our NEAR EAST' MISSIO~, CLUB estabUshed for the particular purpose of giving help In this regar~ The dues are' one dollar' a mon tho We are pleased, to recei vi! , new members in any of our Clubs. Could you make a monthly deposit in MARY'S BANK?" ' GOD'S PLAN for our salvation, reqUlrtng a.:: It does priests and religious, calls for-good Mothers and Fathers to bring into the world those who serve God In this 1'r'~-":"'"~mllF special manner, generous boys and ,girls to offer themselves as priests and reiigious. II devoted laity whose generous financial support llupplies all the material needs of the Churcb., Among the , benefactors of our Association we have' lood people who help to build and maintain seminaries and novitiates through dues of one, dollar a month sent to MARY'S BANK (for novitiates) or the CHRYSOSTOM CLUB (for seminaries); other benefactors are able, to pay for the com-, pIete training ofa seminarian ($600) or a novice ($3001. W1latever ,help you can give in the great work of preparing priests and religious will bring, you much merit. SISTER CELINE lind SISTER VALENTINE are novices of the SALVATORIAN MISSIONARY SISTERS in LEBANON; GEORGE MADATHIPA. RAMBIL lind JOHN KUZHIMANNIL 8J:e students for the ' priesthood-at SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY in' INOlA. Could YOU ,pay for the education of one of these boys or girls?
DURING LENT Could. you send a donation1..To help build or maintain a Church. Sebool, Hospital? !. To educate a seminarian or a novice? 'a. To provide a Sacred Article fora Misston Chureh1 4. To help us care for Palestine Refugees? Missionaries will be' grateful for any sacriJiee that you might make for them and for th'eir work during the Lenten Se.ason. PLEASE REMEMBER GOD AND HIS MISSIONS IN YOUR LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT.
~'l1ear5stODssions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPIELLMAN, Presidont ,
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Magr. Jo•.,. T.' Ijn. Nat'l Sec', Sescl 011 c_lII.olcatlo.. to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
'~e~ K.exington Ave. at 46th St.' New York 17, N. Y.
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The Particular Council of St. VinCent de Paul Society of the Attleboro Area sponsors Legion of Decency List as a public service to readers of The Arachor.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 9, 1961
Old Testament Translators Plan New N.T'. Tra'nslation
Legion of Decency A-I -
Gargo Groat Do,. IGgh TImo "visiblo Invadors
A-2 -
WASHINGTON (NC) - Another volume of the first English translation of the Bible made by Catholics from the original languages will be published February 15. It is volume four, containing the prophetical books from Isaia to Malachia - the spelling menon, is expected to be pub.given in the new translation lished in a' few Years. for Isaias and Malachias, New Testament This volume will be accomfollowing more exactly the
Unobjectionable for General Patronage
Alamo Beyond tho TIme Barri... Big Night Blood and Steel Broth of a Boy Cimarron Colsack. Desert Attack Foco of Fire Flaming Star for tho Firat TIme 'rockles Gallant Hours
Libel The Magic Ba,. Little Savago Tho Sand Castlo Michaol Stragoff The Sword a!,d th' Dragat Mighty Cru.aders Tho Toacher and the Modom TImea Mirado Nooso for a Gunman Thirteen Fighting Mea Pa.sport to China 13 GhOSh Pope Thirty Power Among Men Threo Come to Kift Serengeti Shall Not Ole Tombo,. and the Snow Quoen Town Like Alice Story of Mankind Twolvo Houra to Km Swan lake Twelvo to the Moo. Ten Who, Dared Undor 10 Flags Tho Bo,. Who Stole a Wackie.t Ship in 'tiM ,.,." Million Walk Tall The Flvto and Tho A....owWarrior. Slave Girl The lost World Wizard of Baghdad
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Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
lottie of the Sexe. Blueprint for Robbery larn to be loved Iridal Path 'lvt Not For M. Cago of Evil Crazy for love Curso of the Undead Devil'. Dl.ciplo Four-D Man Goneral Della Rovon! Giant Behemoth Giant of MarothOQ Goliath ond tho Dragon Hannibal
Holiday Far.lovars Secret of the Purple Reef Home b the Hero Seven Ways from Sundo_ I. Aim at the Stan Sho Demons lII"gal Surrender HeR Jail Breakers Tarzan the Magnificeat Journey to tho lost City Ton Seconds to Hoi! Magnificent SevOQ The Tormented Mario Octobro , TIme Machine Midnight lace Trapped. in Tangien Miracle Village of the Damned Mountain Road Walking ,Target Mummy Walk like a DragOl'l Night Fightors Wild and th" Innocent Pay' or Die World of Apu ' Prisoner of tho Volga White Warrior School fM Scoundrels
Unobjectnoll1labRe foll' Adults
A-3 AO In A Night's Work All tho Fine Young Cannib<*-l Angry Hills Big Deal on Madonna Streot Collog.. Confidential Covor Girl KiII"r Crana. Are Flying Crimson Kimono lEnd of Innocenco bodus lFacts of Lifo ./Faot and Sexy !Follor in tho Blood four Fast Guns ~ Blows iAl>ur Skulls of Jonathan Drako P'ronch Mistross Graso is Groonor ~ol: is a City IiOOraes Die YounG
Ho Who Mu.t Die Homo From the Hill Hou.o of Intrigue Hypnotic Eyo Idiot I'm All Right, JacL: Magician Make Mine. Minh: Man Who Could Cheat Death Man Who Understood Womon Murder. Inc. Music Bolt Kid North by Northwe.t Nudo in a White Car Odds Against TomorroVi Ono Foot in Hell Once Moro With Fooling Il<iru Our Man Ie> Havana Possessors Rue de Porio
Spartacus Savage Innocenlll Seven Thieves That Kind of Woman The Angel Wore Red The Captain'. Tablo Tho Unfaithfuls . Tho Young One Thirs! Voice 0 This Earth is Mine Threat Three Men in a Iloo:.1 Tiger Bay , Tune. of Glory Touch of larceny Upstairs and Downstalro Why Must I Dio Virgin Island. Vi;gin Spring (prints .hoWQ in the United State~ Wild Strawberries Wonderful .Country Young Philadelphiano
Se]]parate CBassifica tion ~atomy
of a Murdor-Subjoct mattor exceed. bounds of moral acceptability Gd proprloty ,k:> tho maao media of entertainment.
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Objectioillable inu Part for All
DOIil Gun., Girlo and Gang.tots Rally Round the Flag, Bo". Boat Genoration H Man ... Rebel Breed Belovod Infidol Happy Anniversary Riot 1ft Juvenilo Pri_ Betwoon Timo and Eternity Hood of a Tyrant RiSE> and Fall of B1.... Angel Herculo. Unchained leg. Diamond BIuoboard's Ton Home Beforo Dark Road Racers HoneymoON> Horrors 0: the Block Museum ,Rookie 110m Reckle.. Hauao on tho Waterfront Room 43 \ Bramblo Bush Hira.hima. Mon A _ Room at the Top Ir_th of Scandal I. Mob.ter September Storm IIvcket of Blood Intont to KiU Sex Kitten. Go To CoReee Iuttorfield 8 Inside the Mofla Sign of the Gladiator . Can Can It Started With II Kist Salomon and Sheba Can.., on, NurMI It Takes II Thief Some Cam. ~unning arwl of Horrors Jack tho Ripper' Same Like It Hot Crack in the M;,;ar Jazz Boat Son. and laverl e;,y feW Happy la.t Mil. Squad Car Daddy.O let's Mal.. loft Stud. lonie_ Desire' if! the ~ lil' AbnOf" . Subwa,. k. doo SIr, Eighth Day of tho Weeit Macumba lo.. . Summer Place Bectronic Mon.te1 Monia Surprise Package Elmer Gantry. Middle of the Night Take a Giant.,Stop Female Missile to the Moo. The Entertaif!er .......e and the FUesh Millionaire.. . The Marriago Ga RovDd Elfhot' and Tho ICing Naughty Gilt Three Murdere.ses R1fe Branded W _ Never So Few Tall Story Pf"e Gates To HoIl Of love and l.uct Tunnel of La.. Po<bidden Fruit Party Girl Virgin sOcrifice .....nkon.toin·. Daughter Patinum High School What Price Murder Prom Hell To Eternity Perfect Furlough Where the Bay. Are Prom tho Torra", Portrait of A Sinncw Whore the Hot Wind B10wa Gang.tor Story Pretty 80,. Floyd Who Was That lady' Gene Krupa Story Prime TIme Wicked Ga 10 Hell Of BI..... Private Lives of Ada. Wife for a Night G;r1 if! Room 1~ and e.. Wild River Girh Town Psycho Wind Across the Everglaclee Goeat St. Lauis Ilcmk Push.r World of Suzy Wong , Robbery Queen of Outor Spaco Young Captives Goddon of lovo Rat Race Young Jesso Ja.... Go Naked if! too World
And Quiet Flows
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CAdorablo Croatures And God Created Woman laby Doll led of Grow led, The Como Danco with Me Desperato Wom-. Tba Ixpres.o Bongo Fle.h .. Weak French lino. The I'rvits of Summfl1 Game of lovo Garden of Edon I Am a Camera Illicit Interludo La Rondo Ie Plaisir C) Lettora from My Windmill Uano. Junglo Goddell Lo.o Gamo Lovo I. My Profosslon Lady Chatterloy's lavor Lovor's Roturn Io¥ors, Tho
Condemnecll
Mademoiselle Gobetto . Raven Magdalena Ro.",nna Mating Urge Savage Eye Miller'. Beautiful WIfe Savage Triangle Miss Julia Sevon Deadly Sifts. Mtsou Scarred Mom and Dad Sen.ualita (Barefoot Moon Is Blue Savage) Noked Night She Shoulda Said No Nona Sin. of the Borgias Never _ Sunday Smile. of a Sum!,,8r ~ Night Heaven Fell Stella Strollers, Th. No Orchid. for Mi.. Blandish Third 513x One Summer of HapplnossThree Forbidden Stories O.car Wilde Thrill That Kills, The Paris Night Trial. of Oscar Wild. Passionate Summ.... Violated Plea.el Mr. Balzac Wasted lives and The Pat Bouillo (lovers ·of Pari.) Birth of Twins I Way. of lovo Privato Live. of Adam and Evo Women Without Nom.... Privata Property Young and the Damned, Ths Quo.tion of Adultery ,
Special CDassificationu Girls of tho Night Crowning Ex90rionce
Ro.tricted to a Specializod and Maturo Audienca
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HONOR EDITOR: Clarence M. Zens, managing editor of the Catholic Standard, newspaper of the Wa~hing ton archdiocese, is one of seven Marquette University 'College of Journalism alumni named to receive the school's ann u a 1 Byline Awards. NC Photo.
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BOSTON (NC)-Richard Cardinal Cushing has urged the United States government to cut off aid to communist Poland and Yugoslavia and spend the money in Latin America instead. The Archbishop of Boston urged these actions as a response to the "hot-cold war" which he said was launched against the U. S. by the communist powers" during a meeting of Communist party leaders in Moscow last November. He said in an article in the Boston Globe that the manifestoes issued by the communist chiefs at that meeting serve as warning that the Reds are still seeking defeat of the free world behind a cloak of "coexistence." Counter Threat To counter the threat Cardinal Cushing suggested such steps a.!l strengthening the FBI and "the House and Senate committees aga.inst subversion;" supporting legislation to "wipe out those Supreme Court decisions which the Bar Association -itself has found to be helpful to the Krell\lin followers in thiS country;" and seeking expuls~on of Hungary from the United Nations.
Solons Consider Two Bus Bills AUGUSTA (NC) - Two bills on public school bus transportation of children in private schools are before the Maine legislature, scene of controversy over the issue a year ago. Both Republicans and Demo.crats had pledged re-introduction of a bus bill after a bill authorizing· towns to provide rides with tax refunds was narrowly defeated in a special session in january, 1960. The Republican' mea sur e , sponsored by.Sen. Sylvio J. Gil. . vert of Augusta,. calls' for local option on providing bus transportation. It does not promise state subsidies to towns which do offer rides to the private and 'parochial school pupils. The Democratic proposal, sponsored by Rep. Melvin Lane of Waterville, also provides local option on the issue, but Includes state SUbsidies.
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spelling given the prophets by St. Jerome. It is another step forward in III monumental project by scholars of the Catholic Biblical Association of the United States, working under the sponsorship of the U.S. Bishops' Committee for'the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. Distinctive Mark The method of tr"--"lation, returning to the original languages and oldest texts, is a distinctive mark of the American project. Other translations, such as the Douay-RheiJY'o or the version by the late Msgr. Ronald Knox of England, are b<>c"-'I on the Latin translation the Vulgate carried out by St. Jerome in about 406 A.D. Although the new volume is numbered as the f""rth, it is .actually the third to be published. ]First Volume In 1952, volume one, containing the first eight books of the Old Testament. Genesis to Ruth, appeared. Volume three, containing the sapiential books, Job to Sirach, was published in 1955. Translators skipped volume two, scheduled to .contain the historical section from the Book of Kings to the Book of Esther, because they felt there was a greater need for a new translation of the sapiential books than of the historical books. The new text in modern English is a translation and n01 III free paraphrase, translators emphasize: The final volume of the Old Testament, Kings to Paralipo-
Chaplain Aboar~ Santa Maria RECIFE (NC) - Passengers and crew aboard the hijacked Portuguese liner Santa Maria might have been low on food and water, but they still had the Mass. The '%l,OOO-ton ship has a permanent chapel, and Father Xavier Irigoyen, of Oyarzun, Spain, was aboard as chaplain for the passengers and crew. The Spanish priest had signed OIl the Santa Maria to become adept in speaking Portuguese. His long-range goal Is to go as a missionary to Angola. Portugal's big West African colony. The Santa Maria released her 607 passengers here, 11 days after the rebel band led by Henrique Galvao had seized the ship in the Carribean.
panied by a new translation of the New Testament from the Greek to replace the Confraternity version published in 1941. This was based on the Vulgate and has '~~'-i more than 1,000,000 copies. Father Louis F. Hartman, C.SS.R., of the Catholic University of America here, Is chairman of the editorial board for the project. Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan, chairman of the university's department of semitie languages, is vice chairman. The printer is St. Anthony's Guild Press of Paterson, N. J. Pope Pius XII The translators' return to the original languages follows 11 recommendation by Pope "';lIS XII in his 1943 encyclical on Biblical studies, "Divino Afflante Spiritu." The Pope said that the "original text, which, having been written by the inspired author Himself, has more authority and greater weight than e""" the best translation, whether ancient or modern."
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LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Foodl and medical supplies from the worldwide relief agency of American Catholics have been rushed to the 'Congo, where hun. dreds of civilian refugees from the new nation's civil war have been dying daily of disease and starvation. American Warships brought the supplies from Togo, about 1,200 miles to thEL northwest. They are being distributed through the United Nations. First Shipment The first shipment of supplierl from Catholic Relief ServicesNational Catholic Welfare Conference 'included 500 tons of cornmeal, 50 tons of powdered milk and 500 tons of medicines such as multivitamins, sulfa drugs and antibiotics. Meanwhile, CRS-NCWC is organizing a permanent agency in the Congo for distribution of relief supplies.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.; F.eb. 9, 1961
CATHOLIC PRESS MON T·H
Lent and· The Anchor ,.
How to connect The. Anchor subscription drive with the beginning of Lent? Not too difficult a task at all. . L~nt ~s a time of mission, when every Church member tries to re-create within himself the spirit and virtues of Christ. This is done positively by knowing Christ better and living His life more completely. It is done negatively by the use of mortification to transform the "oldman" and .' . . to root out obstacles to the Christ-life. The Anchor is a help to the -positive approach to Lent. It widens the mind to make the reader, both more "Catholic!' and more "catholic" in his Catholicism. It aims at information and instruction and edification. It is a unifying force in the Diocese, reminding each that he is a social spiritual being living as a member of a corporate .body, which body is nothing less than the Mystical or Social Body of Christ. ' th . th t' . b tLtd h Th IS, en, IS e con~ec IOn e ween en an T e Anchor. Enough said?
\ ?' WhY SU~h Statements. .
enmOlt9hthE WuJt With thE ChWlch
By ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA Catholic University
TODAY ST. CYRIL, BISHOP, CONFESSOR, DOCTOR. The .Sower works through' human instr~ ments, vessels of c~ay, as through this great fifth century teacher of Christ. There is good soil, the Church is saying, that has not been made fruitful because the Word, the seed, has not reached it through the Christian people. The salt has lost its strength, the light is hidden;, But with the e:l6ample of eyri! Christians can be stirred to a new effort, until they can say with Paul in today's Epistle, "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept. the faith." TOMORROW ST. SCHOLASTICA, VIRGIN. St. Benedict's sister and matrlarch of Benedictine sisters, Scholastica's vocation is an important part of the Christian tradition. It is One way of preparing the earth for the seed of the Gospel. Vocation is the most common thing in the Church of Christ. Everyone has it. And no
U.S. News & World Report for the fi~t week of February had. a summary of opinion from many American ~~A·;,t;-.business men and executives who have spent years .in '/4fl~ar .;i;.:.-I. • South American countries. The jnterviews with t h e s e ' - " .. {fjl/ ,0//', various leaders of industry were aimed .at sounding them .out on the stability of investments in those countries and "~n tP 18 the prospects of growth. U IoYiii One such gentleman, .identified only as a "U. S. one vocation, whether it be that . M . f . of Sister or Brother, layman or · t ' '. b ' manu f ac urer, m usmess mexIco or 15 years," had a priest, offers a built-in guaran-· disturbing answer to the question,. "What, in general, are By Msgr. George G. Higgins : " . 1ee of salvation: the big problems., that have to be overcome in Latin Director, NCWC Social Action Department SATURDAY ·America?" To this he said: "Mexico has taken a step·that In January 1960,theU.S.Departmentof Labor reported THE APPEARANCE OF THE : the other countries will have to follow. That's'the separation that 'A~ericanunions su~fered a declipe' in dues-paying BLESSED VIRGIN MARY. Th" .. ' . b . h' b t 1956 d'1958 ' . . - . celebration of the Lourdes vi&- . of c)mrch and state. It has to' ~ accomplished before you . rnem ers Ip e ween . an ; reversmg a trend that, ion~ is a reminder to Christian. get any real progress." " : .had existed for almost two decades. One of the principal Uiat all history is sacred historj, ·What a thought-provoking statemet;lt i Is it simply on.e reasons for this. •. '.IS.to •asw k h'y. they. that history is in the hand cil' . . 'decline , has' " ,b est answer of those generalities thrown out without much thought? Is -be.~n the faIlure. of. the, shoul.~n'tbeor.ganized.Theu_sual. God". The' world, then, for the ,... . it the product of a'biased and religiously prejudiced mind? American labor movement answer.to ~he latter q,-,es~ion is, Christian; is not simply a place 'I 't th t k f t' i .' T . . . ' ," . ' that collar )Yorkers ar~ fu»Y,. 'of evil and suffering, a sort oi '. 8 I e S oc answer 0 . an l-C erlca ,1S)ll commg:' from- ap' .' to organize 'so-called whl~e . capable. of. protecting their. own apperldage to ~e divine' plaD, atmosphere that has been saturated. with that ,disease for eollar w~rkers.· who 'now 'out.. interests by means of individuai but the sacred site of salvation, : several generations? Or is it the reaction of ~:ri '·lul.sym- number' blue collar workers and bargaining . t}ie aren ll ~fman's pilgrimage, h t' A ' . d t . . . . the .matter . out of- which tIM t p'a e lC merlCan mm ,. 0 a temperament and culture that . are rapidly in'. Individuality Disappea -,' ~D!ing .kingdom \viiI.. be ~ · be does not understand? Is it a quick indictment' of a ere a sin g, at . i d . culture that is alien to the accuser? the"expense"of This was po~ibly true earlier . one. SUNDAY . manual work'when white collar work· was of QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY• These are questions that shoo.ld be answered. And hl·s. . ers, even in the . an individual character,' but, as God is love. He does' not mereli -is a statement that should not be allowed to p'ass unchal- man. u f a c ,. M r.· K assa1ow pom . t s ou t , "M uch approve of ·charity. He islovi · lenged.· ' . turing sector_of of this peculiar individuality has , itself. Everything that goes ~ The concern of' the 'Church has always' been the' glory the economy. been disappearing in an impor';' that name in this life. is a feeble of God and the salvation of souls. No one is so foolish as Pre 1 i m tant part of American industry." reflection of the Godhead whose inary estimates , At the present time, he con- name is love. And God is light.· .to contend that individual churchmen have always shown~ indicate that tinues, "one ... finds large bat- Not merely a master electrician. outstanding wisdom in pursuing these aims. But how can during the past teries of clerks, punch card oper- He is the sun, the source of an the Church and churchmen be responsible for lack of in- eight, years the ators, comptometer -operators, the'rays of intellectual light, oi and the like,employed by many truth, brightening the darkness dustrial growth, for failure in economic prosperity, for ~~~~~r~fe~a~~ . firms. Here the special individ- of our time and all·time. So the weakness in technological development? manufacturing em ploy men t ual 'consciousness or character- Gospel teaches Christians where That statement is the type that has beEm tossed around dropped almost five per cent istics of the white collar worker light and sight and the grace oi far too often and accepted ·far toofrequeptly. It is high (from 72,7 per cent to 67.8) and are disappearing." true vision are to be found. And time such statements were taken for what they ,are _ that white collar employees in the Epistle hymns that love factories rose ftom 19.9 ·pe r cent Class Differeuees which is not only a command of, accusations, perhaps, but not facts; judgments, but not to 24.9 per cent. The increase There is no need here to spen God but a mysterious participa.necessarily accurate ones; capsule diagnoses, but based on during this same period in the tion iIi Him. bias,. not reality. number -/of professional, tech- out how the American unions MONDAY
In"rell"6se Wh.-t Colla··r u 'W,or'k.ers Affects Ung-ons
. nical and kindred' workers has' ought to go about facing this WEEK-DAY WITH MASS .u problem. Suffice it to say that been proportionately g rea't e r , than the increase in· the number they have' one, big advantage ON SUNDAY. Because Lent, the '- . forty days of Christian retreat The current situation of too many applicants for college of· clerical and kindred white over many of the unions' of beginning on Wednesday, is the Western Europe. and too few spaces in college has led to many problems. One, collar workers. .annual training season for the Analyzes Situation Mr. Kassalow emphasizes that life of light and love, the leSSOM of course, is the problem of expand~ng'facilities while The significance for the future "while some official differences; are well chosen to prepare the keeping up standards. Another - and one that has been of the trade union movement of '. between white, and blue collar Church for it. Easter, the feast pointed out by the heM of the Carnegie Corporation' of these and related occupational workers do exist in the United of Christ's triumph over sin and New York - is what to do for those in whose faces the . shifts in the American economy States, ....certainly these differ- death, is also the great celebracollege door must slam. . . was painstakin'gly analyzed by ences aren't 'class type'" and to tion of Baptism. So the business These young people should. not be simply cast into Everett Kassalow, Director of the further fact that "unlike the of Lent, as a preparation _ great labor federations of Eu- Baptism' and the renewal of bap-- . ~xterior darkness. They are not in'College for many reasons, Research for the AFL-CIO In- rope, tlie AFL-CIO has never tismal vows, is the business oi dustrial Union Department, in a some having nothing to do with ability. . , paper delivered in St. Louis . had a purely 'working class' the ChriStian life, concentrated and intensified: more light . . . John W. Gardnes, the Carnegie Corporation president, : Dec. 29 at the annual convention· stamp upon it." more love. ' has suggested a· system of c011tinuing vocational and edu- of the Industrial Itelations Re"To put it anothe~ way,'! says TUESDAY search Association. eational guidance on the part of the high schools.. : Mr. Kassalow, "the traditional "WEEK':DAY WITH MASS AS This is wonderful suggestion, one meriting not only"- . Mr. Kassalow?s tentative con- socialist, and in a few cases ON' SUNDAY.·It is no acc~dent, consideration but· action. This is a legitimate expansion of clusions will bring small comfort Marxi~t or neo-~~rx~st traditions . then, -that the special Lentea hIstory whlcn clmgs to some Mass of each' of the 40 daYII the high school role - a role, incidentally, that at times and to those who would like to think and that the American labor move- of . the ,greatE,;,ropean, trade teaches the Christian people in 'some instances takes on the aspect of usurpation. ·But mimt is permanently on the' de- ~mon .cente~s, gl~es. th~~ . an r ' something. essential about Hethis is one area in which the, high school ean aid more cline' and also' to those: laoor l~dustrlal .prolet?rlat IdentIflca- demption and that all together persons .with services that do not demand more buildings leaders who would like to think ti??: Lackmg thIS past and ~a-. they present a course in Cbr. . and could be done with a minimum expenditure for expanded that "business as usual" will dl~lon, the AFL-CI? has at l~ast tian doctrine,' a "refresher'" eventually reverse the current th~s ~dva?tage as It moves mto course for the faded and 1he counselling. thIS fIeld. jaded, for the strugglers and _ decline in membership. Important for Nation those who have ceased to strueNeed New Techniques This is a very important con- gle. WEDNESDAY ·Mr. Kassalow believes that siQ,eration from the point of view white collar workers--including ASH WEDNESDAY. The aigD nof only of the American labor 'professional and technical workof ashes is a sign of penance for movement but of the na tion as ers--should be, and eventually sin, for failure to live according. a whole. It would be very unfor.will be organized into bona fide tunate for all of us if American to the Christian's baptismal com• mitment. Lent is a revival, a OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER unions. unions' were to attempt to organPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River He adds, however, that this ize either manual and white waking-up. a shedding of ~ will require. the use of new and collar' workers on the basis of accumulation in life which im410 Highland Avenue pairs or impedes the light aDd imaginative organizing tech- class distinction. ' Fall River,· Mass. OSborne 5-7151 love of Christ. By these 40 dayniques, the expenditure' of a PUBLISHER It would be equally unfortuChrist acts to form his memben great deal of energy, ,and some Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. mite, however, if employers in into men with the courage of Jar reaching. "structural' facethis country were to discourage their convictions, into people GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER. lifting" on the part of the AFLor attempt to prevent the organ- who know where they are going, CIO. . Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll ization of white collar and tech- And the prime means of this inMANAGING EDITOR Why should white collar work- nical ,workers by appealing to formation is the common prayer Hugh J. .GoldeR be organized? Perbape the their spirit of class consciousne.u. of the Church. the liturQ.
