NEW CARDINAL O'HARA DORMITORY WILL BE READY FOR OCCUPANCY AT STONEHILL COLLEGE NEXT YEAR
The. ANCHOR
Cardinal O'Hara Dormitory To Meet Growing. Needs . At StonehiIiColle,g.e
Cardinal O'Hara Hall, 'first dorm~tory on the'Stonehill College ca~pus, will be ready to receive,·men students in the fall of 1961, ft was announced today by the Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C;S.C., president. ·Construction of the $875,000 building, which will be built undei-. the gover,riment college housing program, will begin in July, Father Sullivan said. The dormitory, which will be ' the largest, ne,,: J;milding on .. A~geles . An Anchor of the Soul, Sur, and li'irm-ST. ~AUL the Stonehill, campus, will t - a c c o m m o d a t e ' 2 f O ' m a l e stu0 I '
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Los See PI ans B u •Id 61'st 'High School
Fall River; Mass. ,Thur~day," Feb.' 18, 1960. deilts and five prefects. 111... 7 © 1960 The Anchor ' PRICE10c' " Liberte T'he architect, Emery '$... OO,pe~ Year of. Brockton, will VO.I 4, I~O. Second Clau M~II PrlYilegea Au'thori'zed at Fall Riyer, :Mau.
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LOS ANGELES (NC) The 61st high school in Los Angeles' archdiocese will be built -in the foothill com-
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othf:r The building' is named in honor of 'John Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C., Archbishop of Philadelphia. Cardinal O'Hara is the first member of the Holy Cross . . F th ers rellglOus ,a order to become Ii Prince' of the Church'. He 'was named a cardinal by Pope John XXIII at the same'
. A new record fo~ weekly home-delivered subscriptions, to The Anchor l'S l'n prospect tod'ay'notwithst,aridi,ng the fact , t.hat the initial Diocesan parish cir~ulatiop. returns ar.e not due for another week. Two parishes have ali-eady notified the Circulation Depal"tme~t Blessed Sacra~ent' Chur~h'. -in' .~~~e"a~~iChard ~ardin~l<?i.tsh;CAltD~AL'O!HARA they will again~ meet then: Fall: River; hilS a record. for ever; , 'cardiria~ Q'J!lIra,has be'en di~ .. quotas. The most ·encourag.. ' past,or of the Diocese to surpass~, : ,Turn to'"Page Twelve, . . ' . jng part of the mes~ages, He ~as more t.ha? 9uil~ri.lpled his· ," '. ' I
parish sub&crlption,tq,tal of 19,57. 'Sout,he'r~ "W~ are pleased,~ith the re.-" , , log," , . sp,onse of o':!r parishion~rsand Rev. Patrick H. Hl.!rley, pastor we ,are looking ~orw\lrdto th~ , of St. Joseph's Church in Taunday~not too far mt~ t~~ ,futu~e ton, was' first this year with a -:;-w!'ten The .Anch,or. ",:!1l, be m,' " " ", . . quota announcement. "Weh'ave every ,home:.m the pansh ,eyery. :NATClIE.Z:: (NC) -..: The' eallily attained our quota and you wee!t," the .Fall ,R.ixe~ pastor ,pre~iaep.t ('of, the . So~thern can' eXl?cct to add mote names to eom~e.nted.,".. ',' ,~""" .~' -Baptist , , Con'vehtion ' has our parish li~t of weekly su~,It.i~ ,~l.so the seco~d successive' .. stated' -that ;B~lptists cannot Beribers to an excellent Cathoh~year fo~ B,les~ed Sacra1.D~nt: to "'supi>orttl~e :~andidacy of a Diocesan' newspaper," ,surpass lts parish quota. .. . ,.. Catholic' for' the lIT.' S. presi':' This is the second successive Aiready,.lO per cent over his dency. . Tear for the Taunton parish in, established quota Rev.' John' J. 'The convention rtlore than the quota class. Father Hurley Casey" pastor of Immaculate '"nine million' members " and' is expressed great satisfaction with Conception Church in ,North rated the second largest Proteshis, parisJ;! response because it E,aston, has assured The Anchor' tant group in the country. represents a 50% jump in .weekly ,Circulation Department "that Addressing' t h'eMississippi subscriptions over his 1957 mark. more families. will, be added, 'Baptist, Evangelistic Conference, Rev. Eugene Dion; pastor' of after next Sunday,", . Dr. "R~msey -Pollard of Knoxville, 'Tenn" said: "We Baptists b,eliev~ in complete and ,abSOlute L~nteri Foru~for , religious liberty for all mim, and we cannot w~lk ,with <'lose who deny' this' fundamental 'freedom "Youth Looks at Life," a' Lenten forum for' young on which every ~ther lib~t'ty is adults, will be hel<;l Sunday nights. during Lent at the fourided,"· .- '. I Dr. Pollard told the conventi:m Catholic Community Center, Franklin, Street, Fall' River, he \yol.\ld not ,"stand QY and keep and at Kennedy Center, New' Bedford. 'It wiil begin, ~t my mouth shut when' a man 7 Sunday· night, MaJ,'ch 6. Christo Churcl); Rev. Joh'n P. und~r coiltr:ol of the' Roman Open to high schQol juniors Driscoll, SS.' Peter and· Paul; Catholic Church runs for 'Presi. and seniors and other youths Rev. Paul McCarrick, St.- Mary's dent of the United States,"
Church Op" pO,s,es C",citholic 'F 0,', P res,i d e,n t
however was theaddedpnrase of both ~astors, "and mor'e Com":
has
Young Adu.lts ", To Open on Sunday, March :6 ..
16 and over, of all faiths', the talks will discuss teen-age problems and ways to succeed in preparing fot adult life. Panelists will be priests of the Diocesan Family Life Bureau, which conducts Cana and preCana' conferences for married all,d engaged couples. The forum ill being sponsored by the Council of Youth Organizations in both cities. First Five SuneJ,a,Ys' , The series will be held for' the first five Sunqays of Lent, ending April 3. Registrations are being accepted at both, centers from young people wishing to attend. Fall Riv,er prlests.~ speak at I'ranklin Str~et inch,lde Rev. Anthony . M., Goip.es, SantQ.
CatpedraJ; Rev.. ReginaldM. Barrette,St., Rech,.and· Rev. William O'Connell, also SS. Peter and Paul. ' In New Bedford, Rev. Luis G. Mendonca, Rev. James ,Clark, Rev. John F. Hogan and Rev; Bertrand Chabo~ will' :speakat Kennedy Center.
D'eclare"s Cat'h·ol.·c Church T.·hrea,tens U. S. Down f a II I
BOSTON (NO)--::-"CatholiCism jn the. United States is' the'most spiritually whoiespme arid soundly alive Catholicism .in the whole world." .,A M;ethodist bishop who s~id he had seen' Catholicism. in ,'action' iIi', 30 countries delivered the triOute' in a strange setting Americaill"eople "can be trusted ~ 'before the 12th national t~' face truth and act together," 'confere'nce of:' Prote&tants and" they will appreciate "dis, and Other Americans United cussion of the controversial," he ,for Sep~ration of Church, and State (PQAU). " ' . Bishop Richard C: Raines of ,Indianapolis made an appeal before the' anti-Catholicorganization for an '!honest appraisal 'of the 'Ameri~an principle' of Church and State.... He advocated: "Let us discover in what we can, agree 'and admit p'~nkly where we differ 'and why;"
sa~d. Bishop Raines accused Protestant churches of helping to tear aown' the' "wall of separation" between Church and State in. . ~hre~ ways: . ,1) by accepting tax exemption's, an indirect form of government subsidy; 2)' by participating in the mill. Turn to Page Eighteen
Two Cincinnati "Newspapers Adopt Code to Govern.' Amusement Ads
, CINCINNATI (NC)-Two ,Cincinnati 'daily newspapers have adopted a "code of standards~' banning objectionable ' movie advertisem~pb~. The code, identical for both news' papers, spells out rules 'governing both copy and art work in amusement ads. The , rr=~*===*=======*===')F==~E====;~====l~==;'~newspapers adopting the I ' code are . the Cincinnati Enquirer and the Cinciimati
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will y. 0 u build . chtirclies, p r ~ a c h . missions" ' ' found schools. All your ." , 'efforts will be' 'destroy'ed , , : "unless' you wield" the defensive . and offensive weapon of apress that' , is Catholic~ loyal and: sincere.:r. will. make . 'any sacrifice; even to pawhingmy pectoral cross; .' ring .and .cassock, to support a :Catholie newspaper.~ ,',
Lenten NQtices
munity of Siera Madre. 'It will be Alverno Heights Academy, with a capacity for 500' girls. Sisters of St. Francia Of, Penance and Christian Charity ,yvill staff the school. Alverno will be the seventh neW. high school built through the, Archdiocese's 1959 Youth Edu~a~ion Fun~. ,
. , Realizing- '. that the regula' . , social events and dan~es'are eliminated' in the penitential season 01 Lent, March, 2 to' April 1'7, 'it ,is the policy 01 The ANCHO& to anticlpatfl' notices 01' spiritual activities from PublicitJ' Chalnnen. 01 Parish, GuilcJ and ,l"~u',h • . "!',oups dU..i,~~1s hol7 ·periH.:
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Post ;md Times Star. 'Adoption . of the 'code was revealed by Brady Black, exec\!tive, editor of' the, Enquirer. , The code' bans' illustrations or text' suggesting sexual immorality, 'excessive violence, ' consumption of alcohol, use of narcotics or any "conduct generally immoral or contrary .to established modes," The code, also requires that "any illustration or quotation used in advertisement in a way which implies that it is a part of '.the show as it is ex'liibi~d loca,pi:"
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese'of FaIlR!ver":"'Thurs.,
Fel)'l~; 196CF','·
St~
...Louis Schooli
Cardi!1)ol Asks An Churr~hes He6p'~Officials Oppose') In '. So!vermg Community P!fob~ems fire' Mea~ure
CmCAGO (NC)-Albert Car- pointed out that in periods of I " .. ~',I', LOUIS (NC)-A ne~ • dinal Meyel~ has stressed the' contention it is true that united' .". ~ty : s~hool safety· code 'l1I: need for cooperation among all we stand, divided we .fall;" . churches iiI solving community They sa,id Cardinal ·.Meyer'. opppsed l;>y' puplic, .Catho]io·' PTpl:>lems.· ''lnade reference to the :1958 . an~; Lutl,.~ran school Qfficialll:· .;Tqe·.Archbishop of .Chicago statement. of the American ollgrpunds that it' calls for need., 'd t h' h . ed less and failS to ~. :~~ sal , 0 . aveemp a~l~ .. Roman Catholic hierarc~y (In, the llii.....·~sh·ade'q· uately b'etwee'n v.L:''\ the need to work and cooperate questioll of segregation." . 6u.&..with,.churchE!s of o.ther fa.it~s in. "He repeated the Bishop'" riOUB ·types of .buildings. '. d t bl aff t t h " Catholic school and insurance regar 0 pro ems ec mg e warning. that gradualism' must officials met with St. Louis' fire welfare of all." not become a cloaIt for inaction marshal William Trantina aDei Cardinal Meyer's comments and 'we must not let the mantle members of the National Autowere report«~d in a statement of leadership fall to the racist ma~c..sprink1er and Fire 'Asso... issued by thJ~ee Chicago pastors and the agitator,' ". the pastors dation advisory committee to' pledging Catholic support to the said. discuss di#.erences in opin;~" OR . Organiza~ion for the. Southwest The pastors said they had fire' code regulations needed f~ C:0~mumty~ ~ neIghborhood agreed, during the meeting that schools. . .. CIVIC orgamzatIon. "it is important to cooperate with If was at Chief Trantina's sug., Msgrs.· Patrick J. Gleason, the' Protestant and Jewish faiths ges~on that the new. St. Tr)Uill Pa~rick J. Molloy and John A.' in Platters affecting community f~.~, c~de;' was passed last ye~ " McMahon said the Cardinal· welfare:" Th~ l;Qde makes sprinkler" ''''Inc .'1 made his remarks during' a datoJ"Y. in ..alm ost . all CathoUo, - meeting· with them at which he' D~pll~l!lI.~~ L.~b·'a.po· 1D •...' . 0" ., 1 . • sch()ol structures. ',': endorsed their plans for' coopIii hf~ \&'iOB II '601] II CATlHI LIe BOOK WEEK: Students ·at. St. J o h n ' ~ut~nia:tic Sprinklers, . ',,'.; eration with the civic group. l '> ~ Baptist· School; New. Bedford, anticipated ·Catholic·. Book'. F~t~er :19h p J .. K~nnedy, .exe~ 'I The pastors' : statement ·was <'HOLLYWOOD (NC~.'----' SUP-~·'. Week with an attractive display, distribution of:bookmarks.: utive .,~~~~~y, of'the St. Loui~ ..: , J 0\.;" stu'dents and' a'n Anchor subscrI'ptI'on dr' e ArchdIOcesan' Insurance welcom'ed. by. the Rev. ·Robert 1.'.1 pOrters of the tenet that~manh8s'.