Continuing Guidance
a:
®The AN€HOR
er.
mergency Fund Esp~riw Santo Parishioners,- faUR~ver,B.oast To Cover Tuition . Fi'-rst 'P()rtuguese Catholic Scho~l U'D- Nutton Pawuw®~ts Loss
BENNINGTON (Ne)
Bennington Catholic high school has set up an emergency tuition fund to offset
.', By Avns Co Roberta . , Espirito Santo Church at 249· Alden ~treet, Fall River, was the .s~o~d "mission"" established'by S;:mto Christo.Church. The firs~ s.erved,Portu&:uese fa~Ihes In the ~orth End of Fall' River. Espirito Santo was founded July 19, 1904, m th~ epIscopacy of BI~hop Stang, in the Flint section of the city. Rev., George'S. Silveira, a ·curate at ~anto ChrlSt9. was named first pastor. of "--- . .,. "7 , .. ~ .~" I the newly-created parIsh. M.' t The mission· owned land <, " ' f ! . ' l \ where the present church is
THE ANQ1ORThurs., Feb. 9, 1961'
. 7.
Says F~anciscan Ho~)" lCU1d Wor~-( Ne@r NHra~aJ~@\)J$ :QUEBEC (NC) - SeveB centuries of continuous work by: the Franciscans as custodians of shrines in tho
loss of revenue from tuitiolUi formerly paid by public school districts. The school's executive comHoly .Land is viewed as neaT mitte\:l indicated the school will mirltculous by an official of tho suffer a loss of at least $10,00~ order visiting here. 10 this year's budget for oper- located but until completion of Father Constant Pilmes, O:F.lV4 the first little church religious nting expenses. Franciscan superior at Bethleservices were held in a hall , About 80 students from surhem, said the Franciscans havo ~ I rounding towns which have no owned by Notre Dame Church. been the victims of many perseE'ather Silveira next bought II " high schools attend the 360-stucutions over the centuri~ an<iJ house on the site of the present estimated that some 2,000 wero dent Bennington school. Their Dlartyred. . $250-a-year .tuitio.n had been rectory. 'Renovations made the paid from each town's tax funds house suitable to accommodate iii CU!stollli2.rnJ of! G!"$M@ until the Vermont Supreme temporary church on the first The Franciscans have' fou::z Court ruled the practice uncon- floor and a rectory on the second. monasteries in Jerusalem wheN In June, 1905 Bishop Stang lil1itutional. they are custodians of the Holy Most towns had paid the Cath- blessed the temporary church. Sepulchre, the Church of tho A debt of $9,000 was incurred olic high school only one-third of Scourging of Our Lord, the GaT~ the tuition charges for the cur- with acquisition of the property den of Gethsemane arid the Baand whim Father Silveira was rent year. The costs were prosilica of Gethsemane. They aloo hibited by la"Y from exceeding transferred in 1908, the debt had are custodians of the Grotto of been lessened to $5,500. This was the cost-per-pupil. Bethlehem, .the home of Jesus The executive committee said paid off in 1910. at Nazareth, the Basilica of in a statement it had been notiNight Classes Cana and other shrines. fied public school districts will On' Aug 3, 1908, Bishop FeeFather PUmes has been stanot pay the remainder of this han named Rev. Joao B. deValles tioned in the Holy Land for 15 7ear's tuition. years. He said that in the Midas pastor. Noted for his patriotic Heavy Burden dle Eas{ there are 475 Francisspirit, Father deValles recogFather Gerald Brennan, ,the nized the role the Portuguese can missionaries who repersent principal, said he hopes the fund language would play. in preserv24 nationalities. will cover tuition costs of the 80 ing the faith among the people. They teach schools, dir~ di9pupils and enable the school to He also knew the immigrants pensaries and conduct parish meet its financial obligations. work. Father Pilmes came here must become acquainted with He expressed doubt that par- the English, language in order to on a preaching assignment, after ishes will be able to carry the. earn, Jheir .livelihood and he which he will visit westera ESPIRITO SANTO CHURCH, FALL RIVER full burden of Catholic ,educa-, .taught night classes for the men ,Canada. tion In the future. of the parish. of the Holy Spirit on the Apos- . Church, New Bedford, in 1913. op Beg'in Plant It 'm.ay be necessary to elimAfter' establishing the night ties and the Blessed Mother. To ·.:During World War I ne Wi!:; a Inate the first six grades at Cath- . school 'Father deValles received the left is a painting of the Cry",.: ' chaplain of the 104th Infantry ,Convert Re'union olic elementary schoois and shift CLEVELAND (NC) _ AuxQ.. permission' from Bishop Feehan . cifixion with the th,ree Marys '26th" (Yankee) 'Division. For the money used to support them to build a combination church 'and St.John. The :paintihg on 'valor on' the battlefields of-·· iary Bish9P Floyd L. Begin of, in~ "the, budgets of. Cil~holic< and scho~l 'to save on construc- ' the 'right side is a depiction.. of,.,France he won the' Croix de Cleveland, who calls his in-tori bJgbe ,~ttoo~s, he said. , , :tion' ~~osts.' The two-part edifice "the Resurrection. Guerre. , St. 'Agnes 'parish a "parish on' a , 'was . ~lesse~ by Bishop Feehan. The r~toiy. was altered' and ' B~Ak~~. in. health" Fat~er bus" 'is' planning a reunion of . Sept. 5; Illio. . another building was moved aild . 'deVil1les returned to. the United the' parish's 'converts and their . Espirito Santo School, fitst serves as a pre-primary 'and,' States after the war and died in sponsors next Sunday. primary school and .parish· hall. New" Bedford May 12, Ij}20, at And if . a sizeable number 0( Portuguese' Catholic school in Father deValles was appointed . the age of 40. While his body . them come, it could be quite Ii ALBANY (NC) - A proposal . the United 'States, . has 'been to strike the 1960 law guaran- directed for the past 50 years by postor of :St. John the Baptist . lay in state in St. John's Church, crOWd. St. Agnes parish, dominteeing that private and paro- 'the Franciscan Missionaries of New Bedford, the Yankee Divi- ated by apartments and rooming ehial pupils will get transpo,rta- Mary. The nuns continue to teach . sion major general' placed upon houses, has had more than 1,000 tion, on public school buses has' the Portuguese language at the him the Distinguished Service adult converts in the last 10 P~~~d1$' ~<l!!i Pea~® . Medal awarded by the Congress. years. There alro has been Iebeen introduced in the state school. ALGIERS (NC) - The Arch- · of the United States. Legislature. gions of children who came inte The school is located on the bishop of Algiers made a radio Sen. Dutton S. Peterson' of Father deValles was succeeded the Church with their parenta first floor .and the church, with appeal to his p¢ople for calmnesa by the Rev. Manuel S. Travassos . or through the school. OdeSsa and Assemblyman Rus. .ell Seikirk are sponsoring the a seating 'capacity of 700, is on and mutual understanding fol- who served Espirito Santo from Trouble is, said the Bishop, the s'e'cond floor. Construction lowing the French vote approv,:" legislation which has the back· 1914 until his death. on Dec. 20, who is ltastor,' that operating St. ing of the New York State costs amounted to $55,000 but the ing President de Gaulle's policy 1953. Agnes is "like running 0 parish debt' was whittled speedily. .of self-determination for preSchool Boards' Association. The Rev. Joao V. Resendes is ~ln a b\lli. People come in one end, The former St. Catherine's dominantly Moslem Algeria. The two lawmakers ilou~t present pastor of the church stay a short time, then leave at, the 1960 law, arguing tl1at it Convent on Second Street was Archbishop Leon-Etienne Du- which observed its golden jubilee the other. We m~ find them, violated the jurisdiction of local acquired ,for the .nuns and be- val urged Catholics of Algiers to · last Sept. 25. He succeeded talk to them during the short came the present St. Anthony's leave no stone un turned in their Father Travassos. Today there time they are here, then try to BChool boards and forced unConvent, the sisters' home for efforts to restore confidence and are 2,600 parishion.ers at Espirito follow them up when they leave reasonable costs upon them. The 1960 law, which goes into 50 years. peace to the strife-torn country. Santo Church and ,316 students for other parts oil the city 01' effect in, September, ends a sitNot~worthy Paintings even the nation." "Peace is born of hope," he in the parish school. uation in which parents of chilPaintings in the sanctuary of said. "Beware of anything that dren' attending. private schools the church are worthy of note. had to attend a yearly special Directly above the main altar fosters despair in your souls and meeting of local school boards is a group picture of the descent strives to create an atmosphere of panic about you! Such things an'd. petition for transportation could lead Algeria and the Celebrate the 50th Anniversa~ of the World'UU\1atlillil for their children. Rejections of the petitions Ci«:!lm~doWliil on FMB'Ods fatherland to utter destruction. of CatiNlJiic Women's OrganDxaJtc~roo Following. the example of the were usually overruled by the Cuban Students» Pope, we have told you again all the Rome Congress State Commissioner of EducaBATON ROUGE (NC)-Thirtion. Under the new law, re- ty-eight Cuban students, victims and again that peace will be the fruit of mutual understanding." Leave April T5 - visit 7 countries - 4.0 dCJyil QUesta for transportation are of a clampdown by Fidel Castro made directly to his office and Oil transfer of funds, face the Price: $1445 Everyone is welcome local school boards are told to spring term at Louisiana State Write: NATIONAl COUNCIL OF CATHOUC WOMEN CLEVE;LAND .(NC) - Father provide the rides. University here without funds Thurston N. Davis, S.J., editor' 1312 Massachusettu Ave., N.W. Wasl1!ington 5, D.C. for tuition, books, room and 'of America maga'zine; urged Shortage of Pll'iests board, it was' disclosed ·h,ere. American Catholics' to get 'out' The 38 are nearly half of the of their "self impose.d ghettos'" Conve~sions' ALTOONA (NC) - Only a Cuban students attending the ·and accept the challenge of re.. I!lhortage of priests and Religious 'university. It was reported· that ligious dialogue. prevents mass conversions to at other Louisiana universities-Catholicism in. South Korea, Loyola, Tulane and Southwest"More Things Are Wrought by p,.~ lDJ~'ll' CllEANING Father David Richers, S.S.c., ern Louisiana-Cuban studenta Them This WorU D8'etim8 ojooof}' are facing similar. difficulties. and said here in Pennsylvania. Edward Grant, Sr., , Baton FUR STORAGE "South Korea iEJ the most fruitful mission field in the Far Rouge chemical executive, asked . East at the present time," the Federal assistance in. a telegram Society of St. Columban priest sent· to the U.S. Department o:f said here before emplaning for Health, Education and Welfare. the Vicariate of Kwangju in Mr. Grant, ·who is chairman of 34-44 Cohannet' Str0Elt the Baton Rouge internatio"nal Korea. ,hospitality .committee working Taunton VA 2-6161 Father Richers has worked ~ the vicariate under Bishdp Har-,· with locai' groupa ,to aid the old W. Henry for six years. He Cuban 'students, said that· at least $20,000 is .needed to heIr>' ~d that during that time he instructed and baptized more the students at LSU. During Lent and cml~ day of Your Iir.' A CHOtCl OJ' than 2,600 converts in the village ow Cardlnat Spelll7'.an's Praysr Bock FCNE- BINDINGS! Sees Pope of·Noan. and Mis3aL No ethel' prayer book wiD $3.So-$4.75-$6.5@ VATICAN CITY (NC) -The' ~ fully sg~bfy your sp!:itual oeecb mr $10.00 and $12.SV fMD1<dJ Success . Rev. John Colin Stephenson., it contains prayers far overy nood. Cl'reIf' BOYS WANTED few the o occosion, every' moment of your dm1J' eAMDEN (NC)~With a total rectOr of the Anglican shrine of fblrB@Q:=:.1l wn~~ Orr~c§)q ~riesthood and Brotherhood. life. It ...iII bring God closer ~ 1100 d. Our Lady of Walsingham iJ:::I. of $6,284,139 already pledged. the keep lfCK' close to H:"-::-,. " [~m~ d e~s.@@ Lack 0* fundEl NO ImpediCamden diocesan educa'tioIUll England, was received in private moM. fund drive is well beyond the audien~ by Pope JOM. ~ 11 Jllll11Drll2 ~ ~ r:ir/iv-¢J.~ f::i = d =.-::::J ~: minimum goal of $5,000,000, and Church of England clergyman, n . wrUta tot efforts are continuing.- Heavy . wartime naval chaplain, b2:3 'lJ'be EDWAmm» @8'[j'@©>W 00<00 liN~ . 0 '~~Og9!re~:?g' lImQW prevented many parishe:J ~. O. hx §74~ headed the College of Guardiaoo \j~.PmfIl ~";;t~ ~~ V@:i'E:I il, C'.J. '170 from completing solicitatioIlB by of Our Lady of Walsingham hDtimcro S, AAdJo the assigned closing date. oince 1959.
Blosh'
As;k 'to Rei"eal·
School Bus Law
A~93~ir~ Archbis~op,
TOUR EUROPE WITH. ~CCW
Hats
ChaUe,.g®
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"DERMODY CLEANERS'
Trinitarian . Fathers, .
R~ct~r
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"8' ,,' "THE A.NCI:fQR:.....Oiocese ofFaJl
, NUn's Traintng
Rive;~~un.,'~.,9, 196,1"
PertNianGi rI s
Houses 'Get Gro'ing Pains TQO;'
i..IMA (Ne) - An Americall Sister Is the whole commercial depar:tment . at the. first paroehial school to be founded he:lle in Peru's capital city. / S sst e,r Mary Celine ~ the Maryknoll Sisters,' daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Cktchell of Mantoloking, ]\T T teaches shorthand, typing and bookkeeping at St. Rose of Lima school. By the time the girl students complete their three-year commercial course they will be qualified as bilingual secretaries in Spanish and English. , The three-year-old school, 0perated by the Maryknoll Fath'ers, will graduate its first class in 1962. lot includes a six-year grammar school and a five-year academie high school' in addition to the commercial course. In the high sch"ol Maryknoll Brothers teach boys, and MaI')"-> knoll Sisters teach girls. 'l1he children start wi th En~ lish in the first grade. The Sisters teach the .English subjects and lay women teach Spanish subjects - so that every day the children have both' English an<ll Spanish subjects. Sisters teach religion in Spanish. .
Here's Space-Creating Idea,.' By Alice' Bough Cahill It doesn't always follow. that a growing family djcfates the need for more house room. Often the small family feels it wants more elbow room, so the problem is how to get it without moving or making an expensive addition. Here's a solution that worked out so up space which you may nov;' well with a ,little Cape Cod use for outdoor living, so we'd house that you may be in-' suggest you add a porch to the terestEid iIi adopting some of rear of the breezeway. 'the ideas. If you like your neighScreen the two walls and lay ,bors, if you like your present a flagstone floor. Now you have location . a Ii d" a porch on which you can relax don't -want to and' still be protected from build a new winds and sun. Next add on to b ou s e, give the garage a fireplace, sink and . some thought cabinets. In space you already to your present have you can now get a study structure and and hobby-room. "study how you Let's consider each change can create more &eparately. When, you enclose 1 i v i n g space your breezeway, you will, of without buildeourse, plan windows., You ing. You have might flank these ,wi,th bookit right in your shelves. Panel the walls and lay breezway and cork over the original floor. You garage. If your present home might paint the ceiling off-white provides sufficient living, din- and the walls a soft green. ing and bedroom space, but you Here's a room you could use as still long for a place "to get a guest room so bear that in away from it all" with a good mind in planning closet space. book, or would like a family- ' We referred to the converted type room for informal enter- garage as an "activity room." taining, you might try these Here's an area in which the changes. family can pursue its hobbies, By enclosing a breezeway, you where it can work and play. 'l1he ean create a study, ;t place to addition Of a fireplace, sink and ,which you can retreat for an closet has many advantages, evening with a good book, or a apart from providing heat when quie' place to do some office the winds hOM outside. homework. A garage makes a Consider a fireplace, built at wonderful "activity room," with a 'good height for cooking, with the simplest kind Of'changes. wonderful storage 'space below You' won't need' the large for wood. With the addition 01. 'garage doors, so when you ,take a small sink and a cupboard, for 'them down, why not install a cooking tOols you won't have to bay' window. One sure way of trot things to and £rom the " boosting spaciousness 'is the use kitchen when you have a light of windows. snack or a barbecue. ' Add Ponh
Plain and Plaid
, Naturally, when you enclose • breezeway, you will be giving
In this room you will probably want to carry out an infonnal or . countrified mood, which can be done with 'a plaid in pleasing colors. When' using plaid you wiil want tb team it with' plain colors. Since you come into this room directly from your study, why not plan, to catty out the same color scheme. Suppose you have painted .the walls of your study green, have used yellow drapes and red leather chairs. If you decide on a plaid, .carry outo·these colors of green, yellow and red. If your upholstery and drapes ate' plaid, then be sure to have a pupn color on your walls and floor,' maybe yellow walls and green floor. " As we've said, before you start any decorating, you will be wise to analyze the over-all e:llfect ,you are trying to create; decide on the mood you want to achieve. O£ten you'lllhear' people say they: want to erea·te a "mellow" 'mood. This requires careful blending of hues, possibly a beige rug, or walls that are a ,dull green with a yellow ,cast, in contradistinction from sharp, clean-cut colors. Use ,a smallfigured chintz with 'SubUe col. orings.
New Bedford Nun Nonagenarian Sister Anna Celestine,' one of the six pioneer Sisters of St. Joseph in New Bedford celebrated her 90th birthday Saturday. She became a diamond jubilarian of the order last Summer. The nun, a former teacher at St Joseph's School, is a native of France and came to this city in 1913. Retired now, she is the staunch support of the teaching Duns with her fervent prayers and long stations in ,St. Joseph's Convent chapel. ' Sister's mind is keen and lucid, end she enjoys th~ visits of former pupils whose names she can. recall readily. On her birthday Sister Anna Celestine was honored with a party and a cake by the other nuns at the con"e~t.
FIRST PATHOLOGIST: First Sister-Doctor to pass American Board of Pathology exam, Sister M. Francisco Fernandes, left, receives congratulations of Provincial Mother M. Benedict of Medical Mission Sisters in Phila- , Court Rules Obscenity . delphia. Sister will return to her native India for hospital Law Unconstitutional work as full-fle"dged Diplomat (yf the American Board of INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Th~ I Pathology. NC Photo. Indiana Supreme Court has ruled
Women's Counci1Gift To Aid Cuban .R~fugees "
MIAMI (NC)-A $1,000 <10-, nation has been' made by the National Council of Catholic Women to Centro Hispano Catolico, . Miami's diocesan Spanish eenter, to aid'itls Cuban refugee program. , , Presentation of check was made, to Dominican Sister Mir.iam, the center superior, by Mrs. Arthur Zepf of Toledo, Ohio, NCCW presIdent, who "was ~ in Miami for the National ReSet~ tlement, CODference ,for Cuban' Refugees: . , " ," Accompanying :MrS. Zepf were Mrs. Edwar~; McHugh, Brid'gewater, Mass., the council's immigration cOmInittee chainnan and 'Margaret Mealey, NCCW, executive director' of Washington, D.C. 0
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$6 Million for Schools
sISTER A.NNA CElLESTINE
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NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The New Orleans archdiocese spent more than six million dollars in 1960 on Catholic schools and expenses conne'cted with their operation.
Women to Hear Boston Singers The Fall River Catholic Woman's Club will meet at Sacred Heart Church at 2:30 this ,SundaY afternoon for rosary and benediction, followed at 3 by a meeting at Sacr~ Heart School. The Catholic Guild for the Blind will be guests for the
Foresters to Skate Our Lady of Fatima Court of Fall River, Catholic Order of Foresters, will mark Washington's Birthday with a skating party at Seekonk' Iceland. Also on the Spring agenda is a St. Patrick's show Friday, March 17.
CATHOLICS GET _ . S~"· T'" ·L. CO' HOSPITAL PLAN .
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session, which will feature theSinging Cahoons, offering a progr:un of selections from' Broadway shows.' The Cahoons, Mr; and Mrs. Ray H. Cahoon, are members of the Handel and Hayden Society of Boston and sing in churches in the Cape Ann area. They have appeared on televisIon and before audiences throughout New England. • Miss Winifred Hasprey and Mrs. Matthew Kuss are co-chairmen for the a~!.:rnoon, with Mrs. George P. BOItano and Mrs. Leo A. Martin in charge of the coffee 'hour. .
the state's 56-year-old obscene literature law is unconstitutional. holding the 1905 law which woo amended in 1957 violated the Federal and state constitutional guarantees of freedoms of speeclll and of the press. Phillip L. Bayt, Marion Coun~ Prosecutor, when informed of tRc decision, said a measure is being prepared for introduction in th0 Indiana General Assembly which should overcome the constitUo> tioDlll objections raised by the high court. ' I The case grew out of raidfl made last June by members oj the Sheriff's staff on establisho ments here. Publications re, ga~ded as obscene by the SherW were confiscated.
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For only $1.85 a month Catholic' men under 61 can now receive $50 each week' while hospi4Llized for any accident or sickness covered by the insurance of our non-profit Society. Payments can eontinue for as long as two yeal"S-totaling up to $5,200. Catholic women and men 61 through 75 get an identical policy at a slightly higher cost. You are paid' iB 'addition to any other insurance, including' Workmen's Compensa~ion. You spend the money as you wis~for hospital bills, or expenses at home. Use your own DOctor and choose any lawfully operated hospital. Your insurance begins the first day you're in the ho~pital. You need this policy now. Inflation has increased hospital ~tes 375ro since ,1940. As a result, most people do not
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have enough insurance. Last year, for example, people who used their insurance found it paid an average of only 31c of every dollar spent for accident and sickness bills. Protect yourself with our low cost insurance. It gives you extra cash for medical expenses. This insurance is offered to YO}! by the Catholic Knights of St. George a ,seventy-nine year old non-pr,ofit Society. It has paid out over $15,600,000 in benefits to its Catholic members. A , variety of policies can protect every member of the family. Get all the facts on this low cost protection. ,Phone ME 7-4224 or EU 6-2113 mail the coupon 'today for free information.' No obligation, of, course. ,Don't delay., One person in every three· famili~ will be in -the hospital ..
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Catholic Knights of St. George.. 104 North Oak Park Ave., Oak ,Park, Dlinois M~ 7·4224 or EU 6-2113' At no oPligation, please lUsh me· free faets 011, hospital insurance for Catholics provided bY,Y9Ul" non-profit Society.;,: Name ....-.._---- Age_,_ _ \ " Address City Phone _'_
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Coluinnist~s Against· 'Zip
ltfE of Feb. 9, 1961 9 P·ills';···· --,..;;Wants to. Enjoy Day in Bed Home Economics Teacher from Fall River
By .Mary TInley Daly Morning. wake-up with. a queasy sore throat, stuffiness in the hea~, irritation behind eyes - aU presaging the annual cold. While some people go to Florida this time of year, we go to bed, a not too unwelcome ~rience. The alarm clock went off as she sauntered into our room, 1I8ual accompanied by a still yawingly relaxed, and discroak, "That's for you, not covered that she has a bona fide for me. I'm zick" - with a patient within arm's reach, she punctuating sneeze. First thought, to serve breakfast in bed to the' afflicted - last thing desired. "Just get yourselves going." "Sure you don't want us to call the doctor?" from Head of the Hou.se and 70ungsters. We couldn' ~ surer. La s t year, they had called ',., the doctor. He ~sJt> and his old zip pills;'"to be taken every four hours, kept down those sympathy-producing symptoms with the result that we . were up and about, cooking dinner that very evening. Witb the 1960 cold killed a-borning, we were deprived of our annual ""winter vacation." , This year, no doctor. Shouldn't Mother Nature, we argued with ourselves, sometimes be allowed to take over without constant interventio.n by scientific miracles? We could legitimately eancel a dental appointment, a difficult club meetmg-and there' were all those. new magazines • be enjoyed. . We reckoned, however, with'eat "the nurse in the house," Markie home from' nursing. ~hool' for the semester break .w. allowed to sleep late. When
Fall River Sister To Note Jubilee, Fifty yean in the service CJl. Cod will be marked this Sunday by Sister Ste. Evariste, R.J.M., the former Alexina Gamache of Morth Attleboro. A. Solemn High Mass of ihanksgivlng Will be held at 11 O'clock at Jesus Mary Convent, Fall River. Celebrants will be three nephews of the jubilarian, Rev. Luc Marie Chabot, Rev. Bertrand Chabot, and Rev. Gerard Chabot, brothers. Father Luc Marie is superior at a Franciscan house in Montreal, Father Bertrand is'assigned to St. Anthony's parisb, New Bedford, and Father Gerard io pastor of St. Therese's Church, South Attleboro. Sister Ste. Evariste was one of '1:3. children, of whom nine are ltving and will attend the jubilee Mass. Twenty-four nieces and nephews will also be present. MaIlS will be followed by • banquet and open house.
was like a race horse at the starting gate. Blue eyes gave an appraising glance, ban d s instinctively reached out to re-make the dissheveled bed,' thermometer was popped into patient's mouth, cool hand took pU'lse count. "Mom, I'd say this is a simple upper-respiratory infection. Not serious at all. Pulse normal, temperature only slightly elevated. We'll start anti-c-old tablets immediately." "Oh, Markie! You have zip pills? I shouldn't stay in bed?" Our nurse-in-training, who is also a natural-born psychologist -besides being a loving daughter-caught the implication immediately. ' Folding a white wash cloth into an improvised nurse's cap and setting it atop her shining .red hair, she summoned up' all her professional aplomb. "It's my considered opinion as a nurse-or an almost-nurse," she 'giggled, "tbat bed rest is indicated ,for this patient. There are psychosomatic symptoms clearly.manifested here. Feel the need 'for'a little gold-bricking,. don't yo~, Mom? Everybody does, now and then." . . No More Lolling . All day long we read maga2ines,talked desultorily, napped, listened to radio; now and then looked at TV. . . ' "How come, Markie, that nobody gets well slowly any more! Why do they have to' snap back unmediately?" "Advances in medicine, Mom," she answered. "Unless the condition is acute or cbronic, you get 'em on their feet right away." Gone are the days when a, seemingly healthy perSon can relax for a few, days with D. minor ailment, let nature take over. No more- lolling around .with tea, toast and sympathy'unless it is done in secret, like thitJ one. "Know.what, Mom?" Markie asked in a burst of confidence, "Sometimes I've been tempted to answer exam questions with the ways you took care of us as kids: honey and butter for sore throats, bread-and-milk poultices for boils, diagnose mumpo with a pickle. There's a lot to be said for your folk-medicinebut not for exams!" Modern medicine has increased tempo, certainly. But curing the simple cold?' Gold-bricking, if you will. Comes a time for most of us when the simple cold can bring release from tensions by the inexpensive. and natural manner. Perhaps hypertension and coronaries ,might be circumvented by. giving in to 1DlBor alIments! This is treading in a scienti1ie field. No more of tbat! ' And s~ne more .day before, takin~, the zip pills.
Three Movements Get Headquarters Building CHICAGO (NC)---,The Christian Family Movement has announced that it and two other lay organizations have been given a headquarters building by the SkU Corporation here. The two-storY, $150,000 structure will be shared with the Young 'Christian Workers and the Young Christian Students, according to III statement from the CFM. ' . ' The' three organizations were recently banded together.' and , atfilia,t~d: wi1q the joint counc.ll " ofthe National Councils' of Catholic Men and Women. They win ' be known as the "Specialized Lay Apostolate." .
New Bedford Women
IISTEa 8TE. BVABl8TB
Josef N. Cobert, director 01. the New Bedford Symphony Orcbestra, wiU speak for the Catholic Woman's Club of the city M~nday, Feb. 13. .
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AN(:.HO,~-Dioces.
Fall River-Thurs.,
Offers Balanceed Lenten Menus Resuming a very popular Lenten feature of two years ago, The Anchor will present, during the weeks of the ~ly ~son, day by day menus planned with all fasting restrictions in mind. This year men~l.s and recIpes ~Ill b~ prepared by Miss Gertrude Lynch, home economics teacher at Jam~ MadIson Morton Jumor Higb School, Fall River. She is the sister of Rev. James E. Lynch pastor of St. Joan of Arc Church, Orleans. ' M~nus wi~ be prese~ted a week in advance in order tp allow homemakers time for shopping and plannmg. ReCIpes are gIVen for starred iiems, directly beneath each day's menu. ASH WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15 Island Dressing, Apricot Upside Down GingeJ:!oa Fast and Abstinence bread. o Cheese Poached Egg IIrelllkfast: Orange Juice, Whole Wheat Toag\;, Strawberry Jam, Beverage. 1. Place hot poached egg' on buttered toast roun6! . Lunch: Grilled Cheese Sandwich, Sweet Rel. Covc::r with hot cheese sauce and sprinkle with Ish, Tossed Green Salad, Russian Dressing, Baked paprIka. . Apple. APIl"Bcot Upside Down Gingerbread Jl)inner: Tomato Juice, Golden Baked Fish. 3 1" butter . Mashed Potato, Peas, Harvard Beets, Pineappie 1 lh cup brown sugar and Cottage Cheese Salad, Jello. 1 to llh can drained apricota Golden Baked Fish lh cup shortening 2 t salt . 2 eggs beaten 2 lh halibut steaks 1 cup molasses 1/2 c milk 2 lh cup sifted floul:" (cake-) llh c slightly crushed cornflakes' 2 t baking soda 3 T melted butter 2 t 'ginger 1. Disolve salt in milk . lh t salt 2. Dip fi$ into milk, then into cornflakes t cup sour milk 3. Place fish on well greased baking sheet 1. Melt· butter in skillet and add 1 cup sugar 4. Pour butter over fish gradually. Stir until melted 5. Bake in hot oven~ (400) 20 minutes Z. Arrange apricots, cut side up, to cover bottom a. Serve with Tartar Sauce of pan. Serves 4 to 5. 3. Cream shortening. THURSDAY, FEB. IS 4. Add lh cup sugar gradually, and cream until! Fam fluffy. , lRreakiast: Stewed Prunes, Corn Muffins, Bev5. Add beaten eggs and molasses and beat thOi'erage. o?ghly. lLunch: Mock Chicken Pie," Tomato and Let6. SIft flour, soda, ginger and salt tOgether and tuce Salad Jello. ' a d d alternately with sour milk in mlaU Dinner; Meat Loaf with Broiled Peaches, :.mol,lnts, mixing thoroughly after each add!Scalloped Potato, Buttered Corn, Spinach, PineIon. . apple Cabbage Slaw, Chocolate. Bread PUdding, '1: Pour batter over aprIcots and.bake in moderato Vanilla Ice Cream, Beverage.. ' . oven (32.5 to 35.0) 35 to 50 mInutes. ' , Mock Chi~keJ1l Pie , . ' 8. Se.rve ":'Ith whIpped cream.. 2 c medium White sauce, Note .. WhIte or ~hocolate cake batters may be tcan tuna (9,oz.).la r ge pieces used Instead, of gmgerbread. 2 cups coOked cut...up carrots MONDAY, FEB.ZO 1 cup cooked drained peas. Fast' . 1. Combine ingredients, '. Seaso.n with Salt and Breakfast: F~uit Juice, Danish P811Uy, Beve1\. pepper and pour into greased 2 qt. 8" casserole age. , ' ' ' dish. ," , , lLunch: T.oaste~ open Crabmeat Salad Santi2. Heat i? oven. (450) until mixture bubbles. thea wish, Potato ChIps, Watermel~ pickle, Fruit cover ImmedIately with lh recipe of Rich BisCompote (Stewed prunes and apricpts). cuit Dough. Dinlller: Chicken Fricassee with Dumplings, $ J. Bake at once 25 minutes Mash~ potato,. Tossed green salad, Roquefon Serves 6 Dresslllg, Apple pie. , FRIDAY, FEB. n Chicken Dumplinn Fast and Abstinence a cups biscuit mix 'Breakfast: Half Grapefruit, High Protehl ~ cup milk Cereal (hot or cold), Buttered Toast, Beverage.' 2 t instant chicken bouil1~ Lunch: Salmon Souffle,. Tomato Sauce, Greea Combine, place on chicken fricassee and cook Peas,. Hard Roll, ~ngel Cake Wedges, Beverage. until well done (about 20 min.). DInner: BroIled Halibut, Lemon Bullter TUESDAY, FEB. :u Mashed potato,'buttered' carrots' broccoli' ~ Fast gratin, Peach and Cottage Cheese Salad Cottage Breakfast: Rice Krispies with Sliced Banana. PUdding with Chocolate Sauce. ' Poached egg on toast, Beverage. ' ...... Salmon Souffle Lunch: Sardine and Egg Salad Sandwich, 2 T Melted Butter Potato chips, dill pickle, Chocolate Layer Cake. 2 T Flour Dinner: Baked Stuffed Pork Chop, Apple 1 cup milk ,Sa~ce, Potato, buttered spinach, carrot sticks, 2 well beaten Egg Yolks Tomato and cucumber Salad, Mayonnaise,. Taplh t salt ioca Cream with sli.ced peaches. lf4 t nutmeg dash pepper' WJEDNJESDAY, lFJEIS. 22 lone pound ean salmon (flaked) !Fast, J?mrtfian AbsUJ1l0nC0 2 stiff beaten:Egg Whites ' .llllreakiast: .Orange ~nd, Grapefruit. Sectlona., 1. Make w,hite sauce of butter, flour and ml·lk. Toasted, EnglIsh Muffms, Apricot Marmalade Beverage. ,. ' :a. Slowly add small amount of sauce to egg yolka. . Lunch: Clam Chowder, Date and Nut Bre"" Stir into remaining s a u c e . ' ...... 3. Add salt, nutmeg, pepper and salmon. Sand~iches, Waldorf Salad, GrapenUit Custard 4. Fold in egg whites PuddIng, Beverage. S. Bake in individual baking dishes or casserole DinneJl': Fried Filet of Sole or meat l1D desired, in a slow oven (325) 45 minutes. ' Mashed Potato, Peas and Onions,o Squasb ,GarS. Garnish with lemon den Salad, Russian Dressing, Dutch Apple' C,Alt.. Serves 4. Lemon Sauce, Beverage." ., . ' "eas and Onions 81\TURDAY, FEB. 18 . 3 C. Cooked Peas Fast 1 C. Tiny Cooked OniOM 'Breakfast: Sliced Orange, Braa MuftfftJl, ae.3 T; Heavy Cream erage.. . . l h t. Sugar ' Lunch: Cheese Poacbed Egg,· Asparagus, Raw Combine Vegetables, add cream ~ lJUgV. Beat carrot. and celery Salad, Sliced Peaches, Peanut thoroughly. ' Butter Cookie, Beverage.' :. ., S~ake gently until vegetable. aN wen ooated . Dinner: Baked Beans and Mixed Grill HamWIth cream. burg, Bacon, Frankfurt, Tossed Green Sal;d, 1000 'S~ves 6 ~ 8.
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CCO. Ceremony
The CCD will be canonically erected in the Sacred Heart Parish, Fall River, on Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock; Rev. Felix S. Chilc;ll?,. pastor, and Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan CCD Direc':' tor, will pr~side. ' Projects for the unit will involve an i n qui r y class for adults,' the orgaiJ.ization the Fishers' group, and th~ instrucolo ~ion of 'public school childr.en.
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r10 '" THE ANCHOR:....E> iaceMl' Of Fan, River.:-"'11iurs.;-Feb;",.. 19611l
PraYe-'i'<Fasting .~ More Necessary Than Dialogue"
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Colgate ·P;~side~t·· D~f~~d~,· Rockefeller School Plan
NEW YORK (NC) _ , HPrayer_ and fasting," mON than the "dialogue," Me needed to bring about religious unity, Bishop Join~." J.