· W . ' . ,. ' . " . " . IV. " L e ft t 0' .. rIght', . mi' 1 . " •• ' i ... , . Com-. ., Chiist,· pastor 'of the "Seventh' .N C' h' .d Ch'" t" R b ~'- 8tH" 'd' I' . . . sslOn; saId ·his·. ~ilin, object.ioil,., Presbyterian church,·' and' vice:"-' the un,restricted right to think, '. ~ncr .!.lU ~ {In . riS ~ne 0 er~, .,.trr~ e. ~brary aides. .to the code is a requirement'that' write andjlliblish anything; se~k 1 t' ..... k1 . ' ... ~esident of the community . .comp e e sprm er systems be gro,UP. .. to deceive even the elect of God, instaiIed.everl i~ buildings ;"hicb .'United We Stand ... .' a N,ational Legion of Decency, . . arti'totally 'fire . resistant. 'PubUo Thepasto:rs said' Cardinal official said here. . ." < and' Lutheran' school official. Meyer '!emphasized that Chris·~Msgr. John J. Devlin; the.le~ ·ST. LOUIS (NC)-&me c·d·lsh,·tin dbad'preViouslyvoicedoPPositioa . gum's West Coast representative, . . . " a VI ua , .e con ue. ' : to the neW' law. . 1 Uan belief carries controversy, spbke .to 1 500 members of' the . tlOn~ currently v~~w,ed. as·, ~syLaws gov~iling 'gambHng and' Chiel"TrantiJla; said' the . re."~ with""it; ; but ,at the ,same" time' . . d 'tr . Bl ' . ehobc .abnormalitIes" are JUst even,' .murder· haVe, a"Iini''ite'daft.;.·, q'~'';';'''m'e'n··t·:· 'w'as' \ m"ade" ""'ca' U~'I'" DW~le,Ul us y. In essed~cra-:'.'p13fD'slhful;'a 'pries~told,ii,:gi-6Up yu.uo: II<: .... .Gre.··.'~tS.·" ment .Church at the annuahMass·· f'··· h' fr"t h"" , , , .... plication\be<:a:use'rhost petsODs' 'fire offic!ws'·bave·'nc{recorcl':oIt"· foi"the.:motion .picture ·industry. i. . 0 ~~rc la. I~,.S . !:!~~"'" " '.: I . ' are 'not addicted to' tbese vices,"'" a ':disastrou~ "'schoof' fire in lil "firaveli~g James FrancisCardinal'McIn-';" ';l'~king part::i~a p~~l-discus.- the'Monsignorsaid;but"virtually'::' bu'iIdirig,,·'equipped'· WithautO::<"" 'VATICAN' .CITY (NC).-Pope: tyre, Archbishop of Los Ange~ sio,n.. on. obl!<;enit)(",b~for.e . ,the, alHilimafts~have'at1east'a_"spark'miitic'splinkl1ngdeViees. ,'. ',d John told a group of traveling '. offered. the Mass. '... , ,'. , ' ; Am,eric;an,·. Gu~l!;l,. ~.' Gat,holic' , of serisuality.~"whidf'may burst "; ·"It "ui oW":contention;'" Father :'.: '. E~,opean'" showfolk that .!. their I~ '" ~-The: unOOriirollecf right' of: atr-" " Ps~.ehiat.rists,. .Msgr.t ".: Yi~~r . ..:1..r\ ,into fla~e.l ( "\ I ,~. KennedY said,'!·c'that· this' prot·.~c:.;'~··' .. c~lling .. c;:t~, Pe mer}toz:i~'!~ ,if it r; ing'every thoughriB:riot inherent' Sur.ell, national; .directpr.. of.Jhe, , .. ', ... PieiUtekThre&t· tiOii'should'be required ClnIy for"\) is: consid~,.~ cc:'~tr,i~~~ion to, in the rights 'of citiz¢i1S,'" 'liliid': . Ca~h;oli~.P;!;1io~ .Ce~~al . ~\.\reau, GrowmglIdoiescert'tsare eas,.'~eonCealed'combustible portionBii"" . tlie moral order willed by God.. Msgl'; Devlin., ,,: " t:.'... declared: ,:" ··preY· tei th'e 'obscene: ·both'be.::'·-' where·,there ·i!f'sufficlent··co;~'·; .The ·:Pope· 'granted" a 'sptkial" Tliis ". h "ct' h8' aftecled ~'Many tend.to·regard'immoral ·cause 'of 'their';in'im;turity ·anet'''· mUDieation oto·'coi:lStitute"everi .'" a*?ienc.e to th~ delegates to the . movfese::~' ~l~sion~f '. , , conduct as abnormal. ·The sinful, their voIaure' DlOtionS ihe'~priest '.'.' probable danger to ,occupants til ,.1 se!-:, is not a~normal,., and, .there is ,., said.:.' Obscene:' pictutes "are . fourth mter~a,tujpal c~~ress' of . eral yea'r~; 8. bU~ldi~g:j:which. is ·othf'---·'Sl:b the European ASSOCIation of a decline of de su d ., ~ such. a thmg as rank immorality- particular' threat Since the 'sex' ." ,fire: .resistive. 'This of'course Traveling Show People. .. ie "ceney ~ . p~ . with perfect sanity. A .man can passion, for the most part, is' wo~d ~~e.to be ~etermined 1Il ,The Holy Father said .th~t.the pr,ty: . . , . . .. be really wicked and .still ,keep aroused through the imagination an m~lvldual. baSIS, for whicb source of real happiness .''1 hI the Magr. I)evlin also referred to all his mental.facilities." being' usually 'PSYCholOgicai there J8 at p~esent no provisit)ll Creed, in Christian teaching, iR !he degeneracy of film adv~ The Catholic Church has rather' than .physiological in . ~hatsoe~er m the (St. Low. the word of eternal truth pro- mg that attempts "to appeal.· showDa "special preoccupation" origin, he added. F1J'e) code." claimed by God. the prurient-minded." ,with immoral literature as a "Obscene literature makes a , . . - - - - - - - - - - - -... Considered in this light, the ·moral corrosive, the Monsignor frontal attack on the protectl've' d " th e act'I ity 0 y o..r · P ope cont lI?-ue Vof " said, and the reason is because virtues of modesty and shame," .. traveling show ~eopl~ becollleil the Church knows man's in- . Msgr. Suren said. "It tends in::d More tbaR herited tendency toward evil is evitably. to pro8.r.essivelY.disarm ' . becoming at .ulleful apostolate: . ~6!900 qolYllQ.I:I!S observed dur- strongest in the area~f sex;· the ,Uri.~eCtiqg, and. curious. : ' ',:: ... lDB' of Original SiD .' adolescen~ . ':ll1~il;\.it .le~vei; him. f . 1195~ ' "by .!h.e..r.....nbers , - a year-': ., , . . : : . th ~:.:. . ·owner/mgr., . ;.. Catholi~ ~d assoc:lilti?p'}o,r dailr adol'&AlthOugh sOme take:"'tliepo~i':'" e. ~~ard~d ~ctiJn of .h:ill;, "',,·,.142 ·,Campbetl :51•. ' '" i'I.I. " , , ' , : .i::. .,. " tion :of·:.,the .Blessed Sacrament tion that man's ten~ency to' sin -lower.... P~~oJU!"", .T,b,e.C::h~rch ., HNew Nation$ , accorqirig-' to 'a'report of the should be "ignored . 'UUl' Mon- kn9W!lthIS o~ly~ well." .'. . ,,' 'NnI"~ord,' MG•. ' I ' THthE HA'GI'UE. '(dNC).:....:sd·utpport" ASadcor,eradti?otaln 'anUniOng ~ ti DaioflY ~ig~?rll·nS.isted thta~:the result of, ' Dti~~~~tion .~f,~bsce~ lit-";: e new y 10 epen en na, . or awza on or,sma "sm: mUs ut: '"faced. "'.. '.' era ure can be. curlJed. effectively .I. f or tions is ''the most important Diocesan priests and semin"Tc{'. 'ignOre; this' most lil'lpor-... only· by concerted effort; Msgr.~. I 'j.', ~~':;RA"TlERASNDfO~' .'. : I ' ,~:' problem of (lU:r time,' the Inter. mans, and' members of the talit'fact' in'~onsid;;ring"human,.' S~en saJ<kThejob cannof.·be . national Union of Catholic Enl- .laity. . •. '" .conduct is- to'adopt an attitude. do~e . by..,~e.:Church.alone, .. nor.;:,.~~~ITfO ...NAlFU.~'"~~i~", pioYeJ:s Associations '!>elieveo... ; . '}; The, ~~er~~t~ 'P'~iOlJ,·~b- which is uhrekIistib,' to 'say ~he . pare~ts,. s~o.olsand the ,courts, ,',.. .::.!. The u~ion has said.top priority' 'llshed laSt 'February ,boy BIshdp least,".Msgr... ,Suren deClared.' al~~e, 9~tl ~n,su~ceed ·~throughl. should be giveJtl to economic and James E. Kearpey of ROCtlcirter, "No.p,erson alive' is ueefrom a C9~unitY,.co~l!cience ·wiUl· ", I, q. ;1 ....•:~ , :, •. 'I'll social' ~d';'fol':"rur81 populatiotUl, ,see]ts.to pro~ote observance of tha.(.str~ge d~~.w.hich.in~ "" at:e,f~~ .DlQral. seD$itivity" he ' , ' , . Tnidc 'BOdy 'suilCJen· ,,' ." of the.' linderdeveloped Coun-" daily holy ·'hours· by' its me~ trudes into every moment. of his decla!!'\~.., ; . ,-... . .. , tries. The (:urreni agrarian bers. .~ eons'ciQus existenCe in this life . "The. culj;ivaUon .of such _,' Aluminiun or' Steel· structure in most new nations is ' .' . . - .' . '. .. . 944 County St. marked b"-"seI'iowl'-failings, 'that struggle'. between•. the conscIence .IS. everybody's. busi.. idea.I.,as",suggestedbY ,hili ·con-· ness," Msgr. Suren said... . 'NEW··BEDFORD... MASS. ~ .' ..'.'" WV :i:.t»618 un~~ ~~~,'la~~~~ ~~'d~~i~B":: :!+:tErithrone~ents scie~ce,erand the evil dictates· of '.\ ,I':"" " · PAUL (NC) Archb'sh his .,low , faUen nature." . of the ~¥.~~4 .~d Agri:-;,*~~ '. ST . ..: . . ..~ I op .. '.\ OrgamzatIQn to ()rgan\ze a WIlliam 0.' Brady of St. Paul The'Church's,concern with tbe . . worldwide .fight' against hUnger. '. will 'officiate at the enthrone- mell3ce :-of obscene literature :,' : It promised" itil' own 'fun "support. I ' ment· of".two Minnesota bishops stems from a realization that lin:' .'" P>I~mbi"g~;';" for 'the FAO campaign.. "··.. ,.. ,,.ir,t,.tne~r .. new $ees,Gn succesldve cur~, ·sexuality·· has ,; been" a ': days in April. '. devaStating force in the course~ot . " Over,l3S 'Years . ,.,' On April 19' h~',~voill entbroDO history and in· thelives ' of 'indi-' . ". c)f'SptiSflee. service Members"''Of Ii'a:ll River;Council ......;.Bis~~ ~ran~"" "Schenk as :1!~' ~. " "\. I.'. ~ 806. NO.MAlNSTREEr 86, Knigbts .()fCo~\llDbus;.will,,~>.~~.p.<1f pUltit~ at,'a ceremony " ,,.
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·'.;oSEPHM.'·F. DONAGHY: .,;.
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:",-,Prelateto Officiate
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GEORGE M. MONTLE.
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donate blm .tp:. t~~J{ed .Cross",,}~ ,Ui~. DUI~t~, 'Ca~edraL ~e Friday Feb 26 when the blood- . followmg day, AprIl 20, he will mobile' b~' at the 'Franldln" officiate at the' enthronement OI! Street Council' Home. .Deputy . B~hop Laurence ..A. Glenn as Grand Kitight· Dominick J.' .Bishop of Cr.ookston. Maxwell is blood officer ill Arcbbis.h9P B.rady win preactl eharge of recrUliting donors. at both ceremonies. '
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'. .. legion of Decency'
FOR1)f HOURS DEVOTION
. The following films are to be . added to the lists'in their respective classifications: Feb, 21- St. Anthony, East Unobjectionable for general Falmouth. . era! patrona.8.e~Behindthe Great St. Mary, .North Attie· y/all; Heavf?',"PI(~l'!rth; Killers bor~.\:·. -. 'Of ' Kil~Ir\illij~~o;'i\'~,o a c her' • Feb. 26--LflSalette 'S~naI'Yi\' .' Daughter.' i;'*..:'~.';"~J': Attleboro. , ..... ";: "-lJnobjectioh[bi~,:;, for adultll Feb. 28 -Catholic, Memorial',' and Adolescen~:'iTrial of SeI'Hon!Ie . l~ali=.iuve~. ':: t. ': BeaiIt Ruile4tlJ{:R-:";:,,:/i~,y,,,:, . Santo ,Chiistii'Fall'Riv~r:'I.. Unobjectibn~'hie"df~~~2Adulll: Mar. 6--H~Iy'.,F.~ily.,:raUn.." '. Maia~a; ~ind da~not Read. l :·lton;.' .' ·.. n, , , ~. ObJectIonable 10 part for aU: St. A!ugu!Jtine,,5,v~yard Ro~ary (theme of this ~ial Haven. ' . satire on post-war Germany UDplies pessimism; there are also suggestive costuming and situa'raE ANCHOR 8eeon<l-eJ""" :nail privileges authorized tions); Too Soon to Love (this .. Fall River. M.IlSS. Published evel7 Tbursda.J at ,no Highland Avenue. li1aD . teen-age problem.film is suggesRiver. Mnss.. bY the Catholic Press of the' tive and tends to 'ignore :moral Diooese 01 Fall' Rivoer Sobsorlptiotl prlae 'values and responsibilities,), . bIF man. postpaid $4.00 Pel' ~ \'.. - ----.... ..... . ......_, .... .
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FRIDAY"':'" Mass 'of 'pre~iuuil Sunday. Simple: Violet, Mass' Proper; .No'· Glori8;" Common Preface. .,.. SATURDAY - Mass ..·of the Blessed Virgin for Saturday. Simple. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Preface lof. Blessed Virgin. ' . SUNDAY-Sexagesima Sunday. :09uble c;>f II Class Violet. Mass Proper;' No' Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St 'Petet's -Chair at Antioch. Greater D 0 ubi e • ~ite .. 'Mass ;.P.rc;>pe~;:. Gloria; second CollecLSt. Paul, Apos- . tIe; Preface, of Apostles.:', '. ~SDA Y-St. Peter Damian, Bishop, Confessor-,"and Doctor Of the Church. Double. White. ~ Propet;.. :Glol-iai'·~:Creed; Common Preface. .
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, 'THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 18, 1960
Catholic Colleges Are Split .On Students Loyalty Oath
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Charges Laymen To Present True Image of Church :
ST. LOUIS (NC)-St. Louis University is opposed to the loyalty oath and non-subversive affidavit required of collegians seeking Federal loans under the National Defense ~ducation Act. But the university will not withdraw from the program,. a university appropriate, and: 'statement" says because it "For this very reason, it is an believes such a ,move would embarrassment foJ' the loyal 'deny students' free choice in American to find himself re..-
CLEVELAND (NC)-The image of the Church in the U. S. needs changing and it is up to laymen to do it.