: . ALBANY (NC) :-:Art extraordinary proposal to help · stude~ts meet increasing tuition' costs being asked by hard: p,ressed private colleges has been formally presented state 'lawmakers: Gov. Nelson Rockefeller proposed in a 6,500:wor.d message that ,the state to st,udents who are free to give about $26.6 million a attend the college ot their 'year to help about 110,000 choice. Ease Problem students. '
Wright of PittSburgh said heli& Bishop Wright stated: , , "Academic discussion of dootrine and increased friendly' 00;. operation in good deeds' withia the human community have helped improve the climate ff!' unity among men, particularJ:V, among Christians. ' , "But one can- almost grarRl the steady growth of the desiN for reunion through the Christ>ian world in proportion to tho increase of prayers for unity .• If He declared that the. unity 6! all Christians in the Church "cae never come to pass through discussion or 'dialogue', alone." Less Important Part "Discussion of theology and the, 'dialogue' incidental to ~ will become a mere intellectual parlor game • . • unless t~ , intellectual exchange is on~ part of the picture, indeed a less important part," he said. ' "Dominating all must be prayer, prayer -and the searching of the heart which should be part of all prayer, to the en4 that the wills of men may be ic _ perfect conformity to the wiU of Christ." ' ,Bishop Wright, stressed thafi the obstacles of religious unity are, "more often spiritual, mor·aI. emotional, sometimes even tem.peramental" than they are ... tellectual. . Such obstacl~ will not be oy~rliome ,by reasoning and d~ putation so much as by prayer arid fasting, by penitential discipline of the spirit and humb~ . purgin'g of the heart in ordei' that Christ may be all and Jill ali," he said.' , -"
The grants proposed by Gov. The Governor proposed tlbe · $tate give directly to students' a Rockefeller' are aimed ~~ easing ·:flat '''tuition supplement." Col- the problem of "tuition-paying , legians eligible would be New students, he said.' Mr. Case said he cannot subYork residents attending a college in the state where' annual scribe to "the proposition that laws duly enacted to serve legituition is $500 or more. . Undergraduates would get timate and desirable public $200 a y,ear, those seeking 'mas- pu~poses - such as aid to stuters' degrE;es would get $400 and den~' - are repugna'nt to the those seeking doctorates would Constitution simply, because 'get $800., . , their incidental effects Qn other, The grants would "not be lim- individuals or institutions -.,; in- , ited to students at private or eluding church-related c~lleges church-related colleges in theo- . :- may prove to be helpfulrather than har.mful." , ry, although in effect they are, . .. since few students at tax-supported institutions pay more Fami~y: , than $500 in tuition. Not Clear Sailing WOOSTER (NC)-William and, The plan will n()t have clear sailing through the legislature. ,Ruth O'Loughlin and their three -The Democratic minority has children will leave for, New proposed a different plan., Sev- Guinea n ext Wednesda'y, be-' eral Protestant and Jewish or- coming the first family from the ganizations, along· with New Cleveland diocese to devote , York City's Liberal party, have themselves to the foreign mission opposed the Governor's pr()posal field. , They will serye for at least· :on what .they see as Chur<;hfive years in the- Vicariate of . 'Sta,te grounds. . The Democrats, have adopted Mount Hagen,' staffed by. mis,~'"proposal by State Controller sioners of the Society of the . Arthur Levitt who favors a.mas:- Divine Word. The' O'Loughlins and their · ~i~e expansion, of the existing FIRST AMERICAN NOVICE: Sister Denise of Jesus, state scholarship,.program as ,an three children Eugene, 11, _Paul" 8, and Daniel6, will ~ry to teach, the fornier Denise Chanipigny of Woonsocket, receives the .~ih'ernative'... ' , . ' ...• , ;, :!?cholarships ~~ the basis. ' qf the, Faith,to natives who did not habit 'of the La Salette Sisters iii the Shrine Chapel from academic standing and financia1 see, their first white ,man ·,until Re~.pnilip;"'teBlanc; :M:S~ 'provincial, assi~ted 'by' ·need would be made ava\!able 1934. Brother Genest, M.S.. . ," . ' .,They .will serve under Bishop , · to' the top half 'of every high ,schOOl g'raollating class in ,the George -Bernarding, S.V.D. Mrs.' state under the Democrat's plan. ' O;Loughlin, a stenographer be, , The plan has been defended fore her ma~riage, will serve as by" Everett Case, president af the bishop's secretary. Mr. Nominate CardinaL, Colgate Ul).jversity and a former O'Loughlin, a'production control ASUNSION (NC) - . Para- proportionate to the capabilities PARIS (NC)-Eugene Card" president of the State Associa'- , man, will: train and super-vise guay's' Bishops' 'have' voiced for action in the social order." nal Tisserant, Dean of the Colotion of Colleges and Universi. workers in building a church, ties. The association of 123 pri- convent, recreation hall, trade "serious anxieties" about social , The ~ishops' also spoke out lege of' Cardinals, has beee vate .colleges has 'backed, the school,S, and other centers nee,d,~d ' and p'olitical coqditio'ns in thi.s against violence, and cited the, nominated for membel'ship ill nation which,has be,en ruled' b~ recent,con'demnation by tIle"Car';' the French ~cac:iemy, made up ])roposal. " , . at ,the ~is,sion. '. ' a sitlgle party for ,a' doz,e.n year~. dirials' an d ';Archbishops 'Of of ~O 'men famed .£01' their Ii.. , .. Mr. Case said'ili a leHer to the , , Gi~~ Up ,Job ", . "They isSued joint '~pastoral France of "acts of terrorism 'a,rid and scholarlyachievemen. New York Times,' which has opposed the plan, that a distinction '" 'Mr>' O'Loughlin;42, 'is giv.irig, letter calling for "im,media,te ~ndoutrages ,against the human per- and declicated to preserving ~ must ,be made. between· aid up· a' $7,300··a year job to take concrete" steps to bring about son." At the same time, theycon~ ~re~<;,h language. ' directly to'institution.s and aid on' the mission work. But· he is peace and order in ,the' 'economic, dem:nedcommunism as' "Clearly not.worried about finding a job c\lltural, ,social and political inc()mpatible" 'with Catholicism'. \, when 'he comes back. This is the Catholics' ,in' Britain fields. 'The great need of this MonNO JOB TOO ItO way he puts it: , "A climate of peace," they said, tana-sized-tropical nation of. 1.5 "Let's ·be. realistic. How do I Fear New Tax Bill NONE 'lOG SMAll. ~wi1t enable all citizens to earn million persons, according tq the LONDON (NC)-British Cath- know I will be around in five their daily. bread honestly,' Bishops, is brotherhood, social olics fear that a tax bill already years?' How do I know we won't' without unnecessary hindrances justice and charity. accepted in principle by Parlia- ' want· to stay in New Guinea? or exhorbitant taxes, without mimt may place a heavy finan- " Besides"I am' sure that if God unjustifiable monopolies or irri~jal burden on Church schools, takes care of my family and me . tating privileges." PRlNTiRS despite government assurances to for the next five years, He cel"Awesome Responsibility ,tainly will take care of. us at the the contrary. ' MtriII 6ftIkle aDd Pit• • The wording of the 2,500-word A sectiol1 of the government- end of that time." lOWEll, MASS. backed bill-a general financial The O'Loughlins say that elf- pastoral was guarded, but the 'IleIepboae LoweIi Bishops made indirect references measure aimed at revising out- tensive Catholic reading played , COMPANY :dated property assessments and a, important part in their deci- to the dictatorial regime of . . I-6UI ... CJL ,,_ _ Preside!lt Alfredo Str0t:ssner. real estate taxes - revokes the sion to join the missions. ' 'tax exemption of state-aided Complete Line "It is evident that those who ,Catholic schools provided for in Steubenville, Diocese today have the awesome responBuilding' Mater~als ltile 1944 Education Act. sibility of governing the country 8OSfON ISets Second Synod ! The bill affects ,the 2,117 statehave the 'best and most effective 'I ,SP~IN~ ST.,-·iFAIRH·AV,E~, ,OCEA~, N. J. : STEUBENVILLE' (NC)~The -Catholic schools in J'ri'eans to obtain the goals we j'supportedand , wyman 3-2611 ,England Wales, which have Steubenville ';diocese ' win:-· hold have outlined 'and whose real.. PAWTVCUt, R. L :a total enrol1ment ,of 548;340 Jits second' sYnod iii the Spring ization has' not been achieved," . . .. istudents. Fee-charging Catholi!l of 1962. Bishop John King'Mus-' they said~ ." fschools,' 'attended by about 100,~ sio has announced. • : In 'addition to calling on all to He said another jjynod is 'n~ prove' themselves "ard~nt' de':' ~OOO students are not directly conON CAPE COD :cer~ed. They were not granted ed because much' of' the legisfenders,of -human rights'," the lationpassed at the first in 1952 :a tax exemption by the 1944 Bishops said: :law. . "has become somewhat obsolete" "The therapy which the nation and other problems have arisen 'requires today with an urgency MATERIALS which demand the attention and that cannot be put off will not 'Three Publications regulation of Bishop, clergy and be the work 'of a few, or of one SPri~g ,Merge Into Weekly Religious. single political party, or of one i PONCE (NC)-Three 'Puerto Canon 356 of the Code of Can- single group of men ... This !Rican Catholic publications will on Law specifies that a diocesan 'grave responsibility falls on each be merged into a new Catholic synod, is to be held every M) and everyone of us. The extent weekly newspaper for the entire years. of this per:sonal responsibility is island. ' AAAfl.IE PARK~NG The Spanish-language publication, whose name has not yet been chosen, will be printed :here with the endorsement of 'Archbishop James P. Davis of ;San Juan and Bishops J:ames E. i McManus, C.SS,R., of Ponce and ;Alfredo Mendez of Aiecibo. I The first issue, planned for LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATl'LEBOOO !E~ster Sunday, April 2, is expected to have an initial circulation of about 30,000. The pubOR Savings Accounts 'lication will succeed "De Reino," the Confraternity of· Christian " Doctrine weekly; "Luz y Ver':' Extra 00 Systematic Bonus Savings da,d," Ponce dioc'esian ;weekly; and '~'Juventud," Catholic Youth Tel. WY ~6.127,1 New 8edfOfll .640 "18alGn~ Street )Vorkers' morithlJr:o ~
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.Paraguayis Bishops Voice Concern Over Social, ,Political CO,nditions
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Laymen'Must Involve Selves Even at Risk of Errors
?HE ANCHOR"':' Thurs., Feb. 9, 1961
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ST. PAUL (NC) - U.S) Catholics can make a real contribution to world peace, but the opportunity 'will escape them if they are timid, Father John LaFarge, 8.J., said here. "The issue before us is exploitjng to the full the God-given opportunity to well as abstinence at the proper contribute to the peace and 'time, while timidity is a vice unity of the world," declared detested by God and man," be the 81-year-old Jesuit, who said.
is an associate editor of America - He said that U. S. Catholics are magazine and a funder of the "timid in really working for knowledge." , Catholic interracial movement. "And you cannot acquire Working for peace "is not n task for the timid and queru- knowledge without work, not lous," Father LaFarge said in an even if you follow cultural proaddress sponsored by local grams on TV," he added. Knights of Columbus. "We overcome intellectual "It can be accomplished only timidity in order that we may if we have the intellectual cour- discover the grounds for hope in age to seek out the teachings of a despairing world," he said. "We revelation, the reasoned conclu- must overcome moral timidity sion of natural law, the findings as well, in order that we' may of reputable history and science," put that hope into dynamiC. effect: hope in what God will do he said. "We cannot' afford to wait for us, hope in what our neighbor can do and can be." meekly for directions from above." , Rise to Greatness Use Love The challenge facing the Cath:' In their efforts on behalf of peace, Catholics must "take our olic layman is ·,"to rise to the sacred weapon of love down greatness of the Church's hope from the shelf where we let it for peace as expressed in her gather respected dust and use it respect and love for the entiJ:e' with efficacy and conviction," he human race," Father LaFarge said. continued. Charity in the form of aid to underdeveloped countries is not enough, he said. "The love that will conquer the world's hatred will begin at home, in our own ST. LOUIS (NC) - Joseph communities and our own par- Cardinal Ritter has found that ishes." it's tough to 'outdo the Pope ill Father LaFarge stressed that graciousness in any language. laymen cannot fulfill their vocaWhen the Archbishop of st. tion by "mere negative protest Louis was informed last Decemagainst the wicked world." berthat he' was named a cardiInvolvement Needed . ~al, he began a concentrated "They are called to involve:":, s.t,udy of Italian.' H~ had pro:-. , ment in that world, in a wa)' that gressed well enough to take part carinot normally be expected 'Of iri ;sirriple conversations in Italian' the clergy," he said. "Involve- when he was in Vatican City this ment implies risks-and we can Ja~uliry to get his Red Hat. make' mistakes, possibly serious Cardinal Ritter said that while mistakes, for we are only human in Rome he had requested His beings." Holiness Pope John XXIII to "But if we are humble followsend a message to the people of ers of Jesus Christ, we will ad- 81. Louis.' , mit our mistakes. We will not be , Papal' Message. embittered or discouraged,but The papal inessage, addressed will try again." to the "dear children, of the , Tlinidity N'otPrttdenee ",' . ArchdiOCese of ,St., Louis," has . 'Father LaFai'ge,' warned that ~~~n received. . , 'timidity can sometimes pose ,It. states in part: "We are hap.. ptudence._But real prudence '''iB ·p,Y .. to send you this greeting a virtue that tea'ches action as through your worthy Archbishop, who returns to you adorned with :Endorses Criticism the sacred cardinalatial purple, which will render him more 'Of Lurid Stories . VATICAN CITY (NC) -L'- precious and dear to you. ConOsservatore Romano, the Vatl-· tinue to love him and to follow 'can City daily newspaper, has his teaching and counsel." Cardinal Ritter said the Pope ;endorsed a proposal to curb Jurid presentations by movies, "recorded it in English, as much as to say that 'Since you speak television and press. ' L'Osservatore took its stand In Italian, now I will speak Eng. commenting on a speech by lishI' "Surely this is characteristic Prosecutor General. Francesco Cigolini of the Italian Supreme of him, and of the paternal spirit Court. In a ceremony officially that has won the heart of the opening the legal year be whole world." stressed the need to curb corruption of youth by modern Giant 'Rosary' Made imeans of communications. , He singled out receht tenden- From Fishnet Buoys fR,RTLA:ND (NC),""'" A giant :eies toward exploitation of vice, violence, horror and .scandal 'as "rosary," made of wooden fishcarried 'by plays, movies, !ele- ,net' .buoys and extending ap,vision and the press. At the same proxlmate~y 75 feet in length, time he criticized the hostility built by a Portland couple, was :shown by various sections of' domited 'to the SanCtuary of Our . Italy's national life' - notably' Sorrowful Mother here. left-wing politicians and intelMr. and Mrs. Andrew Tichy lectual,s - which have criticized llflid they made the huge "rosattempts to bring such exploita- ary" as an act of devotion. They tion under control. obtained the wooden buoys from Astoria, Ore. Father John Diocese Plans Three M. O'Connell, OSM., director, blessed the "rosary" after it was New Retreat Houses spread out 0111 the sanctuary COVINGTON (NC)',;"". BishOp grounds. • Coleman F. Carroll of Miami has announced plans for the establishment of three lay retreat houses in \southern Florida. Father Thomas F. Middendorf, executive secretary of the National Catholic Laymen's Retreat Conference, said the Bis&\'Jew ,~nSl!~l1Id'll I?laygvculI1I«1I ,hop disclosed the plans at a reccmt conference of officers and ~~~rJ'il V@\\D1l' IOCJri)~e 1P~I1'~W directors of the retreat movef~$hDCn Shews @ri)d! ment at Barry College, Miami. Father Middendorf is director Ball1quets of the Marydale Retreat House at Erlanger, Ky. at lincoln Park's One retreat house for women MILLION-D,OLLAR will be operated by the Sisters of the Cenacle. The other retreat BALLROOM houses, for men and boys will Call ROlAND GAMACHE bE> located in West Palm Beach WYman 9-6984 and Miami.
Gracious Action Deserves One
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Journalists Study Problems, Of Peru Media
LIMA (NC) - Acommi'btee of U.S. Catholic journalists has come here at the request of the Holy See te
NEW CHAPEL: Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Fall River Diocese, blesses the cornerstone of the new Our Lady's Chapel at New Bedford as Rev. David Fleming, O.F.M., rector of ~e chapel, assists.
Octogenarian Trustee Reminisces On ,50 Years' Service to Parish
BUFFALO ,(NC),...:..... A man hoard a wealth of memprJes diJHng 50 years of service 86 trustee of a parish. Such a man is James M. Moran, 80, who helped, to found Holy Spirit parish here half a century ago and has been a trustee of the parish ever since., Mr. Moran,' born in County Mayo, Ireland, "just a short· distance from the shrine cxf Our Lady 'of Knock," came to Buf~ falo by way of' Bridgeport; Conn., and New York City "in the days when' a working' man feit he was well paid if he brought home' $10 a week." . Shortly after his arrival here the Most Rev. Charles H. Col,ton, third Bishop of Buffalo,' assigned Father Joseph Hennessey ,to start a n,ew parish in the northern part of the city and 'named Mr. Moran as a trustee. 'Wonderful Feeling' ,'::\ "Fifty years is a long time to be associated with one parish," Mr. Moran said. "It gives me a wonderful feeling to know that during these years the priests of the parish felt I could help them~ "I can still remember vividly, as if' it happened only a short time ago, seeing Father Henn~ssey pedaling his bicycle along ~aJ:l
Honors' Editor
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,ROME (NC) ...;.., RaimondQ Manzini, editor of the Vatican ,City daily ,newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, has been maqe an officer of France's Legion, of Honor at a ceremony in the French Embassy to the Holy See.
A Delicious Treat
Elmwood Avenue, which then was a gravel road, 'on his way to teach at D'Youville College. "Those were- the days," Mr. Moran recalled, "when Pierce-Arrow automobile and the horse and_buggy were fighting for supremacy on the streets of Buffalo." , Mr. Moran said the present liturgical movement is a great boon to the Church. "I think that this, along with the lay apostolate, will make the p'rejudice which once' affected this country a thing of the past .. 'he $aid. "AIt' through the year~ this prejudice has been dying out and Catholics are attaining a higher stature among the people of this country." An active Holy Name Society member and a Knight of Columbus, Mr. Moran said Cath'olics today are as strong in their Faith'as they were 50 years ago, but the world is in the worst state it ever has been because of the communist menace•.
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find ways of improving the Church's press and radio actiy. ities in Peru. The Apostolic Nuncio, ArclP bishop Romolo Carboni, welcomed, the committee at the ai1100 port. The Study Committee of the Catholic Press Association consists of Father Albert J. Nevins. M.M., president of the C,P.A.. Floyd Anderson, its vice presi.dent, and Joseph Sullivan, president of Sullivan Brothers, prin~ ers. Father Nevins is editor anet business' manager of Maryknoli magazine and Mr. Anderson is managing editor of the Advocat~ weekly of the Newark Archdioc~se.. Archbishop Carboni told "tm; committee on its arrival that the Church's publicity organizatioil in Peru is in very poor condition at present," but "there are no problems that cannot be met anci overcome." . Professional Aid Father Nevins pointed out tha1 teams of professional communications experts have been help... ing improve Catholic newspapers, magazines and radio programs in the U. S. for years. The committee's research in Peru will be a pilot project for similar work in other Latio American cou.ntries. The CPA is ready to answer requests from the bishops of Latin America' U. carry' out similar stUdies of oth~ countries. . The condition of Church communications in Peru is admittedly very poor. In the archdiocese of Lima, the capital city, there i j not one general Catholic newspaper or magazine for Catholic&. A few parishes publish occasion,.; al bulletins. -,
Over, 1,000 Members In Columban Society. ...ST:., COLUMBANS (NC)-The Columban Fathers nOw have more than' 1,000 members. , Statistics in the latest Colu~ ban directory disclose there are 769 priests, 230 students and 69 probation stUdents, it was an:. nounced. at. the society's head>quarters here. The Columban Fathers founded in 1918 by the late Bi~hop Ed. ward J. Galvin, work in 209 mission parishes and care for 1 812 mission stations. The largest number of Columbans work ill the Philippines, Japan and Korea.
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$157,400,000 for their foreign missions. This represents. Pr'o&esAs a giant groping toward consciousness through tan* per capita contribution 01 $2.'75 each, which Is $lU9. more 41reams and nightmar~s, Latin America is at once .ahope than the Catholic per capita contribution to the Boly Father tor all the Missions of ·the world.· and a portent. It isa phenomenon of our lifetime which thrills us and at the same time dismays us. For it was' our The North American foreign missionary force numbers 27,219. assumption, naive enough, Latiil' America is still'half • 'The Catholic missionaries ~om the United States number only Caththat the. awake.ning would olic, the record will not be too 7,000. be ,an orderly"process, once' discouraging. The other half The Methodists send 1,580 members to we had concerned ourselves would be chiefly pagan in the their missions; the Seventh Day Adventists with it, lending itself to our modern sense. ' · 1,385; the. Southern Baptists 1,3'7'7; the guidance and control,' plastic in For a comparison, that is apUnited 'Presbyterians 1,356. Thra largest· (, u r masterful proximately what' has resulted 'number of missionaries from anyone hands. Not that in Western Europe after the . Catholic religious society or mstitute in the wer~ ever centuries of turmoil. SubstanUnited States is from among the' Jesuits. entirely as 'to' tially, and with due exceptioris, what the. ulti. one way.or the other, the Church INDONESIA. PRELATE:' They have 817· in Mission lands.. mate des i g n has held the allegiance of someThe Proiestants are particularly generous should be; heads thirtg like half the population of Archbishop 9-abriel Manek, and opinions . those countries which we still S.V.D., has b'een named arch- ·in supporting foreign mission work. The Methodists, for example,' gave in all about. 'to were numbered . describe, partly from, force of bishop of 'Endeh, Flores, $15,000,000; the Lutherans about $15,000,000; ua 11 y . But . . habit, as Catholic. . which includes 63 per cent of eq the PresQyterians $10,845,000; the Seventh Ma tter 0 f 'F ac t that it should Day Adventists $12,000,000.. . take ·the form 'It may sound scandalous to Indonesia's i,300jOOO Cathoand direction pious ears to. describe such a lies. A native Indonesian, we see emergprospect as anything but failure. 'Archbishop Man~k was born As regards supporting the Missions. the Seventh Day Adven"-ging was not reckoned with in Actually it is not a matter of apL h tists lead all "'Protestant grou'ps. 'lrheir members number onI" Ill. l ' . at a urus on Timor Island. our philosophy prova or condemnation but of . 400,000, but each member coid~ibuted $28. The Methodists gave" American business and indus- fact. We' tend, incidentally, to NC Photo. . . $8.52 each and the Evan'gelicml Fi'ee Church $14.40. We no not ..... try have tended to look at Latin delude ourselves by certain know how much each individual missionary society receives for America through the spectrum assumption, as, for example, that w ~~«f1 ~ lfG"<e$~ ,its foreign mission work, but we clio know how much the Catholics of colonialism _ that hateful in the 'Ages of Faith," prior to )I of the pnited States give to the Roly Father who asked that in word. Behind a facade of fluent the Reformation, whole PQPulalLoli'[);)l1!J@!YtlO<m ~O$[}u@rB\.. missionary giving he. be "first and p~incipally aided." Last year rhetoric and noble sentiment tions and entire nations were Ii" he received 2'7c per Catholic olf. $21.'74 lell9', than what each there has lurked a cold deter- Catholic in practice no less than VATICAN CITY (NC)-VaU">':Seventh Day Adventist gave.' . . . . mination to, take money out of in belief.· .' . can Radio reports that Lithuan-,--" Latiil America, no matter how. Accumulating evidence makes ian Bishop Julijonas SteponaFor, those who have ,the Euchmris~ and the other, blessings of If, from time to time, a higher 'it clear that this was rarely if vicius has been under. house arthe .!Faith and who would like to equalize differenCes bi the name hleai of fratern'alism has been ever true, Statistics never lie so rest by communist· authorities of.; 9hrist, send J:ouroffering:s to the Holy Father: through, his . th e 't rans f'er for refus.in.g .to ordain, govern-' S t he p ' . beg Ul'1'In gl Y as 10 ~-voke.d by Americans, l'n 'govociety f orU. f .. ' .', I . - t . t t al ment-favored candidates to thti ~ '." . 'ropagation . , . - 0#I the Faith .•... \ , .' ernment or private industry, all rOm SOCIa _accep ance 0 ac u .., . . ",' ,. ' , . , . .... ,. --,-'- .... , ~'. too aften it has been forced to religion.' ' ·priesthood... .~ .. ,.GQD LOVE YOU to A,non, f~r $2 "This.is to .help the poor of . A recen t s t u d y 0 f F ren".... _l. The radio denied French news ' th.. e 'Y<>.rld W'ie.ld,.t.o.. the. pressures of exploi_.' " '" tQ M.I,I.H. lor $~5 '"This is in. thanksgiving for the ,tabon.. . pom . t, sows h th at. agency reports, that'the autllOri';" sat . ~t to ~id a baby'. in the .... .' , '. .';,._.. . Ca th 0 I"IClsm, 10 . e d e l'Ivery 0 f our new .baby ,.Plea~e, use It is 'not that'Amerieans"have .the, percentageofthose.~holive ·ties depoited hIm.and had him ,:Mi.s.sio~s." ... to.A.S. for $2 "I.,am in the six.th ade, and learned .. " hard....,work ,and I think -Inned mQre greVl'ously than the thel·r·.· rell'gi'o''n' wl'th ,reason'able· imprisonec:i"near Moscow. ' . ,t}lis mOll~y, by . helping Jny motl).Eir: It was . British or the Dutch or the fidelity has' nof greatly ch~nged'··"·.It said that Bishop Stepona~. the ~is,si~ns sh()uld have., the r~ward·.~ .,' . to Mrs. M.~. for $5 Spaniards, it is simply that the since before the Revolution of vicius, Apo'stolic Administrator "It cost 'me $5 for. remedies to:c~re a bad cold. I am enclo~g the clistinction, if any, has been .lost. 1789, 'save for the great cities and of the Archdiocese of Vilna, had same amount to help furnish help. f()r some poor person, who ia And now that we find the Latin a few particular 'areas. . been put under house arrest at ~:erering illness.". .. ---. ' American mind in revol.t agllinst New Catholic Life Zagare, a village in northern Aid to the Society for, the, Propagation C1l the Faith is Dot ·to IIll thill, and including us in its There is danger, of cou.rse. in Lithuania. He refuSed to ordain restrict i.tself to purely monetary offerings. The best kind 01. offeJ:'ing illuned more g'reviously than the transposing the experience ot. the three ecclesiastics b.'lcause he One can make is t.o combine sacrifice with praYer. Specially designed eondemnation of what is evil, Western Europe to Latin Amer';' judged them unworthy O'f the for 'mission prayer is the WORLDMISSION ROSARY, which · there is litt.le. to .salve our hurt.. iea·. There is, however, a 'cOm- priesthood, the radio reported. . employs a different color bead, for each dec!1 de, ·the five decades Protestant Efforts mon element of polarization ob- : L'Osservatore Romano, Vatirepresenting the five major mission areas of the world. How much servable in both. ~an City's daily newspaper, comaid you will be giving the Holy Father's missionaries if you pray Protestant America has seen In. the... latter, 'a', culture' , t d th t d ' t ' ·daily for them on this·.rosary! To obtai,'n this you need only l'nclude l'le redemption of the LaUn men e a espl e vanous re- . World in terms of its own evan-' once dominant'is in the thrOes ports to the contrary "the ath'!ist: . your request along with a $2.00 offering to Most Rev. Fulton 1. gelization. It has made an enor- of eXhaustion,·. but. this tragedy.' campaign in Lithuania has beSheen, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. . mous effort, costing enormous is being offset; and perhaps ulti- come more intense ... " Cutout this column,pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the sums and involving the dedica- mately"nullified, by. the emerUse Hitler's Methods Most Rev. Fulton 'J. Sheen, National Director 'of the Society for tion of thouSands of missionaries, gence' of a: new Catholic life the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Av.enue, New York 1, N. Y.. elerical and lay, to tear down seeking' adjustm,ent. to, a "new L'Osservatore said that_since · or your. Diocesan Director, RT, REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, ' Itur I' tt ' ' .. ' t1;leend. of World War IT LI'ththe fabric of Catholicism and to; cu 368 North Main Street, Fall River:. Mass.. t , b ' u.ania's communist masters have ; It . a h pa ern.d t . '. replace it with a facsimiie of.' IS,'ng" ampere. a . tpresen , y d' . h .' d" sought to liquidate the Catholl'c" thl two American Protestantism. . .. '-'. s,', a IS ear enmg IS'CAUGHTERS OIF SY. PAtD~ This it has not succeeaed"'in . ,re~ara i for th~ 'dignity' of the Faith in Lithuania. The country lnvioo ';oune aim (14-2~)' to . labor IIil doing. It has opened thousands:' priestly', voc~tion and a failure was absorbed into the Soviet Christ"a ;'00' vinoyard as all A~etIo o~ 100 of missions, built hundreds of .' to dc~~prehet:nhd"the roie of stew~~~~r~nisl~~~ hesitation' to re..: Edilion_! p,oss. 'Rodio•. Movios . ail,d . 'ole>. schools, but it has not impressed ar s Ip on . e ·Pin't 6f.:the laity. "'reas of Need' sort to methods used widely in vlalon, Wi~ Ihoso modom moana. thooo its stamp upon the soul of Latin .t>l. JAissionary Sia,oro b,ine Chrlat'o DoctrlllO . It I'S l'n the t it Germany by Hitler's neopagan-' America, nor is there serious se wo areas,' IG all. ;ogardlooo o~ 'OW. color or cr_. ism in substituting pagan f'eas';' would seem ' that Am erlcan likelihood that it ever will.' . Catholicism ... For in~o,.malion w,ilo '0' has a' positive con'- for Christ.ian ones," the newsREV, MOTHER SUPERIOR But it has done something else; tribution to make to its counter_ paper asserted. ' 10 IV. PAUL'S AV!. BOSTON 30. MAli, it has created a schism 10 that' part in Latin America. Our im-' Bishop Steponavicius, who fg BOul which is· not the least eled' t ..' abouf.50 years old, was consement in its present travail. It has me la e missionary' concern, however vital, is of its nature crated Sept. 11, 1955. His consesown distrust and contempt,.. and 'temporarY. It is certainly n6t cratiori along with another new . is reaping of· bitterness. ' our business to try to make:over b'ISh!>P, wa!l first announced by Hop'es atoharvest Save Remnant Now, tardilY,·Catholic America the Church there, nor to initiate 'Moscow ·"Radio. The followIDg ~. the .Evangelicals. iIi an attempt year' the 'Holy See, confirm~d,,,, Is alerted to tAenecessi~y of:do-" ·;.to' impose'" oUr coiicep·ts 'upbn it, " t.~athe.·,hli.d'-.been. co.nseerate.d. b1. '. '. . ing something for that soul,SpeI d hi t P l " O' , .' ,,' ,,,' , eifically for the Church which nor,"muph le~;~oadop~a'polic, ,mcu l,ng, m.m ~ s ont~lca S~ S._. '. ',....,' ..... of colonialism' to"ward 'it, ' ,Yearbook. HelS TItular BishOP. . has been its mOther and nurse. We go there not SO much"-' of Antarado... ' It is not so much the statistical ... .-' , convert as to help, to give what Ph . y' si~.·ans Rece.·ve .,:,'.,...... . . . Inroads of Pro.testantism which have aroused t.h is . concern'· is best in our American Catholic T , .,'.: . . (~ough they are disquieting . '.tradition to strengthen what is Honors for Service enough) as the, threatened col- best in,tpeirs. In that spirit we WASHINGTON (NC) - Four '. . . ' may learn, III the end, as 'much Washington physicians received . U,NI~JI( WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. 18pse of ail entire cultllfe which as we teach; .' " '. was originally Catholic. . . ." papal honors for service to the' ~~~~~ns,~iS5ilS'!~a~~~~~~~i;~~i;ti~~~ . Whether'this could have been Church -In Ii ceremony at the p~eveDted by 'more tiinely' aid '.is·' e,es.:, . rea:~er. m I ty' Apos~olh: Delegation here. esterile ciue~tion, t~ough' it'muSt· ;Am~ng Churches • ..' Raised, to the rank of Knighta rankle in the ··cons<;ience~.:o'~: !, ;NEYV: YORK (NC)-'-Relations . Commandl'lr the Order.of St. ch,urch~len eyery~het:!'!;~om th~ .. never have been friendlier:. be-:. ':. '~reg~rYthe '".Gr~at were Drs. ,}\0111an curia down ~he ;liile<., r ·,.tweeh.Catholics.Rrotestantsand : loJ:m: R.: ,"Cay:ana'th, Robert J. ';, F'i~ qandi~. real~. it, is ,M, "members'of th~ Orthodoxfliith" .Co~feYanq Andrew G: Prandoni; ;u.utte9- th~t th~: pour is lO~' ~a.~t ·flllln~v~~$itY.;pr:eS!iiel¥Bil(i"lier.e:;·,.. (pr:;)~~~i9· ·l.\tI9¥~i received ~ '," Wliy Buy ~ Supply . i~9r;a.r:.yt!?-I~g'l~k.e 8:,~~tat~,~~~h,c .;, '.:. ~i,it.:~&r.. :~.o.hll. J;,'tPOUglllf.tti,:~ :)p.aIH~!'~e«!ll;I.;· :' :':.' '.' :. ,.::,... .': Nact1?D or~sl)lf1tualre..,co!)-q~eab.;::SetOilj'HW.;.Uilciversi~Y:jp'h;s1d~n~).". '.', " ' " , .' ·A: .'" ',' ·";:.~OMPL~TE\', ~. '.' The'1:,lel:i~ tHat can·be; d~~e'IlOW'7:.;i~~counsE!led: "Let no~'one'be·de:.:·.; ,,,.~"; ,. RENTAt WORK UNIFORMS : :::t .. nant as possible.• ' '. . trinal'cha~s separate the 'Cath'; ".C! ;";';-:,-":.: .--::':." . '. Half, Catholic', '. ."l. ., . olic and Protestant churches the~ ,j. >. .:. Hom~.;made Also ·Recl~i.m I",dustrial Giovel ., How much of Latin Amerl~ri:, g~e·~testbeing the c!>ncept of 'w; .~': '" , ',CANDJES Catholicism is it possible to" Chur$, itself." . . .... .:. Ci-iOCOlATES save? The answer, plainly. deLaymen' and theologiansari! "SOVarieties pends upon too many imponder- shocked' by 'the "scandal!' 01. · abIes and unpredictables (in- divideq Christianity, h~ said, but ROUTE 6 near · eluding the Grace of God) to be they must be aware of "the diffiSuccessor to much better than a guess. culties facing a reunited Church. Fa..i rhaven· Auto Thea.... .... EngIalid Overall & Supply Co. But throwing caution to the He said that the Catholic laymen . 10 BoWaa'4 Ave., Hew Bedford FAIRHAVEN. MAss. winds we would hazard this, that must become inspired to' carry 0Sl' . Pboae·~ '1-"'8'1 OI'WY '·0781 I(._at the. end of this century work 'for the cause of unitl';t.
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Carmelite, Brother of Ocean~: Grove Resident, - - - - - - - - - - - - ! . ; 4 0 !, ... Separately Classifies -iCi~cle of D~cepti~n· Founder of Unique Tr~ining School YORK (NC)-The', Nat- .'(the military use of man eoaTtiE ANCHOR-Dfoc:eee of Faft Riv«-Thurs., Feb. " 1961
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A priest with many hats hl Rev. Mario L. Dittami, O. Carm., pastor of St. Clara's ChurCh, Chicago and brother of Arn,adeo J. Dittami of St. Michael's parish, Ocean Grove. Father Dittami's newest job is that of directing United States ful).d-r~ising activities on behalf of cloistered Carmelite nuns in 34 European conve.nts. Previously he wa~ the ~ounder of a completely new r--..-------..,----.-,..~-~. -~.,.· respond to their vocation, knowtype of "training school" for ,I ing full well what faces them. Carmelite lay b rot her s , "It is inspiring - ' al\d also where young men combined' sad. And it should provide a their novitiate with practical study' ')f a vocation to be used in the brotherhood, such as farming, cooking, or tailoring.
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He's also famous for a series. '~~ of books and pamphlets on the .i , married ,state, used in many Dioceses in connection with pre-Cana and Cana conferences as well as individual c o u n s e l i n g ' " of married couples. There's more: he's much in demand as giver of retreats and missions, primarily to religious communities in the Pennsylvania and Ohio areas. He gave a mission several years ago far parishioners of his brother's church, St. Michael's in Ocean Grove. He is, expected there for o visit this April. At National Shrine Father Dittami was ordained June, 1941 at the National Shrine of the Imqlaculate Conception in Washington: After several assignments, he was given charge of the brothers' project in 1952. "He was given land and a broken-down farmhouse near Akron," relates his' brothel'. "He went there without a dime in his pocket." Shortly, however, Father Dittami had laid the foundations for the now flourishing Infant . of Prague Villa. From an initial enrollment of five or six young men, it· now accommodates 30 aspirants t o t h e Carmelite brother's life. The Infant of Prague course lasts three years, and boys receive training in a trade prior to embarking upon their novitiate year. After setting the Villa upon its feet, Father Dittami became· pastor of a small parish in Pittsburgh. From there he went to his current assignment in Chicago. Along with his other activities, he has produced a great amount of writing.,His most popular book on the married state, now in its 9tfi printing, is "I Thee Wed." He has also prepared weekly news sheets for parishes. These consist of a homily appropriate to the Sunday or the liturgical season, with space left for parish announcements. The new project, In behalf of the Cannelite nuns, is a "race
School Camp
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Stl!Jdeni' ShiQ(e Students Gf five CathoIte schools in Havana have gone om on strike, saying they will ~ return to classes until Cuba Premier Fidei Castro io C'li'alo thrown.
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Parish Holds Sunday Masses in Theatre
Educa.tion Program
BLOOMINGDALE (NC)-TMl Diocese of Steubenville will operate a Summer school camp ill this Ohio River community of about 500 persons. High school boys can attend the eight-week program at La Salle camp. They will attend credit courses at nearby St. John Vlanney seminary In the'morning 'and enjo)' camp facilities cluring the after-
. trary to the laws of man) POSel multiple problems about Wdltime morality such as the deception of the innocent the recommendation of lethal ~illG, tho use of sex as· a weapon, eoo. While there Is no attempt by the film to justify such wartime 1mmorality, nevertheless the isllueJI are such that a positive and valid conclusion requires matl.Wity of judgment."
She'd Rather Have a loaf of GOLD ME-DAL, Perfect·Whipped' BREAD
FATHER DITTAMI with death," says the priest. He says that the life of !l European cloistered nun "is so severe that it passes the average American imagination •.. There is scarcely a way for the nuns to eke out necessities for ~ istence." As examples of the hardshiPs faced by the nuns he cited m convent where Sisters had be stop taking in laundry to sup- ' port themselves because toe many of them were :fainting with fatigue at the work; a· house in Portugal, which has only $6,000 of the $30,000 needed and faces eviction from D temporary dwelling; nuns im Spain, who have been offered free medical treatment ,by tl doctor in Seville, but who do not have the money for train fare to send two si<:.k Sisters . there. I "It is a continuing miracle and a sobering fact that the convents keep going," Father Dittaml said. "Somehow young girls still
O ppose Governmen t Is CAPE COAST (NC) - This new African nation's first native archbishop has supported Catholic parents who oppose the government's plan to send Ghanian students to universities in communist countries. Archbishop John Amissah of Cape Coast .wrote in The Standard national Catholic weekly that the parents' opposition i~ based on "right reason ... and strong firmly rooted Christian F ith ~ aTh~ parents had been crit1cized for their attitude by a spokesman for the. government who addressed' the annual general conference of the Catholic Tea~hers' Association here. Kofi Baako, Minister of State for Presidential Affairs in Parliament, urged parents to take advantage of. the opportunity to send their children to universities abroad, including the Soviet Union and Red China.
sharp lesson for the rest of us." Father Dittami's brother holds up the family tradition of service to the Church in his own way. He is president of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine at St. Michael's parish and' wi1l graduate next Saturday from the current CCD teacher training course at St. Louis Church, Fall River.
ional Legion of Decency has evaluated the 20th Century-Fox. movie "Circle of Deception" ~ its Separate Classification because of its wartime immorality theme. The Legion explained that the Separate Classification is given to certain films which "while not morally offensive in themselves, require some analysis and explanation as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions." "Circle of Deception" is the eighth movie which the legion has placed in the Separate Classification in recent years. The legion made the following observation regarding the movie: ''The theme of this film
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WILMINGTON (NC) - Each Sunday the marque,e of the Crest theater is ablaze with lights which spell out the message of Masses at 8:15, 9:30; 10:45 and noon. The theater is being used while suburban St., Matthew's church is beiilg renovated. The seating capacity of the church will be doubled to accommodate 800 persons. The arrangement of usin~ the theater for s:rytces ,~ p~vmg mutually benefICIal. The neIghborhood theater .has see~, better days and. now IS openoo only on weekends. , Father John Foley, I?asto~ tur~ed back the clock whIle hIB parIsh was moving f(lrwarq. He du.sted oM a portable altar, u~edl 20 years ago when his pansh was fOunded and has installed it for Masses in the theater. Tho alta.r first was use~ when tho pansh met in a fIrehouse for M~sses ,:"hile its church Wall bemg bUilt.
fle're sure that Gold Medal Perfect-Whipped Bread is no substitute for a proposal. By the same token there's no substitute for Gold Medal Perfect-Whipped Bread when it comes to Perfect Flavor • • • Perfed Texture ••• Perfect Slices.
Mo Moles ••• No Doughy Streaks-Gold Medal Bread is PERFECT BEYOND COMPARE!
National ,Conference Names Benedictine, NEW YORK (NC) - Fathelf' . Brian Egan, O.S.B., president of . St. Bernard (Ala.) College, ha~ been elected to the board ~ trustees of the National ConfeJloo ence of Chri~tiaris and Jews. The Benedictine, who heads II college whose student body, bJ predominantly Protestant and who was named one of Alabama's four "Outstanding Young Men of 1959" last January, was praised here for "his untiring efforts for the proptotion of better understanding among Catholics, Protestants and Jews!' His election was announced by Louis Webstel' Jones, :NC~ J)l'esident.
OVEN-FRESH DAIt.Y , at your NEIGHBORHOOD GROC~' j-E-Wilt..rifiS'
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By Father John .L. ''ll'homas, S.J.