Pittsgurgh's Bishop John J. qui red to state his lqyalty under Wright told the First FridllJ' the oath and under penalty of Club here. law in return for the common Too often today, B ish 0 p benefits of citizenship and law." Wright said, the public sees the Cites Objections Church distorted - too m u c h This embarrassment is "aU the mortar and organization, not greater for students," it said, enough Christ.centered heart. "since it is not the universal The problem of correcting the policy even of the Federal govimage of the Church is compliernment to so con'dition common cated by such groups as POAtJ (Protestants and Other Ameri_ subsidies and benefits 'for all cans United for Separation of groups." Church and State) which try to The affidavit, it said, is open keep before the publ" an image "to, more serious objections." of "captive schools," "censors" "It requires not only a disand "inquis~tors," the prelate claimer of subversive membersaid. ' ship and activity, but of belief in subversion and subversive 01'But Church is more thall , ganfzations.• an organization" Bishop Wright "Certainly such belief is Insaid. "The ,...... '''r:h is a living. compatible with wholehearte4 dynamic risen person of Christ," STANG HIGH ROYALTY: Paula Barnaby, Our Lady .he added. ' l~yalty to C?ur country. This is of Grace,' Westport, and John Gaisson; Holy Name, Parish, not the point. Today, ,Bishop Wright COilNew Bedford, were elected queen and king respectively at ,tinued, there are enough laYll\ell Dangerous Preoedent the schooi's' Valentine Dance. " ,to do the job if they read. anel "The point is rather that this ,study more history, philosophy , effort to bring the ~nternal, sen",: ,and lives ,of the saints and be, timents of tM citizen wit1:linthe come active in the Catholie ' cognizance ot government .and' Registration of new stud,ents a school newspai>er, photograllhy .Apostolate. of crhnnhil law is contrary ,to the tor Bishop Stang High . School" ' club, and student' government. basic traditio~ of, American 'North Dartmouth, for 'the 1960- An orchestra, and marching' band freedom, improperly extends the 61 school year will be held at' will soon be formed., " competen<;e of Civil, law and, the school from 2 to 5 Sunday: Tuition is a' modest charge of. therefore, sets" a dangerous preafternoon, March 6. Members $1.25 per year. If desired it maY- , cedent," said the university. of the faculty will welcome pros- be paid in instUments of $12.50 Main~nance Supplies , St. Louis and Providence are p'ective stud'ents and parents and per month· payable" the 15th of, SWEEPERS - SOAPS now among 49 ins,titutions prothe' school will be open: f(it .' the previous mon'th. ',' testing, but participating in the DISUNFECTANTS ., visiting. " Transportation through the . , program, according to a state-, Bishop Stang 'High School -is 'facilities of the Union Str~t FIRE EXTINGUISHERS 'ment by Arthur S. Flemming,' open to children of ,the Greater" Railway Company of New BedSecretary of, th~ U. S. Depart- New Bedford area and to chil- ford is convenient and moderate ment of Health, Educ;:ation and dren of the Fall River area;" in cost. Welfare. Seven' others refused 1886 PURCHASE S~ when room is available. The The full cafeteria will be in to take part at all and 13 took Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur 'operation the' coming year with NEW BEDFORD part for a while, then stopped. are in charge 'of the school. , complete hot lunches available WY 3-3786 Mr. Flemming favors repeal of It is a standard four-year high for a reasonable fee. the affidavit. school with courses leading to diplomas 'in classical, technical, Pittsburgh Ordinary 'scientific, teaching, nursing, and business fields. Asks Court 'Ruling An athletic program for boys PITTSBURGH (NC) The and girls includes, an intra-mural Diocese of Pittsburgh has ap'basketball, league: A full sports.' pealed a zonirig ruling of the : program, of football, basketball, Mount Lebanon board of com~ baseball and track will ,be de., missioners which b'ars erection ,veloped. : ' , bf a Catholic church. 'J,'he Diocese ' Social Program' .' :' claims the zoning ordinance is' . Social actiVities for boys and , illegal and violates constitutional. giris are. already well 'started, , provisions" including the First with a sodality, glee' club, dra"; : Amendment. SUffERING FROM ... 'inati,c club, journa-lism club with' The ordinance, wh;ich adds' three streets to a list of township' p" It' t 'O'£f' " , roads where construction of pubre a e nee s ,Ice lie buildings is forb,id,den, is For Migratory LQbO~, allegedly designed tOpresetve " CHICAGO (NC) - Msgr.' the residential character of the" William J.,Quinn of Chicago has neighborhood and to ,prev~nt been named executive secretary Expansio" Plans traffic . problems. . The three of the new Bishops' Committee TARRYTOWN (NC)-Mary- stJ:'eets surround a seven-acre for Migratory Labor. 'A,dequa" wirln• ..;. at least a ,100.ampere mount College, here, has an- plot of la~d which ·;the' Diocese H~ will direct 'setting up of • . ' ~rVice entrimce to give 'you "lithe ~vaA~ nounced a 10 million dollar, of .Pjttsburgh acquired fQr National' Catholic 'Office' fot' tages of, ful,l Housepowe,.! Then, your apphances 10",year expansion program. $60,000. Migratory, Labor, which will o~rate at their, best: You avoid blowing'fuses and Aim of the program is to raise ,Bishop John· J. Wright, o~ ,serve as a Clearing house for inthere are no limitations on your freedom to choose the enr,ollment of, the women's Pittsburgh has c:ieclar~d 'he re.,. formation onc~tholic pi'og;ains eollege from 600 to 850 by 1970'. grets the:necessity "even, con- , on the migrant worker field. The 'a'nd use electi-ic ~ashers, dryers, rariges, air COIlPlans call 'for construction of sidering recourse to ,the courts." office ~ill be loc,ated 'in C~icago. ditioning and small 8ll pliances. four new buildings - a ,dormiMount 'Lebanpu; one ,o'f PittsMsgr. Quinn recently con-' totl', a dinin'g hall,' a' library , burgh's 'most exclusive 's~burbs; ferred in San Antonio, Tex., with and a chapel. The college is is 32 per cent' Catholic: It'has 11 Archbishop Robert E.Lucey ot oI....... wiU eonducted by the Religious of churches,'onlyone of 'which 'is a San Antonio, executive chair" rate your Housepowe,. ..• gIVe you an ,Catholic, Church. man of the Bishops' Committee; the Sacred Heart. I, accurate rewiring estimate. He'll install model'll for the Spanish Speaking, and electrical wiring, give you plenty of circuits, He'U Father Rohel;t Wagner, its executive secretary. locate outlets properly so that you CIlln use all the appliances you wish at one time ... take care of your electrical needs for years to come.
the matter. ' St. Louis, with 5,611 fulltime .tudcnts-sixth largest fulltime 'enrollment of U. S. Catholic colleges and universities - thus joins another institution, Providence (RI.) College, in opposing the oath-affidavit requirement. 'Providence has also protested but has not withdrawn. Officials of other Catholic institutions of higher education have favored the act's requirement. In this category are St. Mary~s Ond.) College;, ' St. Michl1cl's College, Winooski Park, Vt.; and Villanova University, LaSalle College and St. Joseph's College, all in .th~ Philadelphia area. , The division of opinioQ in the ranks of Catholic institutions over the merit of the oath and affidavit is reflected among other private and pUblic schools,. Several major institutions, such Harya,rd and· Yale Univer,si':' ties: have withdrawn from the IN'9gram i~ protest against it., , . ~ bill to repeal the affidavit Is pe~~ing ill 'Congress. Sponsored by Sen. John F. Kennedy. of Ma.ssachusetts, the repeal ~eas.. are has the support of President Eisenhower. It 'has been reported favorably by the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee., Floor debate is expected later ,this month. seoond Attempt " ' The bill calls for repeal only' of. the affidavit.' This seems to ~pporters of the legislation to be the principal target of criticism. A bill to repeal both the affidavit and oath failed in the last session of Congress. The statement by St. Louis University, which is conducted, by Jesuits, that both oath and affidavit should be discontinued did not mention the Kennedy bill specifically. . The university charged that the oath and affidavit are 'Iinept" because those persons; which they seek to keep from ,getting , Federal funds, presumably com.,. munists, can get thel1\ any,way by "perjury and lies.'; 'Emba~ Loyal The university also sllid, it objects to the loyal,ty oath be,;, cause every American citizen is proud ot his citizenship and ready to profess this whenever
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RELIGIOUS }'REEDOM REPORT: Arcot Khrishnaswami, center, of India discusses report on religious freedom he prepared .for United Nations subcommitt~e with Father Eugene Burke, C.S.P., left, Catholic University professor, and Father Jules Gagnon, O.F.M.Cap., who represented the International Catholic Child Bureau. NC Photo.
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TH'E ANCHOR'--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 18, 1960
Transport, Parish School Students Despite Warning
Happy Marriage 'Includes Sharilng Soc.al .Acitivities
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AUGUSTA (NC) -Maine Eductaion Commissioner By Father John L. Thomas, S. J. " Warren G. HiJI has warned Ass't Sociology. Prof.-St. Louis University _. . state sub8idi~s will not be As a mother with six· children, I help my husband in paid to any city or town ,for his business, take my" children to and from school, and transportation of par 0 chi a 1 haven't had a vacation ill 15 years. My husband takes a school pupils. The commissioner in a letter .hunting or fishing trip every year, but when I tell him I'd to school superintendents said he · Jove to go some place he Council of Trent stated clearly: had been advised by Maine's gets mad. Would it be wrong "The first is precisely the comAttorney -General that "it is panionspip sou~ht by the'natural to just pick up and leave for ·clearly illegal to sub~:"';'~e a ·town or city for parochial school a week? After 15 years, I instinct of different sex, and transpo.rtation expenses," need a change of scenery! Under brought about in the hope of . mutual aid, so that p~ch may · A year ago an opinion of the the circumstances, Ann, I rather help the other .to bear more Maine Supreme Court i·' a case think t hat a ' easily the troubles of life, and contesting the validity of parovacation would to support the weakness of old chial school transportation OR do you a great age." . I. . public school buses, pointed out, deal of good, Now I -do not infer, and I there is no enabling legislation though I don't know you don't either, Ann, that in "the state for .such a practice. feel it would 'husbands shouldn't take hunting Temporary Basis solve your basic or fishing trips without" their , A recent special session of the problem. You wives. Most wives are willing Maine Legislature declillJild to are upset, not to skip this' form of recreation. enact a measure which would primarily b e What I am saying is that al'have validated the transportacause you need . though husbands 'may take such ·tion practice of long sta n .-1ing a c han ge of trips, they must also recognize in a number of Maine communiscenery, but be. their wives' need for companties. Despite the action t-,·_~ by cause you miss ionship and a "change of the legislators, some 20 cities ·t hat sense of and towns announced they would sharing and participation with scenery." Husbands and wives need not continue to transport studen'~ to your husband in the whole of share the likes and dislikes in parochial schools on publie life which' normal couples en- this regard, but they must foster "school buses, at least on a temjoy. You an~ your husband ap- a substantial core" of "shared porary basis. , parently have learned how to social activities as a couple if In his letter to the school work together. Such co,?peration their marriage is to becon-.',! anysuperintendents, Co~missioner ·is essential for a good marriage: thing. more .than .a "convenient Hill said reports on transporta. But considered by itself; workbusiness deal. tion'costs will be reviewed next ing together does not necessarily Advtses Firm Stand December to make ~rtain that impl~ the kind of companionship payments are made "in' accordWhat should you do?'" Well, that Christian marriage is meant ance with the law." Ann, you may be 'tempted to to supply. Some of the communities have just "pick up and leave" for a Definitions Vary indicated ~ey, will continu'-- . You tend to regard your hus. week, but becailse of your six band's actions as thoughtless 'children; I know you. won't. GIFT TO PRELATE: This statue of St. Therese de present program of transporting .. ,. ". . . parochial school students '''1til and selfish. No doubt they are, NevertheleSS, you're gomg to. but the 'root of your difficulty have to take a firm stand. If,;r . LIsIeux, placed m the Church of Balatonboglar, Hungary, forced -to discontinue by a court __ . by French refugees who escaped from German prisoner ruling. lies much deeper. It seems clear understand 'your husbanrl he is that you and your husband en- no~ only.selfishl,y ~hO~ghtless,. of- war camps, was presented to Msgr. ~ela Varga in his tered marriage with different he s convmced ~e s rIght.. church there in memoriam to all the French officers' and Remember thIS the next bme ., . . ' expectations, that is, with difBURLINGTON (NC)o-A he gets "mad" at your reque1;t. soldIers gIVen l!aven durmg World War II. NC Photo. ferent definitions of your reNewman Center for the nearly • . spective roles as husband and He gets angry because he 1,000· Catholic students at the wife and of what marriage, defines the situation differently, K~rushchev University of Vermont has been yet suspet:ts he can't rationally should mean. . blessed by Bishop ,Robert F . As you probably know, there .defend his,Jlosition and so tries . JOyce 'ot Burlington. The center 'are many ways of defining what to bluster his way through. CINCINNATI (NC)-The reDon't argue about his tripsTherefore, "it is important ~ in a nO-year-old structure, a good husband and wife should . once the residence of Prof. C. E. treat movement'. is "a' secret th at w e s t u d y commuDlsm. let him. take them, since he can be: Definitions vary from' age Jacobs. probably make out a good case .weapon" in tbe arsenal of the what 'it stands for, what its goals to age, from nation to nat,ion, for them. Rather, insist that you Christian West, a Catholic newsare, how it functions. No matand even among various social classes within the same country. have an equal right to do some paperman who interviewed So- ter who is the' leader, commuthings you'd like to do. viet Premier Nikita Kbrushchev nism isn't going to· ch,ange. It's Your husband obviously foJ. If he mentions the' expense _ in the Kremlin; said here. communism, not Khrushc,hev, lows the old tradition that this "In seven hours of. conversathat we have to deal with,"-he is a man's world. Wives should you've got him cold there. If he remain in the home, content argues that it's too much trouble tion with the" Big K," Frank said., with the companionship of their trying to go any place wiih the Conniff, Hearst newspapers' ria;. children and close relatives. children, point out that they're tionaleditor, said, "the only thing that got under his skin Husbands' should be free to .fol. his as well as yours. Selfish Position was a question about religion.". low their own pursuits as long as they support their families He'll doubtless be angry be. Mr~ "Conniff addressed 'the : 365 NORTH FRONT STREET: and ,observe the moral law. cause he can't' justify pi!