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Ass't SociologyProf.-St. lLOuis'lUiIliver.sity
.: ~'l\iy pr-oblem is the right 'Or wrong .oil' ,alloWing a v€ry elose" r~ia.tiveto live under .our roof if 'she isk-eeping .. company with and entertaining in our home a married man who is sti111ivrng with his wife. T.finally f.oUowed my confessor's advice and ,asked" my ne'ighbor and the common her to leave.. Now my ihus- good. band and good Catholic This false toleraneehasseri-' friends have turned against 'ous co'nsequences for the indi-
SACRAMENTO'(NC)'- . Iner-easing ,yiumbers <)f Dutch refugees fTo~ Indol)eshi.are . moving inm the SaeramentG
aIiea . with the ,aid' ,of .the diocesan Christian Family Movement Federation. The 'CFM has 'help'ed 14 families to reach the u.s..and anc other 13 .are ·still to coma. !Praisel3 JP.eop!e The Dutch families, forced te leSlve Indonesia after thatna.tion ,achievedindependenfe, returned first to their native Holland' ,but crowded conditioIUJ ORDMNED ON ANCmWT SlITE: Two American ,there 'made it impossible for White Father.s w.er.e· ordained recently in the Cathedral of them, to settle 'down into ,0 satis·Carthage;, Tunisia, by,Archbis.hop Maurice Perrin of Tunis. . factory 'new way of life. Mrs. Nancy' 'Connell,whQ Fathers William ,Moroney, left, of 'Chicago, and Rene Dionne serves as liaison agen.t for 'the of Bradley, Ill. NC Photo. CFM :Federation'in finding spon. . :sors for ,thenewcomers,says the ~[j'DrQ\rQ\:~®©l '@In[j'~ Wn~'~ ~,rcn@DIID Dutch families "display;ahigh If' If' ~ .sense ,of individual responsibillflfu@[(i)~~ AAD~~O@l1il®:rr,~ i[F,[j',n®1ill@~ i~y. Th~y want to .stand on their DATE '(NC)~Reika \Wakui, a o w n feet but naturally they need "Reiko, ,a ;convert to the Faith .ana :a certain amount of :hel.p :from ,pretty 26-year-old Japanese miss, :livingalone, has f ound ' it ,m-,.t'heU'· ..s'nonso"s "" -" and 'the 'CF'"I\~ers .1>.1' ff d t th ts will walk again ue .0, e e hor . Iy: diff' It recen Uy to· p~~tl·,.;natm· g m' .'the .program," · creasmg 'ICU ~....... . of an Am erlcan missioner yere h ibbl Sh she sal·d. and his friends in the U. S. . 0 earound. ' e has been mnFather Walter T.Kelleher, ,able 10 'attend Mass because :her ,Small World .For t wo f ami'1'les,.th e ,program M.M., of the Bronx, N. Y., ,first' job ,as .a :ticket' agent in a 'bus learned' of Reiko's plight during, ,depot required that she work helped make -vivid just how a census of his mission ;parish i n :seven days a week.' small the world really is. Rita ,the town of Date on Japan's ~v.ise :Operation 'and 'Henry Dillen mived 'in frozen, , ,northernmost 'island, of Smce ,her condition 'was grow- ,Sacramento -with their Hok'kaido. /, ing steadibt worse witii .time,· ,chlldren'late last ,year. .In JanCHpple~from a childhood fall, Father' 'Kelleher .deci~edto 'de : ~nry" .E1ly .and John. Hariman \';' " .. . '. what 'he could 'for her now. 'andtheirfiveyoungste1'8 came 'The "'Ma:rykn~ller '. c:olltacted _ ·here.. · · a o c t o t s at the Umverslty of Ho'klWhenMrs Dillen .heard .fbe Fo, SpultU/ol Tlheme, '\k~i~o!: w~~, aft~ eX~in~ng~e ' ;name :E1ly H~r:tman ,it stirreef a! WASHINGTON (NC) - For- .g~I; 'adVised '~ I.mmedlate opc:~-" .dimmemory. 'F:ur.ther .checldng'·· mer .Postmaster-General Arthur' -atlon lest 'her '~l.lrY 'be<;ome 11"';;' orevealed ithat :they!had first met .... ·ll:.·;Sumrnerfieli:r-s }promotion"of '<l'e'p~able. , " - !... '" dn.a disPlauedpersons .camp in"" : spiritual themes, on stamps wu ' " "Re'iko. underw~t 'orthopedj~. :Holland where,th'~· lived ::ten1~ , 'honored'here by the Collectors ',aurg¢ry ~~d ~theear.l.Y iIidi~atioris : ',por-arily .after lea~ing Ind~e- ',' of Religion on Stamps Society. are 'that the o.per.ation was. a -sia.· It ,took ,a tr.i,p' .acroSs two. Mr." Summerfield was given cOll\Plete .success,"F.ather Ke,l1e- <continents for . them ,to ·.meet ., . the soc~ety's first annual "Award :her .,sai~ "She will have ,to again. ' .' iof Ment" for such themes as "in main.in the hospital for at Jeast God' We 'Trust," :which wu three months, .butwe'~e , a r - . 'placed on postage stamps in 1954, :ranged, ,for a nearby ,;priest ;to Mrs. "Carl Harris ser.ve :as and'othe,1958 ,stamp on the Inter- 'bring ,her ,Holy ,Communion ,presideni of the !Catholic' Worn-. , 'national' Geophysical Yea r , ,ev~'y week. . : ,en's 'G.uild :of ,Otis Air (ll'orce whic~ ,pictured the hand of God "T.hanks -:to lthe .generosity .of . 'Base, Falmouth" d'or :the coming reachmg toward Man. some :!friends rin /the D.;S., ,wllo .season, :aided :by :Mt:s.Ra1ph financed the ,operation, 'Reileo . \Watenneir, vice lpresident; Mrs. ~~dD<e<aJll'es Sc~@ol' will 'Walk ,.:again. And if 'they. ,'BI1"i.a n '0'DonneIl, .secretary. LITTL'E ROCK (NC)-:...A$1.1 : ,cotild see ,the light of .hope in !her Meetings will be .held on the ,million School of Nursing and eyes 'as she prepares for. a new, , :First F'niday .of each month and Nurses' Home' lias been dedi- 'life, lthey would 'be amply re- '<Will 'be :preceded ,by ,evening warded 'for :the4' charity;'" , 'Mass :at'8 o"clock. cated here at St. Vincent Infirmary 1:IY Bishop Albert L. Fletcher of Little ,Rock. The structure is an additio~ to the $8million hospital staffed by the. Sisters of Gp.arity of Nazareth, Ky.' . ,
vidual Christian 'and for 'society. me saying I had no right if we are our brotnel"'s keeper,' to interfere in someone '~lse's we are 'bound" to Jbe .concerned' life. Did. I do ' about, his 'physica't'and moral Wl'ong?" welfare. If he is' proceeding Yo u r letter a'long .dange-rousor 'sinful'paths W 0 u Id be a we must. w.arn him, ,or .at 'least highly signifinot encourage him ~y .our sil.ent cant document· acceptance.. for one who was Threatens Society writing a com'The welfare of society itself men tar yon' 'is threatened .by fuisfalse,tolermodern society. ance.When peop'le show no conIt points up cern over the existence of social' clearly one of evils, law enforcement receives the many dillittle public support, injustice emmas Chrisgoes unpunished, and wrongtians encounter doers r-eceiV'eequal ;acceptance in a mGrally pluralistic culture. with the good. By moral pluralism. I mean, that Americans have traveled a there exists no general consensus. long way. down ,this road. Dis- . Gl" agreement on what is right closures of widespread cheating, and Wl'llmg. "payola," graft, and so on, are VariollS alternate patterns of greeted with general apathy. The eonduct are tolerated .and freaverage American feels no Perquentlyreceive equal ;approba- .'sOnal concern.' ' . tion. The. ,assumption is ,that Again~ this, broad backdrop, there lll'e no absolute criteria for let's take' a closer look at the judging right and wrong.·EverY-problem. you presented.· ,I' one is free to·jfo:ID.ow 'his own gathered .fr.om your le.tter that "conscience" aLld .aead ,his own 1lhe relative in ·question had life; prGyided he does not ,inter- . olher means of support so' that fere wi:tJh ': others. ' . , .you were' not simply. throwing . Dilemma for Christian heroutoq. the,stre~t. , ' Although ,Christians possess a Fur.thermore, .since ,this 'marelearly defined #t· al.notmS ,'ried man was ,corrurig: 10 yoUr governing' morai conduct, how home,y~u were openly suppottdo they deal with those who do ing or at least toleratlngbis.~vil, Dot accepftheir.norms because sc'andaious action.. ' . , they use "different' criteria ;for,· Granting that they will probjudging' right and wrong.? 'The problem is real and nresents the ably continue their illicit·rela./. tionship elsewhere, you will not , Christiari,;,With a dilemnui~· '. . b4;! directly involved and ihave On the, one hand, he mam- Shown by your ,a~tion thaty~ tains ~hat a pers0t,l must f.ollow , . condemn their ,evil ways. , I the dictates of. h~ consclenc~;' DisregardiJ[)~C!ency on t~e, othet;, he lD~ts~hat ,basiC It is inconceivable that y'our ChrIstian moral prInclp~es are husband and' .Catholic friends. absolute and unchangeable and .should now criticize you for mmust be accepte~ by all.. terfering, or as you stated,. for In. the practical or?e~, the "trying .. to- li¥e some one else's solution has been to InSist on life" Ob . us! th ]01 tolerance. This is the ,correct . VIO ,y. ey ve.no I t' " 'd d to1 . regard for public decency -or 'ior so u lOn, provi e erance 18 the right Ubi 1 b .'. 'f based on the belief that truth in . so'' s p. ay oys ~WI e. 'I . h d t . You haJle -no rrght .to ma'k-e many mora areas IS ar o your home a rendezvous for" eome by and we must respect 'publl'c . er h +,>. . . " tt : smn s, w e''''uer your every persons. smcere a empt'l'elative b ,', I a:1l"" to reach it. ' . . . 7 aSlmp ec -,guo> or . . a sophisticated home"::breaker. Unfortunately, . tolerance 1lJ indeed 11'" h' id h t k eften based either on the as- 'action' 5 ou . ave a en r:rumption that there are no moral . a once. . Ali'lltO-S6'iTilWli' DIl'Dve absolutes, and consequently Spir~t. ~f S~cularism. Father McSwineyCouncil2525., moral norms are changeable T~e. criticism you are now and relative or on the even. receivIng reflects how deeply the Hyannis Knights of Columbus, shallower vi~w th.at my' neigh:..' .spirit of .secularism. ha~ !pene- will "ajd in,;a ClWewide anti-smut drive, giving 'their cooperation bor's moral conduct is none of ,trated some' 'Cat'hohc cU'cies. my concern so long as he leavea . Based on a fcclse :sense -of, t~l- .to ,the Haz:wich-Dennis RotarY me alone. . erance, public sinner!! who make Club in.a Stamp Out Smut camHold Misconception -a mockery of marital fidelity 'are paigp.Object of the drive is You may be' wondering why. oP~nly~ccepted ~d :esteemed .cU111>iLlg of .sale and distributioD. rve indulged in this discussion as if theIr moral VIOlations were of indecent literature. -,-, . @f tolerance. I think it sets your a· wholly, priva~ ',affair ,of· no problem in context. Your husconcern to a ChrIstian communNEW .ENGLAND band and friends .apparently hold ity" . ' the quite common mi'sconcepWhat models we hold up for eLA M tiOl). of tolerance that I criticized, ,our chi1<4'en! ~ndas for charity, 'B A KE above; namely, that my neighwi,ll the sinner receive any en-. bor's belief and morals are none couragement to abandon his evil Every SUll'iday - $2.95 of my business. ' ways if his actions draw no di»This is indifference, not toierllPproval from the good? including Live Lobllter THE ence. It is not based on :sincere ,r'--re's .B.=jR &.... BAll" respect for the truth or for the~"" a U Iv WI person in error but ,on a thought. 'Del,o ft:"';~''''Sv:;.;.,."L I less desire to '3¥oid ,1Jhe inconven·I~. m, :::l' .. "",... ~ .. ' '.II 'U1J,WO, S , Coggsliall ,Bridge, ,Fairhaven -fence of personal concern for ,SAN JUAN (NC)-Arcl:rbish~ \ Jame.s,P; Davis ,of 'SanJuan ;said ,F===-======-"""""''''''''''"'I.'I M~ll'!I PD@O'il Se,m~lilai"$' abill:iJitroduced 'in the Senate ,to .!ban use ,ofrel.igi,9us symbolB S;@da~ ,bypolitical,parues "is a ''violaWASHINGTON (NC)-Semi- tion of freedom of expression!' nars on' new nations ,of Africa, 'The measure is directed ag~ Latin American problems, chan.., :the':<::?i"isti~ Action party's inging rural life and urban re- ,si,g~a'- a llosaryencircling : ~:'.:' development' will .b~par:t ofthe'Christ'·s monogram. It was intro_ biennial convention of the Na,..ducedby: Sen. [ltlefonso 'Sola tional Council of Catholic Men .1i\!lor.al,es .0:£ the iBopUilar ,par:ty, beginning May 4 in Pittsburgh. who said his !i:ntention 'Was to The seminars,condUc1;ed by avoid~;Pr.o:fan.ati{)n." panels of experts will take 'place A:rehbisho,p· iV>a:vis ,told 1flhe - TreasurG«' . on May 6. as part of a convention N.{f.W .~,. N;e<ws :Ser:vice .that in section on ."Christian Unity in a, his .0,piniGln iIftle !bill has' "no pI'obChanging Community." ,ability'of Ibeio;g passed iby1Jhe ~412 ;SlECO!Nl[O) §T~IElE'ii', Theme of the convention will'· Legislatur:e." ''l\.he <San' <Juan .... be "The Apostolic Layman-New S~r, EnglishdaDy newf.Paper, .O$lbJ©rirne!$·7~$~ Responsibilities in Christian. ' ' opposed the measure editorially•. Unity," a' ren-ection "of the in-", It said: ''It is dangerous to pre: 'IFAl!.I!.·~nvlE~ terest in religious unity stimu- vent people from using symbolD mated by Pope .John\s 'Plans to" .tha~ do not violate the lawB' a;f cnnvene an ecumenical councu.- ·dc::c~ncy'."
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WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr. Thomas Sim Lee, 92, dean of U.S. cardiologists and scion of • colonial Maryland Catholic' family, was presented 'here with the Heart and Torch Award, hi:{hest honor of .the American Heart Association. The presentation was made at a luncheon spon~~"~d jointly by the Washington Heart Associa,tion and Provi('l"-~,, Hospital, operated by the Sisters of Charity. Dr. Lee has been associated with Providence Hospital since 1905. He started the first heart clinic in Washington at the institution. He was the founder of. the Washington Heart Association, which antedated the American Heart Association. The doctor is a native of New York City, but his family is rooted deeply in colonial Maryland. His great-great-grandfather was Charles Carroll, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. His great - grand father and namesake was Gov. Thomas Sim Lee of Maryland, II member of the Continental Congress and delegate to the Constitutional Convention. Georgetown Professor Dr. Lee also is related to Archbishop John Carroll of Baltimore, "father of the American Hierarchy"; to Daniel Carroll, who signed the Constitution and helped formulate its
Stresses Power Of Printed Word ROME (NC) Journalists have a terrible responsibility because the printed word is the most powerful weapon of truth, Fernando Cardinal Cento told Rome's newsmen on the feast of St. Francis de Stiles, patron of the Catholic press. The Cardinal, a member of the Vatican administrative staff, celebrated Mass at the Salesian chapel in Rome for many of the city's newsmen and writers. He urged journaltsts to be aware of the responsibility that goes along with their "power to elevate or submerge souls, to corrupt and poison them." Service of Truth Cardinal Cento said: "God, the giver of all good, has given you the precious gift of talent. You therefore have the duty to use it, as He would, in the service of truth. Truth has the need of a voice, as Pope Pius XII _: of, and the most powerful voice which reaches the public today is that of the press." At Palermo, during a similar observance, Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini, Archbishoo of Palermo, said: "All solr1lual values are interdependent. There is no liberty without truth, there ls no peace without justice. The mission entrusted to the press is among the most delicate and important because it is precisely th" mission of following spiritual values, fighting errors even in the face of risks."
Military Chaplains Get New Faculties VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Sacred Consistorial Congrega~ tion said in its annual report for 1960 that it has granted faculties t" those chaplains of one military vicariate to hear confessions of those subject to another military vicariate. The report said that in view of the fact that members of the armed forces dependent on different militl\ry vic,ariates often find themselves together in the . s:!me balTacks, camps and ships, Pope John granted the faculties in a decree of Nov. 27, 1960. An informed source here said that these faculties were grl.lnteft in view of the existence of , such combined military forces as NATO. Previously, a chaplain could hear the conCessions only of the military subjects of his'own vicariate. Now he may hear the conCessions of all military personnel requesting It.
Honor Educator ST. LOUIS (NC) - Historian Thomas P. Neill of St. Louis University, has been named a Kni,ght of St. Gregory by Pope John.
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, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 9, 19~1
American Heart Association Honors Scion of Maryland Catholic Family
Now Home for Aged Open at
First Amendment guaranteeing religious lib--t,,: and' to Venerable Mother Elizabeth Seton, foundress of, the U.S. Sisters' of Charity. Dr. Lee began the practice of medicine in Was~ington in 1900. A few years later h~ took charge of the cardiac clin~ at Providence Hospital. He cortinued, to specialize in the field.... of heart ailments until he was m(,re than p~ years old. He serve(l on the teaching staff of Georg{'town University medical school. .......
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burg diocese and sup~rintendeDl of the home. I Dedication and ble~sing of the new building b Bishop Rev. y James J. Na~agh of <pgdensbul'fit is scheduled for next Sunday. The new home has f:!lCilities for 62 persons. The Gr€lY nuns oC the Sacred Heart will stafL it.
Om)ENSBURG (NC) - The $250,{r,)0 St. Joseph's Home for ""lte Aged, first in· 'a series of :,Jocesan projects slated for the !'ext few years, was opened here. { Transfer of 50 elderly residents ,,:rom the old home to the new :t.:esidence was supervised by t'ather Robert J. Lawler, direc~ ~r of ,charities of the Ogdens-
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LIMA (NC) - Many pe6{lle ~~~. h~re in Lima, which has mao): claims to fame, are proudest of'-- • it title, "City of Saints." . For here in the Peruvian capital lived St. Rose of Lima' , St. Toribio, the city's second' archbishop; St. Francis Solano ID~. THOMAS SIM LEE' and St. John Masias. Here too lived Blessed Martin de Porres, the humble Dominican Brother who served as a porter at the convent of Santo Domingo and CINCINNATI (NC) - Today's whom Peruvians hope will soon be canonized. writer who helps shape public Another claim to fame, but so opinion needs to be "something well known outside of Lima, is of a prophet, a' man of vision, that it never rains here. One at courage, and personal sanctity," first finds this very hard to a priest editoo\" told Catholic believe - for who ever heard newsmen here. ' of 11 city where it never rains? Addressing the' Salesian Guild But even the American Mary- -local Catholics engaged ill knoll Fathers '~~ St. Rose of communications work - Father Lima parish here have no wind- Patrick O'Donnell, editor of shield wipers on their car. They Glenmary's Challenge, outlined tell that someF·..... es there is a . the writer's responsibility: heavy ,mist, but that it never "He is the one who must label rains. what is phony and ,demand CU,.:of God .what, is wholesome; who must be Lima ,has a considerable claim: cap~ble of beil1g ~ol~by into the, title of the most beautiful censed; who is ready to stand city in *he world. But it also lias , astride the course of history and its slums." , to call 'halt' when he realize. These are the barriadas on the that its course has taken a tUJ'D outskirts of the city. One is the in the wrong direction." Ciudad de Dios, the City of God, , Recalling that Pope Pius XU in the parish administered by had termed faintheartedness and Father William McCarthy, M.M. discouragement the evils most There thousands of Peruvians live in small huts and stru'ggle to be feared by. the' Catholic journalist, Father O'Donnell de- ' 101' a meager living. ' The poverty of the parish is clared: "I say that prophet] of the shown by' the varied' park benches which serve as pews press are no profit to anyonefor the people. Father McCa.rthy indeed they write only with red ink-unless they are unafraid of says that some time he hopes to finish the church, to have real facing the problems of their , times." pews for his people.
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The extensIOn Of the Portu.. guese nation over various parts of ~e, .world fo~lowed from the begmmng an .Id~al of h?~an b:o.t~er~oo~ wlthm a Ch:lstlan CIVIlIzatIon wrQte the Bishops. "Christian civilization is this; respect for human dignity, restoration of tJ{e natural law, the establishing of authority, the guarantee of rights and liberties, promotion of trade an~ agricillBishop Robert' E. Tracy of Lafayette, pasto'r; greeted visitors after each tour.
Protestants Attend 'Good Will Sunday' LAFAYETTE (NC) - ' About 50 Protestant families here in
Louisiana accepted the invitation of Our Lady of Fatima parish to visit its church on "Good Will Sunday." ' , An invitation was extended all non-Catholic families within . parish boundaries. Special commentators explained all Masses offered on the day, conducted tours of the church were given itl the aftel'noon and Auxiliar)'
ture, the suppression of superstition and of fear, the confrat.ernization of races and of cultures and' the protection of the weak." The bishops then"said that at present the West seems to have lost .its self-confidence and that it doubts its rights and duties and has abandoned the defense of Christian value. Bwt Portugal remains true to its evangelizirig and' civilizing mission, they said. It regrets that t~is is not I;1nderstood ~r appreciated and IS even demed, ,they coneluded. . .. Po~ugues~ overseas terntones In AfrIca - Angola, Mozambique, the Cape Verde islands and Sao Tome and Principe islands _ have a total area of 793,403 square miles and a combined population of about 11;500,000. 'Territories in Asia _ Portuguese India, Macao and Timor - have an area Qf 8,873 square miles and about 1 500000 people. ' "
Seek Education Help For Migrant Children MADISON (NC) - The Wisconsin Legislature 'is considerin~ a bill that would provide state aid for Summer schools for migrant children. State agencies paved the way for the Summer'schools last year with a demonstration school and a new rule that will forbid children under 12 to work with migrant crews. The Catholic bishops of Wisconsin issued a statement about a year ago urging the state to assume the responsibility for educating the estimated 4,000 children of migrant workers who spend part of each Summer itl the sta teo
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Portuguese Bishops Defend Nation's Control Over Overseas Territor,ies LISBON (NC) - Portugal's Bishops have supported this nation's right to control its overseas territories. The Bishops spoke in a statement issued at the end 0' their annual meeting. They said that Portuguese Cat hoI i c s have throughout centuries been the instrument of God· in evangelizing a considerable part of the world In South America, Africa, Asia and Oceania. ' They added that the Church has always confirmed them in this mission and cited the Missionary Agreement signed .-by, Portugal and the Holy see in
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VatsCGIm Weekly ·Chall'ge~ C@l$tro ,Serves ~®~~ _' VATICAN CITY (NC) 'A Vatican City publication for the first time has accused Premier Fidel Castro. of
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'serving communism. The Vatican City weekly, L'Osservatore della Domenica, 'pointed out 'that anti-religious propaganda is broadcast by the . government-controlled radio and . TV stations and that bishops are called "antirevl)lutlonary'." An editorial in the weekly , written by Frederico AleS$3ndrI. an editor of the Vatican City daily, ::Osservatore Romano-declared: ", "Only God knows what awaits there, our brothers, who are now the prey--for supposed reasons of state--of a 'sorcerer's apprentice' who in the name of liberty is taking away the liberty of a predominantly Catholic people . who have trusted and hoped in him." The editorial said that Premier Castro has changed his country'. future because of "alleged neces-' sity" and ,also war.~s Catholics to change without caring that 'such a change is . -,possible un,less they betray their Faith. It eontinued: Cha-acter Shift ........ "Fidel Castro, driven by events 'which seem to dominate him, shows daily a character shift from :h' neutralist position which he used to maintain. His ilattle against 'American 'imperialism' leads him to align himself always more ,closely with the Soviet Union and through it with cOmmunism." Communism, it added, is using Premier Castro in two ways, to increase discord in the free world ~nd to provide a' bridgehead to Latin America. The editorial said that the only thing that may halt the Castro regime is "the prudent tactics of communism itself." Communists, it said, m~y 'come to think that \ the Premier's goal is so excesnive that it no longer serVell communist goals.
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OGDENSBURG (NC)--Cath()oo Ucs of the Ogdensburg diocese have been released from the general rules of fast. Under the new rules of the diocese, the obligation of fasting eo week days of Lent and OD. Ember days bas been discontillaed. . A similar year-around change' of regulations recently was allBounced· by the Buffalo, N. Y. diocese. . Bishop James ~. Navagh callecl foe the discontinuance of all entertainments, card parties and other social activities during Lent, which extends from Feb. 15 to April 2. He urged hia people to assist at Mass· and receive Communion. frequenUy. He 'said that those who wish to keep t~e former practices of fast should be encouraged to do so.
Sees Better Relations Among Christi(lns NEW YORK (NC)--A priesteditor said here that the gaps between Catholic, Protestants' and Orthodox !'are narrowing year by year." • Father John B. Sherrin, C.S.p.. editor of the Catholic World magazine, said the two main reasons for the better' relations among separated Christians are the prevailing attitudes of the ,World Council of Churches, a' Protestant and Orthodox organization, and the forthcoming ecumenical council announced by Pope John. The priest-editor said he was an observer at' the Faith and Order Conference of the World Council of Churches at Oberlin, Ohio, in September, 1957, and was impressed by the "complete sincerity of the delegates" the trend "toward a scientific study of the Bible," and the awareness of the delegates "of the need for a physically organized Christian church...