> selfish 24th annual dinner meeting of : NEW BEDFORD : Husbands.-who cling to this position. Spell out the facts to the Men of Milford, 'Jesuit laytr.adition are usually following him in terms of his obligation men's reh-eat organization. A , WYman 2-5534 , BO~ling & Skating "the model they observed in their before God. Be firm. Let him -see Pulitzer Prize cowinner~ for the ~ ~ families of origin. Since this that you're serious, and if he 1956 Khrushchev interviews, Million DollarBaliroom was the pattern of relationships doesn't like it, suggest that you Mr. Conniff described the Rusfollowed by their parents, they see your pastor 'or a marriage sian Premier as "a tough, forAVAILABLE can- see nothing wrong with it. counselor. . IT'S ALL RIGHT TO midable, brilliant opponent." For Your If their wives protest, they get Remember his anger only inIn the past' five years under SHOP AROUND FOR. ,angry and insist that .modern dicates that he suspects" he's Khrushchev, "the atmosphere • TESTIMONIAL DtNNERS women are being spoiled by wrong. It's no fun living" under in the Soviet Union has relaxed" SOME THINGS, BUT • BANQUETS new-fangled. ideas about equal- tension, but if you fold up every while the Russian people are • FASHJON SHOWS ity. time he gets 'angry, he'll go on "better fed and better clothed" ,. ANNUAL DANCE PARTY Mutual Pursuit having his own way and never and 'relatively free' from the You follow a different tradi- . learn that marriage sanctifies former "police state climate," . 202-206 Rock Street tion Ann. You believf~,' and through the exercise of charity. he said. f.or information can FalJ River qUit~ correctly, that marriage "Undisputed Master Roland Gamache or should mean more than a conIS ~ PLACE I'D Frank Collins . Mr. Conniff told the a\!dience venient 'partnership in work; GET A PRESCRIPTION of 2,000 "the new Russia reprethat when a man and woman WYman 9-6984 FILLED! become "two in one flesh" STAMFORD (NCj - NearJy sents an even larger challenge through marriage, their lives are three-quarters of the Catholics to the' West" than the old police henceforth fused together in the polled in a two-city ;lrea of state did." And Mr. Khrushchev is the undisputed master, he .mutual pursuit of sanctity a~d southwestern Connecticut favor happiness; that husband and more pulpit guidance on racial added. ' wife are "good' for each other, matters. The poll was conducted "Despite the cynicism' of to use a Scriptural phrase, be. by the newly founded Catholic Russian youth and the discontent Est. 1897 cause they <:omplete and support Interracial Council of the Stam- of intellectuals, Krides on ~ a each other as helpmates and ford-N'\>rwalk area. tide of popular support for his Builders Supplies companions. Eighty-eight per cent of those relaxed policies,"" the' editor Yeurs is not a new tradition. polled said they had no objection declared. 2343 Purchase Street Centuries ago when explaining to associating with Negroes at • New Bedford Mr. Conniff emphasized that the reasons why people should work or in church. Half of the "all authority" in the.. Soviet WY 6-5661 marry, the Catechism of the 88 per cent, however, registered "begins a.nd ends with the some reservations about housing Communist party." The party Hav~ has not in .the slightest degree in regard to Negroes. Sixty-seven per cent said they altered its goal of world· COD. NEWARK (NC) - A federal had no objections to associating quest, he added. grant of $2,950,000 is earmarked 'with Negroes in church societies for Newark's use in acquiring or in sharing recreational facilNEW YORK (NC)-Francis and clearing a downtown slum ities, but 14 per cent listed objecAND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATTLEBORO area ,for de,velopme,nt of a, new' tions in reference to social Cardinal Spellman. has angatherings. ~ounced a gift of '$50,000 in Seton Hall University campus. Asked about the speed with memory of his predecessor, The amount is set aside from 3~% on Savings Accounts 26 million allocated to Newark which integration is being ear-, . Patrick Cardinal Hayes, from for six redevelopment programs. ried out, 39 per cent said it is the New York archdiocese to In addition, $58,489' has been going too slowly, 19 per cent' the Christian Brothers' Man1% Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings granted by the Urban Ilenewal said too fast, and 22 per, cent hattan College which is seeking .(\.dministrallon for detailed plan- were satisfied with the present five million dollars' for • new engineering building. ,pace. nina.
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American Editor Says Formidable, Brilliant Opponent
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. '8, '960
l\fUSICIANS MEET: Or.ganists and choir directors of the Diocese met at St. James Chqrch, New Bedford, to hear an explanation and demonstration of the music of Holy Week, with emphasis on congregational participation in singing. Left, left to ,right, Thomas Flangheddy, Imfl.laculate ConceptiOn, Taunton; Michael Chase and Chester Martin, St. .Joseph, Taunton, diseu88 .points br~ught out at meeting. Center, ~ to
Editors Stress Importance Of Catholic Newspapers The nation's Catholic editors are spending this month in a reflection-reviewing what they've done, why they' did it and how it was accepted. Editorials in diocesan newspapers marking Catholic Press Month commented on the distinction between "a" Dioceses, saw the Catholic press . . t f' d as "an essential part of the Cathohc pOlO 0 VIew an Church's apostolate today." "the" Church viewpoint, t.he Maintaining that the Catholic duty to keep readers 10- newspaper lives on the fervor formed, the defensive function of the Catholic newspaper and other matters. Here are some excerpts from a spot-check of diocesan newspaper editorials: The St. Louis (Mo,) Review, asserting that the information it presents should be a stimulant to thought, said: "At first glance, we. appeal' as the priest in his Sunday Sermon who reminds the people of their obligation to attend Mass on Sunday. .. Rather, we are like the priest who encourages a more active participation in the Mass being attended. We ask you to be a more active reader." Full Presentation . The 'Catholic News of New York noted the statement of Bishop Albert R. ·Zuroweste of Belleville ,Ill., that the Catholic press made full presentation of the Church's position Oil birth control possible in the recent controversy. "This is but one of numerous examples 'of the service of the Catholic press not only to the, Church, but to the nation during the past year. . . . This assistance . . . ,is made possible by those who, like you, support and read it," it said. The Catholic Transcript, newspaper of Connecticut's three Sees, the Ha~tford Arc~dioce.se and the NorWIch and BrIdgeport
Fordham University GetS $100,000 Grant
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NEW YORK (NC)-Fordham University has received a grant of 100,000 for use in the'develop. ment of its new in-town education center at Lincoln Square. The University announced that the funds were given by the James Foundation of New York, Inc. The foundation, established in 1941 under the will of Arnold Curtiss James, has been a major benefactor in the areas of higher education. Father Laurence J. M<:Ginley, S.J., university president, said the grant will be used, in the development of the new sevenand-a-half acre campus located in the heart of New York City. a will include the Fordham iJchools of law, education. busi. DeSIl, social studies and .general
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of the Catholics it serves, it said that "it is no less true under present-day conditions that 'the fervor and zeal of many Catholics will be proportionate to the use they make of the Catholic press." The Catholic Herald Citizen of Superior, Wis., said the Diocesan newspaper can be, in a sense, only what readers choose to make it. "The Catholic Herald Citizen offers the people of the Diocese guidance and leadership in the field of Catholic opinion. It enlists the aid of priests and also of the laity who have th~ mission of teaching entrusted to them. The influence of the Catholic Herald Citizen, however, obviously depends upon the readers it reaches," it said. The Catholic Light of Scranton, Pa., paraphrased words of St. Pius X, in staUng that "the importance of the Catholic press is not yet understood. Neither the faithful nor the clergy give it the attention they should." "To be a Catholic, to call one· self a Catholic, nay, to belong to Catholic organizations and associations, and at the same time be indifferent to the interests of the Catholic 'press, is a patent absurdity," the paper said. Reaches Maturity The Steubenville (Ohio) Register said that after years of uphill struggle for survival and recognition, "our Catholic press has attained maturity." "Special credit' must be given to the role of the layman in the Catholic press,' who has brought to the editorial desk not only professional skill, but who, as a layman, is able to interpret news in a manner most readily understood and accepted by the average man," it said. • The Mississippi Register, newspaper of the 'Natchez-Jackson Diocese, said members of the Catholic prE;ss are craftsmen of various kinds, but have a higher duty than mere skill. "Above all and before all and after all, we are witnesses of Christ, militants in our times, charged with bringing Christ into a broken-down civilization, charged with formi~ Christ in souls now living in intellectual MqualOl' • • • ," it said. - -
right, Carolyn Pizio and Suzanne Tokarz, Holy Rosary, Taunton, discuss new music with Linda LePage, Immaculate Conception, Taunton. Right, organists confer. Standing, left to right, George Cotter, Immaculate Conception, North Easton, Joseph A. Ostiguy, St. Mary's, Seekonk. Seated, left to right, Mrs. Viola Wilson, Holy Name, Fall River, Mrs. Thomas E. F'arr-en, SS. Peter and Paul, Fall River.
Pope John Urges 800 Architects -Manifest Interest In Liverpool Cathedral Contest French to Pray LIVERPOOL (NC)-Some 800 Archbishop Heenan eliminated -:To Our Lady architects from many parts of grandiose prewar plans in favor
PARIS (NC)-Pope John in a special television broadcast, has urged Frenchmen to pray to the Blessed Virgin
in times of difficulty and he assured them he is praying for France.' In the French telecast- from the Vatican, Pope John said he is praying that France might obtain "the grace of peace and of brotherly unity." . The Pontiff recalled his visits to the Pyrenean mountain town of Lourdes-the last on March 25, 1958 when he consecrated the underground basilica of St. Pius X. He said that the appari.... tions at Lourdes a century ago' indicated "the Virgin wanted to show clearly her special concern for your country and no doubt to reward· the faith and piety of so many' generations in France who have called upon her aid throughout the cen· turies." Pope John urged the French to address prayers to Our Lady who, he said, has been so often in the past "your advocate, refuge and protectress." Concluding, the Pope said: "For France We ask of God, and We hope that France will obtain through the intercession of Our Lady of Lourdes, the graces it needs today-the grace of Faith and of courage, the grace of peace and brotherly unity."
the world have applied for de. . . . talls of a $28,000 competItIon for designing a Catholic cathedral for Liverpool. Archdiocesan officials revealed that they included 550 from the British Isles-including Ireland - 67 from Canada, 48 from South Africa, 32 from Australia, 25 from the United States, 11 from Malaya and 10 from Uganda. Others live in Italy, France, the West Indies, Switzerland, India, vari?us parts of Africa, the Middle a,nd Far East and South America. Practical and Modern The winner to be' announced next _Sep'tember, will receive $14,000 for his design, There will be a second prize of $8,400 and a third of $5,600. Winning designs will be selected by Archbishop John C. Heenan of Liverpool, with the help of Basil Spence, president of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and David Stokes, a fellow of the institute. .
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TH~ ANCHOR-Diocese of f.~~I' River-::-Thurs:~;Feb . .18~ 19~O
Trend, of the Times
,Weekly, Calendar Of ,Feast Days
, ,
Former President Herbert Hoover has told a meeting ()f Presbyterian men that the "spread 'of ,the Karl Marx iirus~' was one of the major crises in "this "country, and that ~~more leaders of the Christian faith,' need' to realize the ultimate end,of thisihfection among us.'!
LET's ,,1l8'
,HIM/
, ,By the "KaflMarx 'virus" Mr. H06ver apparently means', eommunistic socialism-the operation, by government of all eommerce and industry and then, the reduction ,of life to materialism. Mr. Hoover s~id that when'Commtinismta)<es over the commercial and' industrial, realms' of a' country" ,dictatorshjp follows and the destruction of independent thought and religion. " , ,
-v--
N4t.UsIIYE
/11M WQIlK!
, It is interesting that Mr: jIoover, 'should choose to:" address his words to, a ,group of men meeting under' religious title"""":'the Eastern Area, of :Yni~ed Presl;>ytel;'iap' , ,:Men. It will be even more' interesting ,to see, how, many < Christian leaders will comment on Mr., Hoover's, words;' will various candidate!\! for 'public} office' to d~c1are 'them.., 8elves on such a vital issue. It, will be he~rtenirig'to see how' many Christian lead,ers state their position in thismatter in clear, ~nequivocal term,s, to show that they'· are indeed aware of -the ' ultimate' end of, the, infection ,of
a ',
ask
Marxism.'
.
' . . : '.
'
; 'The position of the Catholic 'Church and' Cathoiics is ' ,", quite clear in the matter.' Catholic' 1eaders----elerical and lay-know ,,;ell the ultimate end' of Marxism. But wouldn't it be a good idea for non-Catholic ,leaders-clericalarid iay-to put forth their ideas? Isn't that, after all, the 'trend of the times?
Says, Birth Controllers Put
,Econom'ics Before Morals
Wasn't' Somebody ,Driving?