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Pre-Lenten Activities
The Parish Parade
I
ST. MICHAEL'S, OUR LADY OF VnCTORJl, FALL RIVER CENTERVILLE Holy Rosary Sodality will hold The Women's Guild will hold a • mid-Lenten malacada sale sale of home-baked food from 10 under direction of Mrs. Olive to 2 Friday, Feb. 10 at Stop and Rego and Miss Evelyn Almeida, Shop Market, Hyannis. Mrs. co-chairmen. Ernest La Badre is chairman. The CYO will sponsor a Valentine dance at 7:30 Tuesday SANTO CHRISTO, night Feb. 14 in the school audi- FALL RIVER . toriu~. Entertainment and a free A pre-Lenten conference win b ffet will be featured under be held at the church hall toc~airmanshiP of Edward Costa night. CYO. mem~ers between 13 and 20 Will be m attendance. an d Ste p h en L op e s, R . ld M B 'tte SL ST. MATH!EU, Rev., egma : arre , FALL RIVER Roch s Church, Will speak.• Th Wen's Guild will hold a The CYO wilL hold corporate fashi~n s~~w at 2 Sunday after- Communi?n at 9:30 Mass Sunnoon, March 19 in the parish hall day mornmg, Feb. 19. Mrs. Lionel Dugal is chairman. ST. PATRICK, A Valentine whist is set for }'ALMOUTH Tuesday night,. Feb. 14, also in The Women's Gtfild will sponthe hall. Next regular meeting sor a Valentine luncheon bridge is set for 7:30 Monday night, ot 12:30 Tuesday afternoon, Feb. Feb. 27. 14 at Coonamesset Inn. Mrs. John ST. FRANCIS XAVIER, Joseph is chairman. HYANNIS There will be 10 tables in play The Women's Guild will hold and table and door prizes will a pre-Lenten ham and. bean sup- be awarded. per from 5:45 to 7:30 Tuesday, A ·St. Patrick's card party bi' Feb. 14 in the church hall. Chileet for Friday night, March 1'1. dr~n will be ~erved ~t re.duced ST. ANNE'S, prices. A parish variety show FALL RIVER will be held Friday, March 17 at Th S . 1 G ill hold a . . h S h i e oCla roup w . Barnstable. JU~lIor H~g c 00 k sale following Masses this and the umt Will receive corpor- cas e D t' may ....... . t d un d ay. ona Ions II'C ate Commumon and at en a brought to the church basement breakfast on Laetare Sunday. at 7 Saturday' night. Next reguHOLY FAMlLY~ lar meeting of· the group is set TAUNTON for Wednesday March 1. The Women's Guild will hold. ' Installation ceremonies Monday, OUR LADY OF ANGELS, Feb. 13 at Holy Ghost Hall, East FALL RIV~R " . Taunton with Mrs. Emily AnForthcommg activIties of the drade a~ installing officer. To Women's Guild include a .malabe seated are Mrs. Olga Marcada supper from 6 to 8 thiS Satkowski, president; Mrs. Theresa urday .night. Danci~g will follow. Rogers, vice president; Mary A variety show Will be held at Joan Costa, recording secretary; 2 Sunday aft~rnoon, Feb. 19 and Mrs. Celia Raposa, corresponding a card party IS set for. Saturday, secretary; Louise Homen, treasFeb. 25. A silver tea I.S planned urer. for March and a turkey supper VISITATION GUILD, for April. EASTHAM SACRED HEARTS, Members will hold a social FAIRHAVEN Thursday, Feb. 16. Mrs. Francois Mercier heads ST. JOSEPH, the Ladies of, st. Anne for the ATTLEBOR? .. coming year. With her will serve The CYO IS publishmg a news- Mrs Maurice Hevey vice presiletter, "St. Joseph's Carrier." dent. Mrs Joseph' Tremblay The unit's basketball ~eam will trea;urer;.Mrs. J. Emile Lacoste: play Mt. Carmel tOnight, .and secretary. Next meeting of the Sacred. Heart t?~orrow nJg~t. unit will be held at 2 Sunday St. Marla G~ret~1 IS patron samt afternoon, March 26 in the parish of the orgamzatlOn. h 11 New officers include Robert a. Almeida, president; Joan Lemire. NOTRE DAME, vice president; Adele Miller, FALL RIVER l5ecretary' Steven Houde, treasThe Council of Catholic Women urer. ' will hold installation of officers The Ladies of Ste. Anne Sodalat 6:30 this Sunday night at tty will hold a Fashion Spring White's Restaurant; with Rey. Showing at 8 Tuesday night, Feb. Gerard R. Boisvert, moderator, 14 in the parish hall. Refreshacting as installing officer· and ments will be served and sodality master of ceremonies. Tickets officers 'are chairmen for the are now available, according to event. announcement by Mrs. Francis ST. MICHAEL'S, Mulrooney, chairman, and Miss OCEAN GROVE Doria Couture, co-chairman. Parishioners are assisting in To be seated are Mrs. Norman plans for a Festival of Music to Levesque, president; Mrs Albert' be presented in March at St. Petit, first vice -president; Mrs. Anne's Auditorium, Fall River, Yvonne Beauchesne, second vice by the Sisters of St. Joseph. pre sid e n t ; Mrs. Fernand Parish chairman is Henry Letendre, recording secretary; Dion, aided by Mrs. William Mrs.' Edmour Poirier, correMahoney. They announce that sponding secretary; Mrs. Felix proceeds of the festival will aid Paul, treasurer. the building f~nd ·of the, Sisters. Directors are Mrs. Thomas The Catholic Wome~ s Cl':lb Jolivet and Mrs. Julien Tremand the Holy Nam~ Society w~ll blay, with representatives of Co1-sponsor a Ma.rdl Gras whist parish societies to include Miss party Tuesday nJgh~, Feb. 14 at Laurea Caron, Third Order of St. K. of C. Hall, Milford Road, Francis' Mrs Normand Dumont Swansea. ~rs. Mahoney a~d Ladies' of . Ste. Anne; Mis~' Raoul Desrulsseaux are co-chalr- Therese Cadrin Children of men, with Henry Dion to be Mary , master of ceremonies for the . evcnt. OUR LADY OF FATIMA, Committee members are sellSWANSEA lng tickets and announce that A penny sale will be held hi transportation will be available the parish hall at 8 Monday to the hall. A meeting of workers night, Feb. 13. Mrs. Donald will be held at 2 this Sunday at Lasage and Ambrose Powers are thc school hall. co-chairmen. Free parking will ESPIRIT9 ~ANTO, be available and valuable gifte FALL RIVER will be awarded. Joyce Perry and Cynthia Arruda are co-chairmen for a ValST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, entine dance to be held from FALL RIVER 7:30 to 10:30 Friday night, Feb. Bluebirds will hold a cake sale 10 in the parish hall. at R. A. McWhirr Co. from 9:30 ST. JOHN BAPTIST, on, Friday morning, Feb. 24. CENTRAL VILLAGE Sharon Boissoneault is president The Women's Guild will hold of the group. a Valentine whist at 8 Saturday ST. JOSEPH, night, Feb. 11 in the parish hall. Mrs. Gilbert Santos is chairman. FALL RIVER . The Men's Club will hold a The unit's regular meeting will ham and bean supper from 5:30 be held at 8 tonight in the hall, to 7:30 this Saturday night 'in the preceded at 7:30 by a potluck supper. Members are requested parish hall. President James to bring a McKenna is IZeneral chairman.
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 9, 1961
17.
Catlh@~o~ F'unds Off<elf ~@rrvices To Asd ~tate' LANSING (NCr - Catholic Charities of Michigan has offered its services to s tat e commissions and agencies to help major problems.
solve
eight
The eight goals listed by the Catholic group are: opposition to discrimination in housing, education, employment and other fields; elimination o~ residence requirements for stlilte health and welfare service benefits; research for better me!lns to aid multi-problem families; expansion of marriage counseling serv'ices to include premarital; neomarital and prenatal ~ounseling. Also strengthening laws con,:" cerning marriage, divorce, .separation, annulment and deser~ tion; strengthening e, xis tin g home maker services; pz:oviding more day care centers and nursery schools to aid working mothers; and providing a minimum living budget in Aid te Dependent Children a~lotments.
QUIET PLEASE: American Sister Dimitria, member of missionary ordel," for work in Mrica, asks for silence during ceremony at North American College in Rome. NC Photo.
Willing to Cooperate The board of directors, headed by Bishop Joseph H. Albers of Lansing, listed the go~ls in stating its willingness to cooperate with the Michigan Youth Commission and other p'ublic and private social welfare agel)cies.
ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold a penny sale at 8 Tuesday night, YOUNGSTOWN (NC) - The Feb. 14 in the church auditorium. Catholic Hungarian Sunday, 66": ST. ANTHONY~ year old, religious newspaper, is "Society can make ho greater MATTAPOISETT back in business-in a new 10- investment that in :providing Mrs. Mary Hillman, chairman cation. proper care and treatll1ent to the of the Mardi Gras supper to be The twice-weekly Hungarian many children in our midst who held Tuesday night in the church language paper, published by by virtue of birth or circum-basement, has arinounced that the Franciscan Commissariat of stances find themselves in a disthere will be two settings-at 5 St. Stephen, m'issed four editions advantaged position," Bishop o'clock and 6:30. while being moved here :from Albers said. Mrs. Vincent Worden of New Cleveland. The paper's new home Bedford gave an illustrated lec- is a few blocks from the com~ ture at the last meeting on her _missariat headquarters, which! I ~ experiences while tea chi n g opened here three years ago. I American children in Japan and Published Thursdays and SunSpain. days, the paper has 8,000 sub.1 OUR LADY OF LOURDES, scribers, including two in comWELLFLEET munist-controlled Hungary. Fr. I Peter Torney, O.S.F., shop man- I ' •. I. The Holy Name Societies 0 f Wellfleet, Truro, and No. Truro ager said: "The communists want L I will receive Holy Communion to know,what we're saying. But - - - - - - - Sunday in a body at the 9 o'clock they won't let the people read -~-'r-----r-1I1 Mass Truro.in the Sacred Heart Church, •it." •
Catholic Newspaper Moves to New Home
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On Sunday evening at 8 o'clock, the members of the Holy Name Societies the recreation roomwill of meet Our inLady of' Lourdes Church, Wellfleet. Refreshments will' be served. ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN The Association of the Sacred Heart was host to the New Bedford District Council of Catholic Women in the Parish Hall. Miss ,Helen C. McCoy, chairman of discussion groups, announced a series of 12 lectures on "Introductions to Holy Scripture." The course will be conducted by a Holy Cross Priest from Stonehill College and will start Feb. 28. Registration will take place on the opening night at 7:30. Mrs. Emmett P. Almond, past diocesan -president, announced that the Council will supply speakers to organizations to explain the Council's activities. SO. YARMOUTH ST. PIUS X, The Holy Name Society will sponwr a St. Valentine's Whist Party Monday night at 8 o'clock in the Church basement on Station Ave. Among the prizes will be lamps, blankets and a .food basket as a door award. Francis Chace, chairman, has also announced that the 75 cents admission charge will include refreshments.
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18
THE ANCHOR~ Thurs., Feb. 9,
Lead~rr
R®~l\!ests
"Ch~rc:h,Aid
,In
Planning Catholic Student Center .At Dartmouth
1961
HANOVER (NC) - A new $460,000 Catholic student center will be constructed at Dartmouth Col-
Only.,
Emelrg~lT8cies
DETROIT (NC)-A Lutheran lea(ler saiO here that church rrroups should dis-, ,tribute ,U.S. surplus com-' moditics 'overseas only in emergencies. ' Paul C. Empie of New York, executive director of' the Na: tion~l L"+1leran Council, said .. ehurch grouos actin~ for the ,government in distribution ()f' such goor1~ risk beinl! looked , upon as "instruments of politi~
eal
1"\1-.~ .... ,..L:~~':'IS."
He told the council's' 43rd an· Dual meetin~ that surplus goods ; should be distributed hy church '" agencies op 1v in emer!!encies or _ when ~" other outlet is available. This woul~ avoid giving,' : one religious group an "unfair" . advantal!e over another, he add- • .' ed. The Lu+'leran council rep.; resents siy ~-<"r i.l1theran bod· les with a membership of 5,500,,800. . . _ 1 DISCUSS 'REFUGEE PROBLEM: ,First hand information' On·South Florida's Cuban Largest Distributor' Among U.S. church groups, refugee problem is obtained by Secretkry of Health, Educa.tiort, and Welfare, Abraham Catholic Relief Services - Na- Ribicoff' from Sister Miriam, superior at Miami's Centro Hispano Catolico! and Father ,tional Catholic Welfare ConBryan 0 .. Walsh, Miam'i DiOCesan Director of Catholic Char}ties~ NC Photo. ' '; ference, maintained b". .. V·S. .~ Catholics. is the largest distdbutor of U.S. surplus commodities · to the needy of the world: MIAMI (NC) - Many Cuban, ing and furniture. The Camillus corl1ing to Msgr. William' F. Mr. Eml";e also said: , refugees still find it difficult to House, operated ,by the Little ,·McKeever, Miami diocesan .su'-Protestants share Catholic perintendent of schools, subjects -- eoncern about "increased secu- obtain the bare necessities of Brothers .of. the Good Shepherd, , Jarization" in public school edu- , 'food, clothing and shelter des- has served more than 3,000 offerE;d will. en a b 1 e Cuban sfu~ents to maintain their sclio, cation, but ",-, .... - 00- indoctrina- pite aid from Miami· church meals to Cub.an men. groups and national relief agenNot only fathers but also ) last;i.c standing until they return tion in public schools is "out of cies. mothers of ,children are now to yuba. . the questioll." The Centro Hispano Catoiico seeking employment from which '11wo Sisters of St. Dominic of -"Federal aid to parochial (Spanish Catholic 'Center), foc':' they, may be able to pay 'rent, St·ICatherine de Ricci head the schools, be they Roman Catholic al point of the aid program es- feed their families and purch- facility. cxr Protestant, would greatly tablished by the Diocese. of ase necessary cl(~thing. A nurs,Crowd Schools weaken and impair the public ~iami fo~ exiles from the reery staffed by the Sisters ?t the ~ Spanish priest instructs ' echool system." glme of Fidel <?astro, sa~s there, cer:ter c~res for .2.0 children classes in Christian Doctrine and -"No c1earcut formula can be has been a 30 per cent mcrease dally, whlle'an additional emer-, 'the!reminder of the seven-memfDund by which routin'l applica- in the number of persons apply- gency ,nu~se~y accommodates 40, ber faculty will be composed 0If tion will solve the problems that i~g for information, aid and ad- ,boys and girls ranging, in ~ge qU~lified teachers, including arise" from church groups ac- vice every day. Over 90 large ,from one-and-a-~a1f to five Erriesto Garcia-Tuauri former 'eepting Federal grants for 110s- , ba~s of food are now being dis- year~. The~e is. no charge for the sup~rintendent of s~ondary '. pital constrl1~t.ion. tributed )da~l~.The total value ~erVlce which mcludes the se~v- schools in Havana. of food dispel1sed thus far ex- lng of' a hot lunch and mld:R t i "'IT ermit cee,ds $50,000., ' " ' " morning ,llrid 'inidilfternoon reflelsen t afc121010eos. PM an .' ', f r e s h m e n t - , enrf' , m,en 0 , , sgr. McIn many msta,~ces, the cen.ter " . ,,' " Keever said, He added that "if oJ - ;1 Continued from Page One repol'ted,, th.ose ' n.o,!", seekmg L.e~rnmg Language. " , ' the! need prgves greater, we will i ;. these 'arguments seem un- food, for their families ,are the Clothing and" ,bedding re-" consider expanding the peo" worthy, impractical' and, illus- same household heads who. a ceiv~d, fr?m· all parts of, the gra"'.'" .'" , , i: ory. O!)posed to them is a very ,~ew months ago wer~, seekmg U.S., sorted by. voluriteers, is Some 2500 Cuban children i; IIOlid reason to believe that rec- ;' employm~nt. The center's files distribute!! to the needy cases. ha~e bee~ accepted in Miami i" egriition of the Peking regi"me list son~e.3,700 ,names ,of heads Aocording' to ; one volunteer, :vparf.chial ' ~lem~ntary, Schools. j1 would be an extremely heavy "of fanulies who, have sought ?arments ,remam on the prem- , One class ~as more than 80 per' :! blow to people in Asia, and ~ork through the cente.r. T.o d~te ~ses about, "48 hours," so ,heavy 'ce~t Spanish-spe~kin'g, ,another elsewheni who want freed0111. ~t has been successful m fmding 19' the ?emand. " ', . ha,s, 50 per cent Spanish-speak,i " r , Jobs for only 60Q persons. . Englis.h;language. classes, are ingt ' 1,l One Red China official, has t ' , The breakoff of U.S.-Cuban conduc ed for two hours'twice I .. been quoted as saying his people . -~.~...... ; are so "backward" that the "Pelt:- dipl~matjc relations has cut the weekly. ,~here are 235 refugees
Cub~'n Refugees' Fgce Struggle Ifor Surviyal
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.lege het'e, Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester announced. The center will provide new quarters for Aquinas House. which was established in 1953, with religious and social facilities for about 400 Catholic students at Dartmouth. The center will have a chapel seating 257, a chaplain's residence and social center with a eonnecting structure containing a 133-seat lecture hall and library, and study areas. start Campaign The center is 'expected to be comple_ted by the end of'1961. Father William Nolan, Aquinas House chaplain, said Dartmouth College and the Hanover parish. have 'coopera~ed in its efforts, but that Aquinas House will remain completely independent . ~inancially. A drive has already been launched to raise $500,000 for construction and other costs.
Gains Promotion . . Continoed from Page One, with the' Atlantic fleet. The cruise will last 16 days. Father Stanton, who was a Navy chaplain during the Korean War, has been on reserve status since 1957. He is in charge o( Navy Relief services in the Fall River area and is on duty every Tuesday night at the Davol Street Training Center of the Navy.
Oratorian to Direct Newman Secretariat ROCK HILL (NC) An American secretariat to gain evidence for the canonization cause of Henry Cardinal Newman has been established here. Father John W. Greene, C.O.. will head the center, which will , also work to acquaint the American public with the life and works of th~ 19th-century convert to Catholicism.
R'eal'Estate Ren'e Poyant Hyannis' 335 Winter St.