,
'By M~st,Rev. Robert J. Dwyer,D.D.,
..' Bishop of Reno A college dean said receply that he read where "meIn November, 1959, the Admh~istrative Board of the ear failed to make the curve.", What disturbed him in the report of the accident bei,ng recounted was this:'''Wasn't National Catholic Welfare Conference' ,published an extremely' forthright statement on "population explosion" and somebody driving that car?" the morality of Federal sp~nsorship of artificial birth conThe dean continued: "These kids grow up think~ng that trol propaganda, in foreign ' their failures can be blamed on almost anything that comes is over we should have accumu;. parts.' Untler the circumlated quite' a library, to mind-poor textbooks, bad instriiction, anything;" , . stances the Americanhier' Separate Questions There is much in what the educator says. Youngsters archy had no choice but. to ' In the inevitable confusion of, must grow up not only with the idea of ,privileges and, spellk out. In the face of a highly public debate there is a, fatal rights but-·more especially-the 'idea' of responsibilities. A organized. and vocal campaign tenden~y to lose sight of the fact that two separate questions are sense of civic responsibility impels him to be a conttibuting' to "sell" the nation on a' coninvolved. One deals with the citizen. -A sense of family responsibility makes' him strive troversial dem-truth about "population exploto keep the home circle intact. ographic theory sion", the other'with the morality of artificial' birth restriction. And a youngster must be taught that 'as these are his and to commit her to' a course There is no necessary connecresponsibilities, so, in the case of ,faiiure, he must be ready of action with 'tion between the two except in' to stand up and admit to the share of failure' that is his. g r a v e moral the minds of those who are Failure must not be put off with a "the car failed to' make' imp 1 i c a determined to hoist birth' control with the petard of population /the curve." After all, as the dean asks, "Wasn't somebody t ion s, silence might have been scare, The point was admirably driving that ~ar?~' , interpreted as scored by the British demogindifference. The rapher, 'Dr. Colin Clarke in Bishops 'cannot , recent television discussi~ of , " be indifferent to public' morality. ' the matter. , DUri~~ '~orl~ War Il, an A~,erjcansoldier \g~ve. a, 'It ,wasto be expected that the 'Now w'hat is the ttuth abOut' bungry, FllIpmo~ hIS last can,dybar. The act ,of '~enerosIty ,statement would provoke ,vigor.- Hpopulation explosion"? This' ill and- sacrifice made an impression'on ~he 'recipitmt. 'It'waiC rius reaction. In the blurred ' properly 'a scientific' question 'an impr~ssion .that is stiil nutkil1gitself 'felt and 'in a' ,way~ thin~in'?~f . some pol~ticiansit a.nd s~ould'~ left'to. theexpertl' , that will m.~an health and happIness for many 'thousands.'. ~.as a 'sUl?I~al, pronou,!1cement ~ . answer. But i~ III Qnly too' , '." ,.' " ., ' , '; , , ' - ' .. , " :,' 'masmuch as It ""as calculated to eVident that expertise in this " ~or ~he FilipJno we,nton' to .~ome~anAin~rican,' sharpen rather t~an to blupt the particular field is claimed, bY' ~itizen and to move to thil;! country where-he went through pointsC!f diff~rence :t>etw~en'as- almost ~veryone who cal'). 'read medical school. He has ,just finished a five.::Year~6Id' practice ',piring Catholic' cal1diqates for and whoth~nk~ ~e can tote up a in Montan ..,,"',' " ,,' " , ' officeall(~ their unco,mmitted ~olumn ofstahshcs. . a.,: " , , ' ".' . ', , ' , ; -, " opponents. Certainly 'it' occa- , Blatan~' propaganda has 10 , For now he has decided to leav~ his home and practice,' siol)ed (or co..,incided with) !lome: beclouded the problem and So and to spend three years on the Island of Dominica-caring questioning of presidential hope- p.layed .upon the popular 'obsesf~r almost seventy thousand natives whose only medi~al' fuls'; the qu~stions bein~. ,~eavilY Sion With security as to stifle .. . . ,', " loaded to mduce suspicion of reason and common sense. faCIlIty IS a, small hOSPItal staffed ~y three nuns. unwarranted ,clerical influ~nce. No doubt about the popuThe good doctor has used his' own savings to buy' FortunatelY,at least for the lation of the world is growing, medical sUlPplies and equipment that should last him a time being, the air was cleared though with baffling inconsist. year or so. He has deliberat~ly refrained frorn asking for by the sensible' comment of, ency, but it is far from clear , . . " President Eisenhower that so far' that-the problem has approached .'' any help because ~e looks upon thIS as hIS proJect.. " a s he' is aware the' United the c.ri.sis that hall"~en so widely, And so an act of sacrifice made by an unknown GI States government has no notion pubhclzed !nstea~, the careless fifteen years ago will have an effect that the soldier and ,of recommending birth control astbat~d?n With which populatiQp .. .' ' " to anyone a IStICS are flung about, and the ~Ihpmo could not have foreseen. •." • to which Dr. Clarke took per tin- ' , New, Challenge ent e t' t t'f' th , '- But that is the quality of sacrifice--it is never wasted, But the controversy goes on. th' xffcePt.lon, es files ,ra erlto • . ' ' , . e e ec Ivenes 0 a mere s 0l,t never. go~s .wIthout ef.fec.t. An . appar~ntly casual ~ct 'of and IS alt~gether hkely t? cen- gan, The inventer of the phrase' self-demal IS Important m Itself and, ~an be revolutIonary t~r ~ttenhon ,for a long tIme to "population explosion," whoever lin its consequences. ' cbomt~ It has ?een poun.ced up0!l he w~s, demonstrated the quali, '. ' ' y . e pop'! .ar magazmes. as a ties of geni,us. , And occaSIOnally-as' in this instanc~the conse- ' subJect to tItIvate reader mterD d Ef est espeCialy as an arena for ' eman s fort quences become known. . ' t b t t f ' ,The scientific demographer , is ' rlpos e e ween 'proponen s 0 a "new morality" to meet'a "new' eoncern.ed to seek t?e answer to '~hallenge", and the defenders pOP';llat~on growt~ .In !he fuller , \ of the traditional Christian view r~ah~atlOn andutIhzatlOn ?f the of the moral la'w. : ' earth s, resources.. In thiS he , .. . resembles the phIlosopher of , Tele,vlSlon has gotten .~nto the ' social. democracy 'who seeks to act w~th somew):lat, dubiOUS re- make his system viable in an , suIts so far as its claim to afford expanding community., OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER, OF THE DIOCESE',OF FAll RIVER an open' forum fo~ de~ate. is , There are those who throw up' concer'!ed. Its fav~rlte ~Imm~ck their hands and say that genuine ' Published 'weekly by The CathC)lic,r~ess of the bi~c~s~ of' Faii ,Riv~ of leadmg off the diSCUSSion With "democracy -can only exist in'a a '£ilm-stri~ showi~g a ,horde of, ' small and manageable, city'410 Highland A'venue 7", , "hungry J:I~ndustam, "appare~tlr. state; there, are others" happily, ;:all Riv~r, Mas,. ' O S b o r n e 5'71~1 proof POSltIV~ of the explOSIOn who believe that dem'ocracy can PUBLISHER the,ory, is either innocenc~ or be indefinitely' expanded pro-, Most Rev. James L. ,Connolly, D.O.,, PhD. deliberate malice. \Tided the level of individual You may take your choice. intelligence and responsibility GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER' And now, after the appropriate ,is maintained. For this both Rev. DOlniel F. Shelloo, M.A. Rev. Jolln P. Driscoll ' interval for pencil-sharpening, imagination and effort are deMANAGING EDITOR books are appearing giving the manded. There is no place for !Hugh J. Golden' full-dress. treatment. Before it the easy answer that would .\.,'
,Consequences
it;
•ANCHOR··
TQDAY-St. Simeon, BishopMartyr. The son of St. CleophM and a kinsman of Our Lord, be was among those present on the 'day of Pentecost. After the deatb of St. .Tames the Less, he became Bishop, of Jerusalem. He g09'erned the Church for more thaia 40' yearS,revered by Jews 'and' pagans as well as by Christiana. At the age of 100, he was put to death by crucifixion in the reiga of E":!peror Trajan about 112. ToMORROW - st. Gabin~ Priest-Martyr; He' was a Roman, , brother of Pope St. Caius and father of the martyred St. !?.. sanna. He also was related to the Emperor '~iocletiari. He Wall ordained late in life and died ill ,prison, or by the sword about the Il8me time his brother, the Pope;, died, in 2!J6. SATURDAY-St. Eleutheriuli of Tournai, Bishop-Martyr.' A n~tive of Tournai, Belgium, be .'became Bishop of that city ill 486 and evangelized the Frank. who had settled in that vicinity. He is said to have died in 532 from wounds inflicted by Ariall heretics. The day also \ is th41 feast of a saint of the same name. who is said to have been Bishop 'of Byzantium, martyred aboui 310.
'
, SUNDAY St. Severian, Bishop-Martyr. He was Bishop, of Scyth'opolis (Bethsan) ia, Galilee and upon his return frora the Council of Chalcedon, about ,452, was murdered by Eutychian heretics with the conni"", ance of. the Empress Eudoxia. MONDAY-Feast of Sf. Peter'. Chair at Antioch, which commemorates the taking up by Sl' Peter of his Episcopal office ill the ,city of Antioch. ' , . TUESDAY-Sf. Peter Damian, Bishop - Confessor - Doctor. He was born in 1007 at Ravenna, youngest in a large family and was left an orphan in charge of an older brother, who ill-treated, him. Another brother, Damian, ,archpriest of Ravenna, took charge of the boy and paid for hisschoo~ing. He joined the Benedictines at Fontavellana and became a model monk. He wae chosen Abbot and influenced several Saints at the school-SS. Dominie Loricatus, John of Lodl' and Ralph of Gubbio, among' them. 'In 1057 he was mad.: Cardinal-Bishop of, Ostia and, . served several Popes in impo~', an't posts, as'legate to German3'. ,France and LombardY, and aI!' 'papal representative at several, councils and synods. He wrote extensively, his the 0 log i c a i works, pOetry and Latin verse' being rated among the best CIl the Middle Ages. He died .. ' Faenze in 1072 and was declared a Doctor of the Church in 1828. , :WEDNESDAY- Vigil of s.. 'Matthias, Apostle. Mass of tAe season. solve the problem by destroy inc the moral integrity of·man. ' Refuse to Debate ' ," , It is 'typical of the advocatet of artificial birth restriction ' . the only solven't 'of "the pop ,";'1 '1":' tion question that thev refu"" te debate the economics of demand' and 'supply. The problem, !l,ey insist, is immediate; it ('--.,~ abide the slow adjust""ent that would right the economic balance. , But in this they are simpl,. repeating a familiar formula. Long before "population explosion' captured their imaginatiOll they were arguing for famU,. limitation as the only possible cure, for economic ills, It is the old business of putting the cart before the ' horse, economici before 'morals. It is the subversion of values which leads .. , moral chaos. , We have been adjured to kee» our .heads in this debate, a sal.. tary injunction. But it is hardl,. in that spirit, that th~ Congr&., gationalist minister, Richard M. Fagley, author of The Population Explosion and Christi• . Responsibility, suggests in the current issue of "Christianit,. and Crisis" that the AmeriCaD hierarchy is committed to • fertility cult." We have had more than enough cleverness to amWle the mindless.
"
P~t~sb~~ghfr~~~~'t, LoveAlon'e~;\' Co~quers:Fea~r";"":}
Says
Missionary..,.,,from,· ;Notre Dame
(~in .:\ FoJl'
River:" ,~·r5;s~N~e~~~8;·
Ret~f\R~·';~~9:',,~~frican A~$ignment, Tomorrow
-":WASH1N:GTaN"'~(~Cl:<:j,
~Jtt~~urgh'~. :$is~op,~ioJir(~~;
Wright said this is' ,~'the"age of'fear;"',and,the only way-to
196'~
7
coneg~ Pli'e~i~ent
",:·."U.rges .Ntewsmen 'T B' '.C .-
. . .... :""" ..'·.··:..·:~·.. ,By Patricia McGowan '" "";,:,,, ,,', ;, . ': . . How do mISSIonary B~~t.he~, keep cool in those long .h~bi~,r,·rrnes~cret is,out~ they', "'c:, ~ear Berumda shorts undel' them when they're on the misslOn~k,"Th~y,were.pop~'aJ:: with ... 0 . ,e. reahv~ .. us long before. t~eY.})e~me. .a, ~~~,. here," smiled Brot~er ~i9ha:el ~~ a~raby,F.I.G., a .NEW -raRK (N,C)-:-M~~~ Bro~h.:.r of .~hrIsba~i'Jns~uqJaon,.,liPme o~·:I~~ve. f;l"~m hIS mISSIon assIgnment in. :l3ukumi, John. J. ,J?ougherty, I?res,tr AfrIca~·;Sono()f,Mr.. and Mrs. . ··_-~·'--;;:-·n·r=----,"··";,' . . dent of Seton H II U' Ernest' <ill'Notre : ,,Brothers conduc~ a jUnior~ec.. sihrC So th 0 .a ~IveJr .::.,.:' .' • .,'. I.: " ~tl~aryschooJ, roughly eqUlva".1, u ..range, .... Dame. paZ:Ish, Fall· RIver, ,he IEmt to junior high school in this ~rg~d Ca~olics m the commull"; has been ~ this countty for cQuntry. Three Brothers care for lcatlO.ns fleld to be "positive and
'e()l'iquer feai' is through love 'of neighbor'and of God. ,"",'0,"" 1>";Addressing 250 men· at 'the' a~':' nuaI John Carroll Society dinner meeting, the prelate said the··un" reasonable' fear that "<-irips : the 180 boarders and ~o or so day creative" ~ath~;" than ."negativ~ world today is a cr~sis 'shared by a year, :stud)'ing at LaMe~nais' students. "We hope for a four,th .. a?d censorIOUS m thelr profesal,l levels of society, from gov- , College, '., AJ.fred, Me., and the • University ~ of Detroit . com~ Bro~her this. yell.!," ~id Brother SIO~S.. ernfllents to individuals. ,!,:ork, for his ba\ehelor's Michael.' sgr. Dougherty addressed "There are gqvernlYlents,,' he . plete degree' . " . . more than 300 persons at a Comsaid, that rule by carefu1ly ,con.,. , :' , ., . . . T h e boys ~re boarders because .munion breakfast of the Catho~riyed terror tactics, 4lthougn Tomorrow he leav~s\.~or New ~ly 'by havmg complete' care' of lic Institute of the Press. them, can the Brothers, ,hope· to M' ., , thia, has been the. cas~ ,,'si~~ York and on Sunday he'l} be counteract the pagan influences h'lsgrih Dougherty ~a~d that !intiquity, it never before has 'flying' to .. Am'ste¢am, i where Ie of their home villages. "Moslems ~ d .. t"er~, ~u~ ~ righteous I?,~t;nc~r~ied ,o\1t ,wft4 su,~" ,J:l~~~ he'll pick \~upa .·,."Iilissioriary plane,,\,tG_Africa. Th~"philie,:he create trouble tor us, too," said In Ig~~ lon .1Q t e" ace of evil. ,p~~E(fu~ess apd ,0n . !l\1c!;l,ll" ~~"e. says, til opera·ted by a ROman Brother' Michael "Right" now Cathol~cs.:m~st be con~tructiVtl. scale, he added. '.,~ ." . ". '. . . . and creative" in Uie l' ' Motive in' Adveri~~ '. ''''',', a~en~y ~ ~~~~iallY for ~i!=an tQey're influenl;:ing the .~eople to . tolate. " . p ess a~ ",. r'.\ " .." " " ' . ' :! .,.' "\ mlsslon<!rles,Every two months bQy'co~t Sunday collections.",. .. . ,\ On the. national scen~,,:.,feaJ;,1 ~. W)l~~, B~other Micpael returl1$ Christian Pattern is, . reflected in bU$iness ,bi ad,-::-: it tak~s'! reWrning missiona,t:i~,: he will assist in a new emphasis He ouUi'ned the moral aspeCtS ve'rtising that capitalizes'or' ~~~'f~ to thelr,'stations, and picks, up, those due for; home leave.: that is being laid .on agriculture . of communications, 'describing ~!s~op ,Wright dec~ared.. ,.. "~g.. The attractive feature' about m: the'- school. Permission ·has ...the ~Oth c~ntury 'man as "grow... f?~m.er years,",.he said,~<!,!,ivm:.~, the projec~. "is that the.. plane, been granted by the government ing into the fullness of Cilristli! tl~llng was geaJ:'edto appeal til f,!r.tht; .Brothers to add a tWQ Yet, b~ said, cont~'mporaIi " ~erson's ambition'::'-tO,k~epi\lg always goes:~;y way o~ Rbme and- . , ~ year 'ag,-icultural course to the' man stands'in' need' of the "total up with the Joneses, Then came every effoJ:'t. js . ~aCI_e ·to ensure its passengers an audience with academic study' now offered. Christian pattern," and it is ilp th~ appeal to patriptism, the idea the Holy Father. "Last time I ". In preparation, Brother has . to those in communications. ~'to tha~ we should buy things' be~ taken teaching courses in biology bring the light into darkness." ~~4se this was, the'American~ went, Pope John was receiving while iQ this·country. HE)'ll help "If we destroy the Christian thing to do. But now theprin:': Cardinals-to-be, and we couldn't have an aUdience," related with practical aspects, too. "In concept of man," Msgr. Doughcipal 'pitch' is aimed at fear.";" the .missions, he said, "you can't erty declared, "we have nothing ':.'Catholics are not fmnilin'e' 'to Brother· Mic,hael: "This time,. expect. to teach and do nothing on which to found a 'new moralthis' fear attitude, he said," evenl however, we. have an appointelse. There's so much work ity." . .~ , the unreasonable fear of death.·.'1 ment for noon next Wednesday." . .' 'C'' .. ,; .. everrone has to chiP. !n~ I'v~ This' is true' he Obse~ed, , .,I'There used to t>e Ii- tinie;" '~I B us,- areer . done buildiilg... "farming, nursing . whether one~co~siders sex'morsaid, "when people faced :death: .' 'Brother Michael'has 'been in and even, ·been a vet!" ality, honesty. or other areas of rea'listically and prepared 'for it; . .A project close ',to his heart life where the scientific. study But· no more. Now there are' the community 13.. years, e n t e r ' - · f elaborate euphemisms' even 'fOr' ing. as a seni5lr. at .~revost High I: "~:.; ~< ~ .:. ·."~,;l.• ~,: .: · .'." . . ., is the erection of a chapel on of Jl?,orals 'an? the natural law S~hool., vInto t~at. tJIJ:le, ,he has ~_ .:' '. . the school grounds. At present are called into application. . . ~h~ .~ol'd ~die,' and it's ~~ry pi,ffi~lll~ for II. priest. to ~~t~.",." pa'cked' a variety of experiences. ~RO. MICHAEi E. BARABY DOYs' and Brothers have to climb . a. ~il~ to a nearby mission station .Newman Club Leader I11-;Issl.on from a f~ily. to.. giy,~,l!:, ~j,s Jirst, ",:or;k. 'w,as ~n .~aJeryille, I;elatlve the last rites. f?f, :~e: Me., where .he taug~t ,gram~a1:'- trees and the, export of copra., for dailr Mass, and prayers at To Get Youth Award Church.. ~his psychOPa~ic, 1eSl school and,. m 1953 he, receIved, Th.e people are. 90% Catholic. school have' to be said out of .LAFAYETTE(NC)-TheOu~ of death IS the reflection of a his first missionary assignment, and the Brothers have started a doors":for want ·of·a chapel. standing Catholic Youth Award to Hoima Africa juniorate for native vocations in Sick attitude." , . . connection with' their high He has collected some funds will be presented to Robert Lee Two years at Hoima were fol- schooi. for the' project while in this Lejeune at the tWO-day meeting New Fear Added country and has the promise of of the National Newman .Club There is an over-all' fear .of lowed by :two years in the' SeyNot for Tourists card parties, and other social executive committee at Soutbwhat the future might bring, the chelles Islands. When asked where they were, Although the Seychelles are affairs that will be conducted for eastern Louisiana Institute openBishop said, and with it' a com":' . ing here in Louisiana on April J!lon el.'cessive fear of religio.ns, he answered ,with the ease of beautiful, they haven't been dis- his benefit. who has been asked the quesillness, aliens, Negroes, oJ:ews, one t'10n h d d f t' "Ab t covered' by .~he tourist trade. . He· expects to make another 8 next. Mi. Lejeune, president of the Catholics, Southerners and 0OO U?l re ffs· °th' Imests, f EOUt "There's only'one boat a month," home visit in five or six years. 1, mI es 0 e coa 0 as "d B 1 O· I minorities in general. .' Africa in the Indian Ocean." sal rother Michae. It carf the usua three months hor,ne Gulf States province of the ,copra to Africa for further leave, three weeks are spent wlth National Newman Club Federa.. ~And'now a new fear hallQ~n Th ey ' re suc h t'.my speck$' ries ef' . t h .. d a~d~d, a fear of overp01>u~vo~:', h' th t h d 't . d r memen. parents, t e remam er at one or tion, was selected for the honor a, ~ oesn mm '.Slnce i957, the 'missionary has anQther ,Of the community's J by, thE! National Council of Cath<~~. ad~ec:}... . " " , . pwever, houses" . olic Youth. : Foear, he pointed, out, ,"1$'.11.. people not knowmg ;ibout them, be.,en at. B,·u.kumi.' There the l'he Seychelles ,number.. 90· . ~"ralyzing thing, one that can' 1J1l!~e an individual', hel~iess,!~' is~nds, some. "just rocks stickHe. said there is a wholesome 'as' il:).g Qut of t,h~ water,': five or six, habitable. Mahe, ~e. ,m~in ~~ll as an ~e~lthy. :feli':r;.·'~n.d: island, where Brother Michael if;~~ar is controlled and properly:. worked; ha$' a'. pop~i~tion: of: :' ,u,'?. ·A,'.! ~~d", it ,.can, 'bene~it m.an~iA.4.." . GQVERN/v\,EN(' INSPECTED,GRA'OE' . , 35,000 "clinging the hills. a~ ~.'e.'.ac. oast:~. '. ,., ,,'., .".., .' " " • , :j'. c S~ek. Tight:(:p~n,t.ro.~;.::.,~ / : E,levatio~ :at .', .¥ahe .,r~ng~ .t" Over. Cheap' Labor''1I'' ~~:in ·z~ro. at, sfi!1l ,leiVe.~, to ,3,()OO ' e " ~~~t, ,..so the,. cling~ng,."is npt, I WASHINGTON . (NC)c:...;,LaMi' SecretaryJameii P;; ivI'itclleit' haS' merely .figurativ:~.. Chief ind~s., '~ ~ indicated his departlnent' is try .is the, growing of .coconut "£~dying possible ~eIl({m~ri£S to .next year's ·Mexican Farni Pope Cites' Progress Labor Program which would re- Of Church in _T'exas i quire more stringent coiltrol' of SAN ANTONIO (NC)-:-Pope Mexican migrant workers iii this John has expressed the hope country. that the Church in Texas "will OCEi\N SPRAY C lLB The disclosure came. after a continue its progress.. DELICIOUS WITH TURKEY CANS deleg'ation of civic and religious The pope's wish' was contained leaders met .with the Secretary. in a message' to Archbishop 'ft:t.e eight-member group rep,re- . Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio se'nting the National Consumers from Archbishop Angelo Dell\ League told Mr. Mitchell the Acqua, Substitute for Ordinary 50 million "braceros" or Mex'ican Affairs in the Vatican Secretarlal;>orers brought into this cOUil-: iat of State. .. ' . try each year are depriving ,some' " Archbishop Dell'Acqua wrote ~merican farm workers of jobs to acknowledge a specially bound lind depressing the wages, of copy of Volume VII of "Our SHANK otJ:1~rs. Catholic Heritage in Texas" Among the group protesting whic~ had been sent to Pope ·lB. ~the shocking effects of extreme John. poverty' and joblessness., of The seven-volume ~istory of American migrant workers" was the Catholic Church in Texas CHECK! COMPARE! SAVE WITH Msgr. George G. Higgins, direc- was compiled by' the' late Dr. THESE EVERDAY lOW PRICESI tor. of the Social Action, Depart- Carlos Castaneda,' professor of ment of the, National Catholic history at the University of Welfare Conference, JUST HEAT AND SERW Texas. The project was' spon';' The delegation charged ·that sored' by the Texas Stilte council Fried Haddock ~this program has ,become:, III of: the Knights 'of ColumbUS. . SLICED , _means of' providing a:' .surplus ., !" QUALITY SLlCE.D.· of cheap labor·so that wages and Cooke" S~.lamf.... working conditions can .be· kept ~a:ria ni$tS . ;A~ nounc~ I '. 'S~per-Right Bacon 2V~·3V2 LBS• .,;:.;. READY,iO.c;OOK· I\t, ,',worse ,than~ sub-standard BuitdingProgram, . QU'~L1TY, SLICED Whole Chickens' .Ul 39' levels on' corporation-farn'ls.· "DAYTON' "(NC)"-'-A two-mil. <:AII"Good, Bacon \ Ill"'. . I WHOLE OR. CUT-tlP, RI!ADY·TO.c;OOK . ,lion dollar bliilding' program 'at ,:Score Desecrations .,~' Mount St. John: rilf>therhouse of Fowl'"'' . ' ~ ",' . lIl43c : 'RiNDLESS WLEVITTOWN' (NC)~atholie the 'Cincinnati 'province of the Bacon "4 Las ~n(hjp;' READY.ro-cooK : -," '" . . War 'Veterans 6f Nassau County; Society of Mary (Marianfsts)', toasting .~hick~ns i- " , 'SU'Pl:R:RIGl-tT SMO«ED BONELESS N. Y., have deplored the 'recent· will be started inth~spring; desecration of houses of worship. Father James M. Darby, S.M., FRESH. READY·TO-COOK $houlder Buffs The action was taken in a' reso- province superior, said.. , l8 Chicken-Breasls 'Two buildings will be inluUon adopted at the veterans' Prices 011_ !II this ad guarante«llhnJ, lat.. Fm. 20 lIlId ~J" la IIlls C4lMllIGll¥ • annual convention. Another'con- chided: a scholasticate to acvention resolution approved c'6mmodate 250 students, and a blEd daily prayer in public sc~ooIS. gymnasium.
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NORMANDY (NC) -A' tcIp 'Vatican official has praised the .';idea behind anew cooperative , college ,here 'in Missouri ,whica .. is run .solely by ·nuns~for ~un.. Valerio Cardinal Valeri, Pre, 'feet of the Sacred Congregatioa of, 'Religio~s, also lauded the Sister Formation Conference, from whose work Marillac Col"lege developed.' The conference is a movement _among U. S. sisterhoods ~ strengthen the spritiual, cul, tural and professional training _of Sisters, especially future teachers. Marillac had its inspiration iD conference studies. These showed that Sisters dG part, or all, of their work in higher education in colleges arid univer'sities open to the public. ,Conference officials thinklthat .. under such circumstances, ' i t . .- difficult for Sisters to acquire the special kind of formatioD of Sacred : which they think ,is demanded tea mark-', ~ their vocation.