Sp. 5-0079
~~' DEBROSS. E 01 L ~
' ';:' program, of educa: the slightest" from the line that many th9usa.ods who' are al- tionspecifically designed to' ,. 1 bas heen spelled out by the ready iQ this .cOUl,ltry remai'ns. , meet the needs of Cuban youths, .. ' CO. ~ I LIKE BEING HELPFUL leaders. People Going HungrT whose studies have been inter- "'Ill ~ I NSTUD OF HELPlESS _ Recognition of Red ,China inJobs and food are the most rupted ,has been inaugurated.' ~ I ~' / 114£ WAY I BEfORE yolves more ,than Washington urgent needs according to Sis- The co.urses parallel: those of- ~ WE R£WTED THIS and Peking, although that ought terMiriam, superior of the, fered l':l: the secondary level: WHEEL CHAIR FROM b be enou~h. It also involves Dominican Sisters of St. Cath- schools: I:n Cuba. ' '.. "'Ill millions of pe'ople in, many ":erine de Ricci- of Albany, N.!Y.. ' Continue Studies ~3~5 NORTH FRONT STREET~ places who yearn for freedom. who staff Miami's Spanish Cath,Th~, curriculuin offered I in ,~ ,',: NEW ,Bl:b~RD .. They would be crushed by any" , olic Center. ' " public an'd ',parqchial hi 'g h "'Ill " action'tha,t could be propagan,;,' "People who -formerly, were ~h~ls o.f theU..S. differs :-}n' I ;1 WYman ,,2':5534 ~ dized as an indorsement of 'the seeking jobs are now begging for ":lany respect~ from theed,uea-: I Red c;hina regime. food", 'and in many cases are tlOn pr~gram III Cuba~ and m,ost i ' g o i n g hungry," she said. "Al- students, iffi.any of whom .do ~ot ;;~ though' many' donations have, s~e~k E~gl~sh,'are expenencmg ~ Electrical enabled" u's to give immediate difficulties at area' schools. Ac: J~ aid, there is still a tremendous'. ."""",,,,,~ I, ~ft Contractors Continued from Page One need, and all An1ericans should ..,. : ~A body else to help them ,support feel a personal responsibility to . ~, their schools, either. They just help these people who are refu. " ~l nlr'UI (~A ask that when benefits - paid CAN 'SAVE YOU UP TO' y ...~ for iri part with their tax money gees from' communism." Emergecy Nurseries V~ -,are being passed out, their 25% ~ TheSt. Vincent de Paul So'; ~i ' ehildren be invited to share in ciety of the Miami, diocese, . 'ON YOUR FUEL BillS i ~, them." Brokston Chem. Co. 9~ County St. (. 202 ROCK STREET , Later, the pamphlet says: "By working in conjunction with the f denying education benefits to', center, has assisted s9m~ 190 Brockton 19, Mass. New Bed ord Catholic parents and children ,C' u ban "families, expending I FALL RIVER; MASS. who patronize paroch"ial schools, thousands of dollars for food, ;::~:::::::::::::::::::::::~ ~~ the State is putting a price tag rent and payment _of utilities ',bills, as well as providing dothThe KEYSTONE on the' exercise of religious lib~IYOUR BANK" erty . . . It is as if the State Warehouse Salesroom Legion of Mary were to say 'to Catholics: 'Cer, , New and Used' Starting Ash Wednesday and" tainly you have religious lib, , ' ,: OFFICE' EQUIPMENT erty. But you'll have to pay continuing every evening during "SOMERSET, MASS. -.N~xt tq ,Stop~ & Shop ,We show a la;ge assortiilent of used double for your children's edu': Lent except SundayS' at approxand new: desks; "cha.irs, ,filing cab, ) f ._ •,:, (ir~yi,~s ~, ybur'~ participati~n in:' th'." ..' ~ , . cation if you choose to exercise • imately "10:55 'P.M:,over Station jnets, tables, etc., in wood and sleel: Il'" . .~rowth of a new Banking Instituti~ WBSM, the Legion, of "'Mary of AIso metal storage cabinets, safes, The pamphlet cites the G.I. New Bedford, Fairhaven and • COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SERVICE shel ving lockers, etc. \ education benefits granted by Acushnet, will sponsor a five• MORTGAGES - AUTO and APPLIANCE LOANS 108 James the government to ex-service- minute program entitled A Daily Accounts Insured Up T~ $10,000 near Union men ;is an example ~f_ public' Lenten Message. Rev. Albert F. NewBed fore assistance ,to students regard,;, Shovelton, spiritual direct8~' of: Member: Federal, Deposit Insurance Co. I r . 'WY 3·2783 the Legion of Mary at St. James }n-- of whether "'cy a'ttend prir • .. , Harold. J. ,Regan, Preslden1 Parish, will be the speaker. ' \ ' , i ' vate or public schools.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 9, 1961
Jioly Family at Somerset Headlines Marry Slate
19
'Kelly Kh~b' Aids
Mis$;~[ffi@lr N@med KeUy Oiro ~O~QWBa
By Jack Kineavy It's for an the marbles tomorrow night in Somerset where the league leading Raiders are scheduled to play host to a hustling Holy Family aggregation that is only one game off the pace. Since both quintets were victorious on Tuesday, Somerset will put Rangers after' an eight hour train an undefeated 13-0 record on ride from New York had to take the line,' while Holy Family to the subway to get across town will come in at 12-1. A Som- arriving at 9:45 for a scheduled
ELIZABETH (NC) - "A priest's gift to the priestless" is the slogan of the siJ6month-old Kelly Klub '()p.
ganized here to assi$t a Ne~ark priest serving in the Santa Cruz area of Bolivia with Richard · erset victory will all but clinch 8:00 P.M. g~me. Cardinal Cushing's: Society ~ the league tiUe putting the By this tIme, some 200 of the St. James. · Raiders two up , hardy 4000 plus die-hards on with but two to hand for the game had sought The priest is Father Martin R. play. Holy Famrefunds but the face-off took Kelly and the slogan refers ti fly on the other place at 10:00 P.M. and the the gift of his services as a misb ~ n d is con': Bruins' record was preserved. sionary in priest-shQrt Bolivia. , ceding , nothing The Rangers, despite their tediThe Kelly Klub was organized and the Paroous odyssey, weren't too tired to by one of his seminary classchials are shoottake our heroes in~ camp, 2-1. mates, Father Roland W. Muening for an upset storm Results zen of St. Michael's parish here. victory t hat The Garden box office took It has about 750 members ia will e 1 e vat e another beating on Sunday when northern New Jersey and fa them into a'first a disappointingtiy small crowd Rochester, N,Y., where Fa·the!' place deadlock. ,. of 4088 saw ~e Celties wrest a Kelly's parents reside. SomerSet had a 73-56 edge in the 123-121 decision from the Sl Already on Its way to Father first round meeting of the teams. Louis Haw.k~, .the leaders of the ,Kelly as a result of Klub activiFor the Raiders the game 811Wes~rn. dlvlslO~ of the N.B.A. ties is a sPecial truck. It is • sumes an even greater impor- Ordmanly this first, class attracstation wagon on a truck chassis tance. A check of the schools' tion would have Jammed the fitted with heavy duty acce&athletic records reveals that Garden but the elements were sorles. Somerset has never had an un- such that the pa~ronage was reThe truck may help Fathel' LET'S GO: Captain John Lopes of Mount Carmel, left, Kelly defeated basketball sea son. duced by' two-thIrds. avoid incidents like one There have been many one loss - '!he storm also ~aused a, novel . and Captain Donald Canastra of St. Kilian's, right, are , he' described in a recent letter. slates and twice the Raiders have . shift in the collegiate .basketball set to jump as Referee John Centeio tosses ban in Boys' Setting out for a nearby Mary;.. annexed Tech tiUes, but that un- doubleheader, at UtIca, N. Y. , . knoll mission, Father Kelly 'School League game at Kennedy Center; New Parochial blemished record has thus far Holy Cr~ss was sch~duled against , found'that the·6 P.M. traiil had , eluded them. Dighton and Holy N.~.U. In the afternoon gam~ Bedford. 'left &t 5 P.M. because its light. Family have been the major . which was to be televised. How'weren't working. stumbling blocks and 'each has ever, the Cross was snowbou~d So' he travelled on the 7:31 Str~~ses · one more shot at Somerset before and Colgate ha~. to be substi- . P.M. frei~t, rMiqg an open the campaign ends one week tuted.' The Red Raiders. then proflatcar in the wake Qf the woodfrom tomorrow. ceeded ~o take N.Y.U. II!-to'cam~, YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-A coltigate the possibility of tuition burning engine. No one is more aware of the' 8~-75, 10 one .of the season s lege president said here parents plans offered by banks, Knights pitfalls ahead t han skipper bigger upsets. Holy Cross .met must make "every sacrific~," 1n- ',of ,Columbus scholarships, part- Student, 13, R~c:~awes Sherm Kinney whose fine '59 and defeated Syracuse ~t mg~t, eluding borrowing the mon'ey, to time jobs for students, and loans. quintet compiled an excellent ~00-71, f?r its fourth vICtO~ 10 'send their children to Catholic He said parents are bound by MedQI for HeW'@ost1il1 FORT WAYNE (NC)-A 1313-1 record in, Narry competi- Its last five games. colleges. canon law to provide' the best year-old ,parish school pupil tion. To go all the way, of course, One of the longest w~nning .Father Kevin Keelan, T.O.R., possible education for their chil- here received the Cbicago Motor requires a generous admixture of streaks on record was term1Oated' i told parents of Cardinal Mooney dren. Club's highest award - a gold talent and good fortune. In many on Saturday when the Na:vy t~r High School students here eduFather Keelan said of Catholic respects it is not unlike throwing pe~oed, the Yale Umverslty . cation -is "not an expense but an schools: academic standards are medal for heroism. David Hazelett of the safety a no-hitter. And that· master sWlmr,n1Og team, ~8-47, at An- investment." He is president of eql!-al to or surpass other instipatrol of St. Jude's gradt. schoW. · crafsman Warren Spahn the napolis. The last hme Yale was College, tutions in most instances; costs was credited with pulling ao. .' beaten was in 1945 when the Steubenville (Ohio) fInest lefthander in N. L, history, A d'd th t ' k E' ht N I conducted by the ·Third Order are usually well in line with the other student, Carol Schramm, 9" · came up with his first no-no rmy I eric. Ig . ava general average, and they help from the path of a truck turning effort only last year. Academy pool r~cords fell dur- Regular Franciscans, Parents, he said,' should invesprotect and develop the Catholic into the school driveway. Durfee Fairhaven ing th~ m~et which attracted an Faith. Only one other I such medal The long-awaited, clash be- enthhuslastic crowd of over 2,000. JapaneSe. Passionist has been presented to a Fort tween Durfee and Fairhaven is T e ~eekend sto~ was also . Honors Priest-Editor · on next Tuesday's Bristol County resp?nslble, for the first ~un~ay . Takes Fined VOWS'" ST LOUIS (NC) _ Father Wayne pupi~ in the ~ast 30 yeaI'&. . agenda and'. it marks t~e b~~in- .. I'V.yh' League Basketball, ~~me LOUISVILLE (NC) - 'Frater Daniel Moore, editor of the St. t''-,'''' ning of a' crucial three' game, Wit 10 memory. .columbia .was Augustine 'Paul Kunll, doescribed . 'Louis Review, newspaper of the finale for the undefeated Hill- . scheduled to host Cor!1ell In a as the first native ,Japan'ese . St. Louis archdiocese, hali been ' toppers who meet AtUeboro and ' Saturday night en.counter: ~b~ so .Passionist, took his -#nal ,reli- named a papal chamberlain with then Fairhaven' again in the. bad. were traveling CO?dltlOns. glous vows at the Passlonist, 'the title of Very Reverend 'MonWindup of the 1961 schedule. The r_~a~~ ~edken ciliul~n t ;Jl!k~ , Fathers Seminary here., signor by His'Holiness Pope John Jewelers' upset of Fairhaven l a s t , on ers e Ions Born in Tottori-ken, Japan,-on . XXIII. week moved them back Into flag den, ,a 'distance of abou~, five Dec. 26, 1932, he became a concontention' two games off 'the miles. Cornell .won the S,!Jnday .... vert to the .Catholic Faith in' pace and one out of second~ ga~e-, ~-57. . ,'. 1952 while a student 'at the Uni- ~ A FAMILY TIEAT Bristol County added a ninth B ?d ndr~ttrO~?v~~, ~~ent 'versity of Kyoto. The following Elecfrleol member to its roster last week di~,::n aCi: Sl o~ "~a ~ e t a:-, year he met Anierican Passio1'1ist _ .BAR·B.Q CHICKENS with the inclusion of BisJ,1oP stor:; o~s:~ :s t~ t a ou. h~' missionaries at their retreat" Contractors' Stang. The Dartmouth Paroch18la n tiv Sh ~. a u P Illn 't house in Osaka and asked per- ' will attain full-fledged status in W~Ul: h aWlD~ngan.) F a.: ~ ,mission to join. the community. FARMS all lI)ajor sports, commencing "only nave" een consl ere He came to tile United States in 180 Liberty St 146 Washington St., Fairhaven with the 1962 football season. a urry. 1956 and joined the Passionists Just off Route·.6 Stang had a successful freshmanHelena Bishop M. arks at the community novitiate in Sl sophomore grid debut under Paul, Kan. FAU, RIVER WY 7-9336 Athletic Director and' Coach ilver Anniversary . Watch for Signs Carlin Lynch this past Fall and HELENA (NC)-Joseph Car- . i!'.<;:>o-""'!"'-------~--. OSborne ~2143 While out for ~ Drive the youngsters are curr~ntly dinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Stop a\ this Delightful .spot 'getting their first formal basket- Louis, will be among the HierPUlM81NG& HEATING, INC. : ~ ,ball experience under Coach archy attending the Feb. 21 cere_,.." ' f o r Domestic 'Jack McCann. monies marking the' 25th anni~ ,' / The big news of the week was versary of the consecration of " ~ .~ndUBuu.l COME IN SEE _. and DRIVE the weather which raised havoc Bishop Joseph M. Gilmore of :....--_ Sales aIMl with college and, profesl!ional Helena.' , . Oil 'Burners Service hockey and basketball schedules. Bishop Gilmore, 67, was born . WY 5-1631 The Boston Bruins' who have 1ft New York City. He moved, 2283' AC.U5HNET AVE,' "'The ,Worler. Most Beautifully Proportioned, Ca.... . . never had a game postponed due w,ith his fam.ily to' Anaconda, . NEW BEDFORD at to weather had a close call Mont. when a boy. The MonSaturday . night. The visiting tana prelate was ordained to the ~ priesthood in Rome in 1915 and Parish Claib Makes he was consecrated the fifth Bishop .of. Helena on Feb. 19, P'lcn' 'IC Re'servation 1936. The diocese has 83,500 FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS PITTSBURGH (NC)"":"Members Catholies, double the number of St. Bonaventure parish took when Bishop Gilmore was conROUTE ·6, HUTTLESON AVE. 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. no chances that the county's . secrated. Catholic school enrollNear Fairhaven Drive-In North Park Lodge would not ment is 10,000, twice the number be available for their Men's Clu'b in 1936. ' Italian Dinners Our Speciahy picnic next' July. C Service On Patio Some 67 hours and 25 minutes ongregation Urges before the Parks Department be- Vocations Campaign gan honoring applications for use of the park's facilities, Lou VATICAN CITY (NC) - The R. A. WILCOX CO. I Sigety, president of the clU'b, Sacred Congregation of Semiwas in line for the "first come, naries (lnd Universities has OFFICE FURNITURE first served" reservations. called for a special campaign for lit Stou for. 1.......I.t. Den...,. Over the weekend, and in two- vocations by Catholic Action • DESKS • CHAIRS hour shifts, 34 members of the organizations and all Catholic flUNG CABINm • BANQUETS • WEDDINGS club spelled one another outside associations interested' in voca'. PARTIES • FIRE FILES • SAFES the door of the County's parks tions. • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS FOLDING TABLES office. When the door opened The Sacred Congregatioll bAND CHAIRS for the handling of reservations, Ned aB instruction for such • 1343 PlEAsAtf.r ST. FAI:1 RIVER . a representative of the St. Bona- campaign addressed particularly venture's Men's Club was first. 110 Bishops anq. the. heada 01. OSborne 3-7780 The outing will be July 16-two national and diocesan aSBOCia.,. 22 BEDFORD ST. . days after the feast oi St. BoD- tkins of 1a)rmen throughout the FALL RIVER 5·7831 aventure. world.
Educator . Importance O.f Catholi,c College Education ,
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,TH,e .ANCHOR~ .. Thurs., Feb. 9,
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'Hails. Gove',.,or's Pia n to Assist Colleg'e Students
Government Aid. .To .Assist Cuban Refugee Students
NEW YORK (NC) -:- Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's plan to extend state aid to students a t ten ~ i n g private and
· . MIAMI (NC) -:- The Fed-eral Govenunent has made -a' $100,000 grant to' ~nable -Cuban college' students to
cl).urch-relatEid colleges was hailed here by Francis Cardinal Spellman. . The Archbishop of New York addressed 1,100 members of the Fordham University Alumni Association. who had joined to pay tribute to him as the most eminent gradua:~ .of the Class of
· eontinue their education in this · country. · The action Cl\me as an after- . : math of the National Settlement Conference for Cuban Refugees ·held here. The conference 1911. ,brought together representatives Prefacing his prepared re.of the government' and of relief, marks with a tribute to Lieut• . welfare and religious 'organizaGov. Malcolm 'Wilson, a Ford·tions'. ham alumnus who introduced · Tracy S. Voorhees, director of him, Cardinal Spellman said: "I ',file 'Cuban refugee' program· also thank Lieut. Gov. Wilson under the Eisenhower Adminisfor siding with Gov. Roc~efelier ·nation announc'ed the release of to have justice for every col'the Federal funds for the Cuban lege in the State of New York." 'refugee students. $200 Supplement Included in the grant was His reference was to the pro.$4,000 which went to Father posal.Gov. Rockefeller has sub.Neil Sager, assistant chancellor, mitted to the ,state legislature for the St. Augustine diocese. He calling for $200 as a tuition sup'reported . that the. diocese had plement for every resident at.provided this amount to enable tending private church-related 40 Cuban students to continue colleges. .their education at insti'tutions The Governor has defended within the diocese. . the constitutionality of the plan . Arr;ong Catholic organizations CATHOLic CAMPING OFFICERS ELECTE.D: The NatJilal'catholiC Camping on the ground that the money .represented at the conference 'wereCatholic Relief Services- Association has ele~ted its new national officei"sfor the next twJ years. Standing, 'from will be given to the student, not institution. National 'Welfare 'Conference, left right, are: Father William J. McMahon, Cathedral Camp director, assistant to the . theAmong the me.mbers of, the worldwide relief organization charge of special activities; Sister Mary . PattiI of Torrington,' secre- hierarchy who joined to pay mail)tained by U. S. Catholics, , national .director in'I ., ' : and the National Council' of tary; Father Peter G. Armstrong of Sari. Francisco, treasurer; and James Savocool of tribute to New York's ArchCatholic Women. .Akron, vice pre'sident. Seated, are Msgr., Joseph E. Schieder, hational' director and bishop were Paul-Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of MonFather Richard O. Boner of Concord, H., president. NC Photo. treal anh A~<;hbishop . Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the U.S .
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Schools of Christ Bring Skills to Boli~ian Youth
. PENAS (NC) -The growing LA PAZ (NC) - Thirteen they will die. If they are the .Maryknoll radio school of the, thousand young Indians of Boli- work of God, they will survive." Andes Mountains will soon reach via' are learning their ABC's School Aims. into 800 more remote Indian in more than 800 sch~ols in. a Specific aims o{ the schools villages, thanks to the coopera- ha.lf-century-old experiment In are" and Church-State c o o p e r a t i o n . ' tion of t he United Nations The cultural and Christian CARE officials here. The schools are owned by the formation of Indian children and To participate in the Mary- government, which pays the adults in rural areas: knoll radio school setup - the teachers and sets the educati~nadl The social' and economic ad-. only one of its kind in the area- standards. They are supervIse the U. N. and CARE donated by priests of six missionary vancement of the peasant class , , nbycthe of small indus300 transistor radios. orders: Augustinians, Fra i screation -, 'and . In return, the Maryknoll cans, Jesuits, Maryknollers, . tries' such ,as carpentrY ~ · Fathers agreed to broadcast the Oblates of Mary Immaculate and, weaving. ·agencies' health programs to the Oblates of St. Joseph. . The education of'Indian' women 800,000 Aymara and Quecha InMost of the schools have. in management of the home. dians living in mountain villages .thatched ,roofs; dirt floors, mud , Community edu~atiof). in hy-' ef Bolivia. walls and a' minimum of w-in- ,giene' and sanitation. : T\1e transistors, costing about dows. But they a' vast ~m-· ......rairiing of.. youth and adults $25 .each, are inst,alled in ceQ,:" ' .p r ove me '1 t , 'over, . the shanties:' in the use ,?f.leisu~e time-:part of' val points of each village, At . their students call home'. , A!1d ~ long-!arige program against ~~ifi~time~ ilie ~d~n~ fu~~d~nyoufus~~yare~p~ along with trained lay teaehers:- to a' better life.·~ ' . ,.': . . 'tune their receivers into, the, 'Founder of these "Schools' of t:~a~~a~~n~~~m the central sta- Christ,'; a~ they are kn9wn, was · 'all Italian' "Franciscari,'Father Missioners see the radio schQ01j(:iseph" ;Z~nipa;' ·O:f.M.. Father,' 'as 0I1e answer to help solve. the' .' Zainpa, .insp)re<i .by 'papa l , social problem, of too fewi>riest~ to ,. teach the Inci.iiuls living. in the.teachfngs, opened four,sehools'in · . 1907. He began with a.handful of ~aece~sible,sky:-h~g~villages of s"t"udents. With hard work the .the Andes Mountams. . ""-schools grew and prospered...'
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H' Y h C ItS outongress As Communist Front
the abuse of alcohol. Visits
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Priest-directors regularly visit the schools under -{heir charge.. In the Iremote villages their visits· may tie the occasion for one or two-d~y missions. They witness marri~ges, baptize children (and sometimes adults) and give the
SANTIAGO (NC)-The president of the Chilian Democratic . Youth Organization denounced as a communist front an international youth congress sched-' uled here for mid-April. Raul Troncoso said that the World Federation of Democratic Youth, which is organizing the meeting, is controlled and directed by the Communist party and its agents. Mr. Troncoso called the congress an intrusion in Chili, where the Christian Democratic Youth . group controls "five universities and is the. strongest political youth force.
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last sa1craments to the dying. In 1960 the Bolivian governmerit· brought the total of "Schools of Christ" to over 300 assigning 51 more governmentownedl schools to. the Catholic organization. These schools were placed! under, the supervision of American Franciscans of the· . Holy Name province, with headquartets in New York. '.
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War 'th'Pontl'f.'cal Mass' WI · CHARLESTON .'. (Nc;:::) A Pontifical Requiem Mass for the Civil War dead was offered here in commemoration of· the centenary of this nation's epic strug-
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MILWAUKEE ~NC)"":""Dr. Wil.,. liam H .. 'Conley, adininistrative assistant to ,the' pre~ident of gle. . Marquette Uni~ersity, has be.en Bishop Paul, J. Hallinan of, 'named, editor of the Catholic E:harleston offered . the Mass, 'School Journal. Members of the cadet corps, of The Citadel military college served, as color guard, buglers What A~out You? and guard of honor for the ca.tafalque. During the war cadets from The Citadel played a significant part in the service of the Confederacy. The memorial Mass' was offered in the Cathedral of St. lohn the Baptist" which is adjacent to the site where the ordinance of secession of South Carolina from the, Union was signed on December 20, 1860.
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LIVE ROYALLY •• llUXURIATE with a I King-sized hot wOlte~ supply. For I;>athins, shaving, laundry, dishwashing •• ' all the ,time ••• (Jt less cost i••.~ with an efficientr 'economical GAS WATEIL HEATER. -
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Girls sixteenoand-over are needed to serve G~ as' Nursei, Laboratory . and X-ray Techliicia'ns, Accooi.ntants•. Dietitians, 'Seamstresses, Cooks, aRc! lin other hospital dep.artments. Mother Mary Elizabeth at St. Mary of the Angels Convent, Rock Island, Illinois, will send you more infor. mation on this happy life.
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Senator Heads" Drive' For Maine Hospita'L WATERVILLE (NC) U.S.' Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine is honorary chairman of an $600,000 campaign for a Catholic hospital in the Waterville area. The Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul are building tile 125-bed hospital, which will cost an estimated $3,500,000. Bishop Daniel J. Feeney of Portlland has approved the project. In 1952, Sen. Muskie became, ~e first elected Catholic gov~nor of Maine"
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Before: his death in 1935, Father 2;ampa' ~aid: "If the schools are the ~ork 'of Zampa!
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Special consideration ilJ given to "late" vocatioNJ.
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