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By Aliee BOugh CahiD As a .parent, irs your responsibility to see that the ehildren have a place to study. For thi lJ 'purpose they oft~n " gather around the dining table, or find a comfortable spot in the breakfast nook. 13ut what about Dad, who must bring work home from the office ' ' Another wonderful treatme'nt and needs reference, books for the wall,where you are putclose at hand. What Dad ting your books is ,to use a studio wants is a study ,without bed, which you can slide under
. t t h a built·in framework below the addmg an ex ra' room 0 t e bookshelves. This make"s the bed house. He ,needs' a place that is private, where sofa-depth for comfortable sithe can work in ting in the living room. the evening and Its use as a bed, when' Dad doesn't 'have to wants to ta~e a nap, 'or :whim ; ,w 0 r r y aQout you 'have to accommodate over,cluttering up night guests, is further disgui'l~J the desk. May,by use of small'square bolsters be you' already to suggest chllir ar;ns, and cor'have desk in I • duroy covers tailored .like upyour 'H,v i n g' holstery. roo m; but:, if We have long ago iearned that , Dad must keep partitions a'rid" ' furniture can. AT JUBILEE TEA: Plans for expansion · work on it you divide living space into, multi. Hearts, Academy, Fall River, were,discussed at a may find' yourpurpose areas. While we sugVolunteer Staff ' self a bit embarrassed when , gested draperies for a' partit',:,~ ing, the beginning of preparations '-for observance. of the guests come' in. -and, the drapery material must diamond jubilee of the coming of the Holy Union Sisters ,Marillac, which opened, last u A 'cluttered desk is a probbe the same as that used on to Fall River. Left \to right, Mrs. Frederick A. Shea, Mrs.' ,fall, is one" approach to that lem, but here's an idea that 'may windows, one could also use a probiem.' help you. Partition off the bamboo blind to get privacy William A. Torphy, Mrs. Melzar P. Sampson; Mrs': Alvin Conducted by the Daughters of J. Sullivan. " amount of space needed by run- between two rooms. You get Charity, the college has a staff , nirig 'Il ceiling traverse rod for privacy, plus a feeling of depth, draperies'across the area, ~here. by partial vision through the made up of volunteer Sisters , " from 15 U. S. communities. Its by making a,study alcove a. part blind. (Be sure to hang the bUnd , of your living room. ' ' on a ceiling traverse track,sc:i .student body also represents a The di-apes will separate the the rod is less c~nspicuous.) LOVELAND (NC)-Woman's .one h'anci to practic~lly ~ake her ,variety of sisterhoods. · alcove from the rest of the room, , Bookshelf Partition failure to 'appreciate her God-a man,' doing all the works of a 'Th~ college:s general program but when they are open, you, Or, instead~f building book- given role in society is a major -man in a man's way,-contrarY. ' provides .a llber~1 arts - degree ,," " ,and teachmg ~ert1ficates for both will have an extra-large 0 living Qshelves against the wall, you. factor' in the ills of modern to God's plan. ' , " ~' " grade and high, schools. Two room, grand for entertaining could use them as a partition civilization according to Auxil-' 2) "The more crude attempt to 'special programs are, available when morl~ space is needed. 'rather than blind or 'drapes.: The iary Bishop Paul F. Leibold of . ·t· ' m!lke her ,man's toy, endeavori,ng.. for undergraduates in nui-'sing With draperies only partly' same arrangement could ,be )Jsed Cincmna I. of woman's special./. in' every ' th ~r f or S·IS t ers prefarIgnorance . te sp e c t t 0 rna k e th' .e, , ~nd ,ano 'closed, the study' area is hidden , for a sofa bed under the book-' ,dignity 'and proper role, said, thmgs In 'her, thatappea! to h;ls . 109 for; SOCial work. .' ',from view, so there's no ,worry shelves. Id 1 d t .' ' lower nature, ,more allurmg and , The letter from Cardinal VaabOut clearing off the desk. IIi ,planning a study on~, must( 'B'IS h op L'b el 0 , ea s o. ' t ' f ing Th' ff t f ' . 1) "The false 'attempt on the, sa. IS y' .. , IS. e or 0 course 'led was addressed to Moth~r . Man-'Slzed Desk of course, •give ,serious, concan lead to nothmg but her total Catherine, Sullivan national Use· a man-sized desk in, a 'sideration to lighting. For desk , enslavemell~'" chairman ,of the Si;ter Forma, well-l~ghted sp,ot. WheI1 one has . wprk, e:,me, may use' a table ,or, Miss ,Ferreira Delegate' . The Bishop, sp'eaking at cere- . tion Conference and president of , a lot of' paper work; a -'TIall floor lamp. A table lamp may be monies marking the 16th amii- . Marillac. It was read to facultt ' -'de'sk is 'not functional. You can 'a straight' or swing-arm' type,. To D of I Convention 'Hyacinth Circ~e 71, New Bed- , versary'of draihrllle Community members at a .meeting. · have bookshei'vesalong one wall. with' the 'bottom 'of the ~hade · Big !>pen bookshelves with ad- , approximateiy 15 'inches from. . ford Daughters of Isabella, will College, praising the' college as , send Miss Natalie L. Ferreira as "a training' center for the apos:" St. Patrick/s,P~rty · ju'stable'bracketsare an inex. 'the top of your desk. Our Lady of Victory' Court. , -pensive way to 'treat a wall. I'd it you 'are 'usirig' a flOQi lamp, ,delegate to the annual conven- .tolate, direetedto'the great 'wotk 'suggest you also reserv'e 1\ part, which' can remain a't the side 'of , tion of ·the organization, ·to, be of ChristianizIng the worid;" He ' 'Fa~ River, Massachusetts CathOf your'jv'all"space for file~abl'" your desk, the preferred styie ,held in August in ~ansas City. said its students' are' "women : "olic Order of,Foresters, will hold A style show to be held Tues- who possess this apostolic spiri;'r ,~a, S~. Patrick's party Thursday, nets. is a' double,swing arm, With this 'These can" be,concealed by a style, the' shade can be mCJ,voo "day, April'5, at Kennedy ,Center :but ,not a vocation to, the reli:. , March 10, with ,Mrs.· CatheriDe gioullr l i f e . " , Bolland as chairman. ' large panei in the bookcase wall, into needed position;,' , will benefit the White Sisters. . ,. .:: '., or 'painted' to"matCh- the' wood-' If you want to use wall,l;l.mpil work, i! you are using adjust(and these are ideal for a child's able brackets and can't use pan- study center) and your'desk is eling. ' m o r e than two feet deep,- select ' types with an extending or swing arm 'by ,which you can move the center of 'the shade ,forward..I Finally, be sure to have a ~;7." i [,/ Celebrliting her silver jubilee able waste basket by your desk.! in the religipus life is, Sister Hospital Says Seventh· Mary 'Veronica, the former Margaret Woods of Fairhaven; who Baby IOn' the Housel has been a teacher at Sacred . MANCHESTER (NC)"':""From Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, now on, the seventh baby born ,since proff~ssing .her, first v()ws. in a family, ~will 'he "On the , A former sh1dent',at the acad-:- House" at Sacred Heart Hospital , emy, staffed by the Sisters of , here. the Sacred Hearts and Perpetual Mother 'Callista, hospital ad- ' Adoration, she is' direcfressand miniStratorSaid' Uiat 'hospitali· religion teacher in" it.,· high zation for' mothers' 'and theii'~' '.' . ICh'ool'departinent. sevehtil'· baby, wiil 'be'·free. ' ,Her' fainily,' in Fairhaven: ,In- Sacred Heart is the first 'ho~itai ' , :" eludes". 'br()ther,: John Woods, in New ~amp8hire to'makff;8ud, ": ' >, ,and: a sister" Miss Elizabeth an :offei. ' . . Mother Callista said maybe Woods. ' Ahother, 'sister, a nurse, • - C::apt. Mary Woods, Fort some day the 'institution wiiIbe Devens. ' ' financially able to give hospitalization to 'mott:telll'; and' their' eighth, ninth and tenth , , babie,s.
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, ,Assumption Circle, Fall River, hold , paught.ers of. Isaben'a, .its annual Co~munion brealdast' '-, Sunday morning, May' 1· -at, White'iRestaural)t; foUo'wing' • o'clOck MaS!!, at 'St; M~ry', ,Cathedral. " , , ,;" " Mrs. ',Raymond Barrette,: regent, ,will represent' the circle at the national convention 'to, be ;.. held in Kansas Ci,ty in AUgUst. •:.,~,
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A corned beef supper wiU be. sponsored ,by St. Vincent'. AlumriPand Friends at St.Vincent's 'Home,' Fall' Rive~, Saturday night; Feb 27. Proeeeds will ,benefit the institu-' ' ... ,llon's building fund, and pastry and novelties will also be a,vail-, able. Edward Kaufman •• ill SISTEB,, MARY" VEBQNICA", "charge oLarrangem.eriti.' ,,:
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"By ,Mary Tinley Daly " ,,; .' Christening of! a baby: is a solemn, glorious,' emotion'" 'fined occasion.' liifah'tS, rigged out in the finest, accompanied 'by ~elatives, aiTiv~,~t .the church. Group A sits in baek pews ·.'on the Epistie sid~, Gro,up B on the Gospel side. Groups C, D, a~d .E shift for. themselve? and it turned'out all ~ight? Personnel: new' mother IS Gaelic or Latin, it's O.K." 'holding the bag, 'Ute:rally; Then the Ephpheta ("Be tho.u father is nervous-again. open"), followe~ by the ques-
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Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River, is among 50 high schools in the nation selected to be members of the
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Godmother holds baby until the crying starts, then mot,her takes o v e r. 0 n c e again we have had the privi. lege of seeing this sacrament a d ministered, U-:s time to our youngest grand. , .child, lit tie .Alice Emmons, . I Pat and Allan's daughter. I n . traditional long \i.hk , ... hit e dress, ~:~;\ .. U u ff y white'~. I '. , . bonnet strings tied beneath her. little' pointed chin,' Alice was queen of those waiting at the church. Her two co-baptizees, boy babies, yelled at the top of' their lungs. Alice was as calm as the eye of a hurt:icane-but tbat was prior to ,the. ~remony. " All
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Renounce Satan? Thomas Giles and Edward Michael slept peacefully while their sponsors willingly renounced the Prince of Devils. ~ Mary Alice set up a howl, trying to drown out her renouncers. Loudly she protested beliefs held by Holy Mother Church. Protest was strongest as the priest asked, "Mary Alice, do you wish to be baptized?" By this time, Pat's face was as red as her hair. "Of ~urse she's just a baby,but why dOes she have to pick the 'wrong CARMEL NIGHT IN SEEKONK: Committeemen 86m moments to yell?" Came ·climax. The priest, tak- last night's program as they prepare to leave Mt. Carmel Rectory for the Parish Reunion. Left to right: Joseph Ing baptisInal water, poured it in the form of a cross on the Castro, Seekonk; John Hendricks of Rehoboth, chairman; heads of the baby boys. Both Manuel W. DeMattos, Seekonk; and Annunzio Provazza, howled. "Thank goodness," Pat Seekonk; . sighed, as Alice led the chorus.
pro~:e~~~'F::~:t~~"·~ont. byT~~ne~: ~~o~:~gS~~~~~~~~: DePaul' HighSchool Girl Livens Up
Camp a.t Sq'ua,
Valley Olympics
College Entrance Examination. Board, 11 group previously lim.ited to college membership. Sister Mary Carmela, R.Sl\'I.. principal, said criteria for membership included size and t)-pe of school, region of country where it was located, Its ac. ereditation record and the nWllber of its students taking Collatte Entrance tests. High schools received one, two or three year memberships in the organization. The Fall River academy was honored with one of the three year grants. ''We are very proud to be among the pioneer schools admitted to the C.E.E.B.," said Sister Carmela•
Many Advantages There 1iU'e m'any advantages ~ membership in the organization. The high sChools receive mailings previously sent only to colleges and can vote at meetings. The fact that 11 student comes from one of the 50 hi~h scnools thus distinguished is an asset in making college enrollment applications. S 0 m e 1225 high . schools were considered in make Ing the firial selection of 50, said Sister Carmela. She has attended regional meetings of the C.E.E.B., the last at Brandeis University. Another wil be held this month at Wellesley. Matters such as college fin:ancial aid programs, needs analysiB and plans foJ' future expansion are discusSed at the gather....
white garment, "Carry it unW stained to the judgment .seat"; the lighted candle, ''Keep yout SQUAW VALLEY (NC) "By early December," the Baptism above reproach: .. live. .Youngest and perkiest member. perky Miss Harrington said, ee[ with Him forever." Mary: Alice of the U: ,S. speed Ilkating team . waS up in my studies to where had her own .candle, to take in. the Winter Olympics here is my class is right now. So rll · "Peace be with" yoo:' :said home and relight .on· the anni.. Pooch Harringtoq.. have to put in some extr.a study · ~ther, following the ritttal~· .. versary of this day, for First "If' they passed ,out' Olympic: laps just to be sure I'll be up · Peace descended on" the' two' Communion, and other· special medals for. eb~llience, .the 16-. with them, when I get back to BtUe boYs. They do~~;o~ just days. : year~ol(:qrom W~e, ~;"..,.who DePaul." • as our Alice decided to ~me a . The age-old' rites of' Ibap~' was p'aptized Co.rp~lia, \yould ~. . Eager . for Blessl~. inis. " 'DOn-conformist... ';, :"'. .' tism, administered in Catholic. weighed. down with, them. .' The effervescent youngster · ~at Is 'your na~e'r- -rather Churches ·throughout the world, While others we~e grumbling ga~e the impression that ~hol~ asked. '. century after century, still hold about adverse weather conditions ast1c~y ~ well a~ athi~tIcall,.. ~omas Glles," Edward .Mlch. their significant mean~g. New that hit the valley shortly before she disdams skatIng. WIth ~e ae1" . froJO th~ 5P01UiOl':8 of the . and holy souls-thousands. e.~ery the games started, Pooch Har-;: Pfrack-likes to be a little bit IR other two... .. ,. '. . week-are added to tlle Church rington enthused: "This place is onto ,"Mary Al1ee"'ln a necessarily Militant, little. Catholics des- terrific; The food is out of this Wh~n she lea~ned that James loud tone from ~e godparents· tined for Eternal Life; and. en- world and the ice is perfect." Franc~ Cardmal :j.\kIntyre, of ours. .. rollment into the Church. Uni. . Sh dded th t there' aren't an,.. ArC~bIShop of Los Angeles, was '. Ccrem' started. . Thomas v"ersal. . e a b a E t hi h eommg to Squaw Valley to of&OJ Ice' areas ack as w Vc l l can. fi' t t th d d'lca ti· ~ . /too on UL ""lies and Ed . ward MicbaeI re . . come close'. to Squaw a ey's. QCIa e fa th Se . e Ch h and .:'. .'·~i'(~d "the, ~lt of .~l:i,d?r'J~~e. Attlebor.oPistriCt . F,~ilr . ,·facilities.· ). "'" .. ' " < tOue:I~~ Sk~S, ~:- H:'~gtoa I,y.&,yl;lnt .u~eig~n~trm.~\..., " 'To 'HearFamily ·Panel '" Back in Wayne,.Pooch.Har... said!~"I'in sure going to try to A1:.coeurfOs~!ho' tu1~"ha' 'vile' "t'O'·I.~: the A panel discussion~ im' 'Liturgy ;rington' is 'a ,junior' at DePaul get my ~kates' in there when he ... ... High SChool, which is conducte4 . one t·o make the fuss," Pat and the Family will be held toD gives the blessirig." by the Sisters of Charity. ur_ fumed. morrow night at the Portugueseing pregames practice sessio~ The two other young mothers American Hall, Attleboro, imme- her school books arrived. That,. were, we knew, bolding their .diately . following the ··District she said, was a signal to start R. A. WILCOX CO. . " " breaths, figurati~ely crossing Four meeting. Of the r)ioc~san.. .some serious cramming, attestg ·SPECIAL MILK . OFFICE FURNITURE tbeir fingers, h?,pin ~~eir babies Council of Ca~h~lie W~~n. ':.. :':"'h}g,'that all isn't as slick as ice .. Btoek for Immedtate DelIv_ would remain good: The panel WIll de~lwlth.cath7,.<evim for an Olympic star. 'FrOm Our Own Came the exor~~.;.~ary oUe customs of a seasonalan,~ u • 'DESKS • CHAIRS Tested Herel Alice, fully awake,' .. :~ed ..'the national nature, and t~e 'family Hyannis D of I Plans FILING CABINETS sign of the Cro,ss ~n'~er' fore- and .the Mass will also'. be 'disAcushnet, MaSI. WY 3-4457, . .' FIR'e FILES • SAFES head: "Never' dare,. accursed cussed. Members of all District May Post Offite Sale FOLDING TABLES devil, to vio~ate the sign of holy Four affiliates, compriSing' the ' Father McSwineyCircle, Hy• Special Milk AfliD CHAIRS eross," Then a prayer' ... Wltat Greater Attleboro area, are annis Daughters of Isabella, will • Homogenized Vito D Milk was' the priest callbig ,Alice? urged to attend:' hold games parties Sunday eve• Buttermilk . -Maria' Adelaide?" Hadn't he . ning, Feb. 21, and Sunday eve• Tropican'a Orange Juice beard her name?· '. .' . . Sucordium Club Sets ' , ning, Feb. 28. . " . . 22 BEDFORD ST. • Coffee and Choc. Milk Pat' and Al looked. at..eaCh b 4 A post office sale is planned FAU RIVER 5·7838 • Eggs. Butter . other. Had they brought;"'~ice" Sucola for Fe • 2 for May and next regular meetonly to carry away "Adelaide?" Mrs. David W. Boland lind, ing ·is"s.~t for Tuesday, 'Feb. 23, "Just the Latin form, prob- Mrs. Thomas F. DiNu~c~.'ar~..co:"··,;. at"Kn:ig~ts of Columbus Home. .....,.,< ,~.: '." ,.: ).,:,.1.'; "bly," we whispered. "Remem:. cnairmen for a. suc~~~ t.?,.. P.~;.~~I~~r·,~" ( J : ! . " . ' , 'I.' . ' ,.' :: , '" .. • -.' 'f". ber Eileen was baptized 'Helena at 8 Wednesday mgnt,·)te~,:,24;:\;'DI¥me PrOVidence Nuns : . , .. , .~ . ' " · (Why is it 'always located' In t1 drafty vestibule where infants, Susceptible to colds, 'have their physical vuln~rability tested 18 · they get their souls fixed ,up?)
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at Sacred ~ar.ts~cacj.e~Y·tA'!t~':·:~··H'l:;,'?;~i' Provincial :: .. , ~ ",,'\ '" '. ~".~,,.,, _, '."., ,'. ~rospect ~tre~~;:" .lf~l~: '. Ri:y~~!;<,.".;:;a.){F N e w ..; ",'. _ . .. F . . '>'N,0;'.' . MOther;: ','
'.'.'~" i ~~DY'.'(NC.)).,
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mothers form the .'.comm.ftte~·',~~:tMW. (Western) Province of the' , . .assisting in arrangements. (bve~ ',. ·~is.~fs of Divine Providence;"" 100 prizes will be given; in ~c}~i- .. ~.~~ ~succeeds Mother. Mary Lu-' tion to door pr.izes and specIi3.-~H':; <;ma-r,who no\y serves In Rom~ ~s awards. The chairmenanno~ilse,:.. S!lc":!I.!ary to the commu~llty s that winners need not-be pres~nt .<·· ••~Rt~r ?eneral. at the affair.' ' .. '·.f. <;i.~natlve of Brussels,. Ill." she , " .<'.• 'joined the sisterhood 10 PIttsMother of Six i~ State/s':~;:burgh in 1~3~. She is the si~ter' . .,' of Msgr. WIllIam F. Haug, VlceMarch of Dimes Mother·'.cliancellor of the Springfield," OMAHA-Mr"S. Dale W.Rowe,. :nt,' diocese and of Sister Mary' 29: a member of Christ the King Ann Haug, novice mistress a~ parish and mothe~. o~ . ch'~.,. the, Div-Ule Providence novitiate '" J dieri., bas been rtamed-:'Ne.brasher'e.'·!'::· "I ka's March of Dime~':lVIothe~ ~f : i::', Breakfast .: ' 1960." . ,. .She was cited for "her courage North 'Attleboro Catholic' 'and determination in ov.erc~m-, Wo~¢p.~s Club will hold its an- ,. .log great obstacles" in b'attlirig nual communion breakfast Sun- . . paralytic polio, which :'afflicte~ qa¥i )VIarch 6, at Rome Resta~- . ' , her'in '1954. ' . '" rant. Miss Mildred Leary 1:8'. FIN A LIS T': 'S'usan··J.· .Mrs: .Rowe Cl"ed.its the March chairman. of Dimes for'maidhg possible Koch, Senior at Holy Family much of her recOvery. The cost Fairhaven Whist High, New Bedford, has been of her treatmeni over almost. The Alumnae Association of Ilotified that I:Ihe is one' of three years came to about $8,. Sacred Hear'ts' A'cademy, Fairwill sponsor a whist at the finalists in the 'National 000, and the ~ch of Dimes haven, made up the $2,000 difference the. academy at 8 Monda,. eve.Merit Sc~larship...competi- ; between tlle family.JI).edical·in-. Jli,ng, ..ll'eb,...22: Miss PaWine Da.-. tion. I. ' . ' . ,. surance and persOnal resources. vignon, chairman,
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MASSACHUSETTS
.'T~e 'Greatest 'Sale of Winter !
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THE ANCHOR-Dioces~ of Foil .Riv.er-Thurs., Feb. 18, 1960. . .' .. .
'College Loan Bill Now Pending: For F~fth Time
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Explains' Vital Importance Of Catholic· Labor Schoo~s
WASHINGTON (NC)---.-A bill to authorize $125 million in' F~deral. loans for class~ r~om construction by public
By Msgr. George G. Higgins .
Director: l\JCWC Sociai Action Department
During ,the middle· 30s artd early 40s Catholic labor schools' and la.bor-management institutes sprouted up all over the American landscape ,like' dandelions until, at one Point; they numbered dose to a: hundred. Sinc.e the end of World War .II, however; , AccO;~ing to Dr. Lipset,- who many of these s~ho~ls have is not a Catholic, . labor schools gone 'out of existenc~,' and 'under religious auspices are' very one seldom hears ofa new . useful, if not indispensable, ,for
., and :p'rivate colleges is pending ; ,. })efore the Senate .Labor 'and Public Welfare Committee.'· .' .. This - marks 'the: fifth time a,rou.nd for' the proposed prO-; gram of long-term, low-interest loaps. It.has been approved bi the 'Senate three tiines, and its fourth trip' was withdrawn; It once failed· to . clear . the House. When it did, it was twice vetoed by President Eisenhower. drawn .so as not to delay passage by the Senate of the $1.8 billion program of Fede~al sup. port for public. grade and high schools. It was intended as an amendment to th~ support bill.. , Sen: Joseph S. Clark .of Penn.sylvania, along with '22 cosponsors, introduced it again '(Feb.' 9), and swift action is expected from the Labor and Public WelfaI.:e Gommittee.
on
~ne being started nowadays..
the .training 'of rank-and-file There are some priests ·and workers in the political skills 1 a y men conwhich. they simply have 'to acnected with the quire if' they are to participate Catholic social effectively in union affairs and action movehelp to safeguard union democment who feelracy. t hat t his is Most workers, Dr. Lipset probably just as writes, "do not gain these abiliwell. Their artie's through their jobs, and regument is that Search studies.indicate that'tg ey the labor school, 'do 'not usually belong to formal as sucJi;' has organizations outside the union out I i v Ii d its 'either. There ar,?, however, at usefulness' and least two organizations which should now be ',' have contributed to the ;training' . replaced 'lIY a ' of workers· in political skill~. JI10re intentive kind of apostolic churches 'and: radical. political Notre Dame.Receives: training for' workers and' em- parties.": " . , ployers. The work that used to : At the present time, he ·con. . .' ,,',' in .Gi,fts be' done by the' iabor . schools; ~inues, ..':The : Catho.lic Church MEMORIAL~ZED.IN GLAS$: ;MsSfl". John J. ·Dough-· . 'NOTRE' 'DAME (NC) --.: The' ~ey maintain, (:an be left to, tht!: .• '~'.' se~ks' to~raln . Catholic' erty, president of Seton Hall University, examines one of: University' c)f 'NotreDamere-' unions or' other ,int,?rested or-, ;,wp'J:;~e~s lIJ. th~ skll~s·of'orato.ry, the· oldest'" .stairied·.. glass : representaticms' of ~VenerabW '~eiv:ed' $3',375,79'2 )J;1>gifts....anl· ganizatiops.·; """ I ••• : '" ' ••: ' '; p~rN~~~.n~.ql' . ;p,r.o~g.ure, '.:: Qr'-: ,Mother Seton: ·it· 1s' .in .tlie·· tiliiversity. admiilistration. ,"grants during 1959: '.' . . . " " . .. :.. ,' ganlzatlon, and ·admlnlstratlon.". ' . . ' . _" . :.: ". '. ", " . , ', .' ,.1,.,. . . , .. . ' Stm,??lng:Str.ong., .....:.:l~.,., ~., ... "':"';.".""'.....:, ....: '. ,: .. bulldmg. NC-Photo.' . ""'~' _';'.' ,'. i-'.. · . , .,. ;~"" ,~llther.:.Jp,~~.H:,W!1~n,.,C.S.c.•. -"I. . Father,;P'hlhp ,Carey,;!S:J;., Dl.,.;·, ,.!".'''.' .~~&l~ .P.~r~~,,' ':, .; . ,. " '," ". ":. . , . . :., ;':', :"'1' u:.•·,·., : .:.'..' .'. " ',~, .' ':~;, ac~mg .. dl1:E\ct9~ '. of 1 the Notre" rector of the Xavier InstItute.of,·. ,; ~r.~ ~Ipsets trlbu,te to tile ,.:Dall}~ Foundat~o.ll, .U1e .. llchool 's .. IndustriiiL ':Relations:: in, .New , ."C.atholic Jabor"sch:oo.!"moveqient' .. ~ven-: O~PI ,~ P~r <"dCcyeiopment ox:ganization,' Said' . '., York City· which celehrated its,: ,ill, ~he' United States' is :very" i'" '''.' " ':","R'" .~ ..,., ...•.).; J'E.tL ,... :,.. ,.. 1 ':;$6,395,a4'4!:has: 'b'een' c9nti-ibuted' 25th anni;ersarY'on- Feb. 7; ·isn't· ;.gr,atifying,buLit·does?::t tell the' ,0 ..e~a I, t::~ 1 Ito-" Notre'Dame:-atiririi{ t1'te' first' , one to spend niuch'timetheoriz"':' ~hole st?ry. , .... : .' "'.' .' , i." .• ·.·ROME :(~C)-Inst~tutIoJ;lslIke. 71,000 acres"of lI~co~e property .. two years. o~ i~ 10:..ye~r,·.$66,?OO ing 'about a' matter' of this ,kind:) ,·c'-, .Ca,tho11? labor schools do spend~·. 'Santo 'SpIrlto (Holy Ghost) Hos-.. and .~t charges patlen~s only what ~ 000 development·, progr~m. H you \veteto ask:him~hether:.. a.lot of ·t.lme,.of ~~lJ~s~,on,.p~b- . pit!!l help give Ro.J;ne,j~ nalpe of' t~ey" ca.n pay,~~kmg,.up ·tb~., .. .':By 196'f'the l'universityhopell or not Hie' o~d~style' 'labor, schooI;:i./'~¥C. sPfakmg, ~~r~lam.~nt<l~y pro-' ... pte ~.'Eter,n':ll ~ity.": '. ,.:. . ;, ." ~ . ?~~~erence f:?m social.:. sen'k!\ " \Q;: acquir~" '$18,600;~.'for' new' has a'. ~.ft~U!j~eF~:'fJ!~t~r~$·J~~t;"~~~~'~¥~f,a~d sI~rula~... co~rses Ibe-" ':. Th~ hO;sPita~':hlls ~e~ . SI.~hng;,. ~aY,~e~t~ ~~t~h~,,~?Y~~J?~e~~ .. :::'.: I b\lileyngs;.' }h~lu~ing ", ~. li~{a~y .. would pr9ba~~y":f i.'~»W: ~t~a~ ~:~;:~~~U.s.7;· t~elr ;dlr,ectqrs: ar~ ·co~-'· : on' tile b~~~ of the .~I~e~ ,a ~~~" .,:'t,~9~g~ t~~~ popel:! n.cr Jon,~eJ,":,.)v.ho.s~ :con!itruct~on' "w111 '?e~m really dQes n: t ]~J;lOW.' 'r:; . '-':.' .~~: \,;::;,:v.:~l').C~~d, ~.n.t~e.;~o,r.:ds o.f ,,F:ather... blocks f~orn St Pete,!,' s .for more are. d;lrectlr. con~e.cted·,wIth: . n.extyearj he. ~ald.. The .10.,year All I know, he.wouldmodestlyCarey, :that ~,e~ocracy. and: .. than,700 years,<Like ~he Tiber ~anto.Spirit6,. .Pope Joh~. vis-: ,'goal also provides $27 mUlion; add is that the Xavier Institute, more democracy IS ess~ntIa~.toand St. Peter's, the eXIstence of 'ItedSanto .SpInto' oil ChrIstmas for .faculty. ' development, $11 whi~h' has' alreaqy provided the. health of .thetrade.. union' . Santo Spirito is· something that. DaY,-1958, He toured the wards,:' million for research and $5 milpractical guides for approxi" mov.ement ... : qas been 'taken for granted over' . ,chatted with old men and visited : }ions each for student aid and, mately 8,000 workers,' is still B~~ theY.do much mor~ than t~e cen~uries.. '. . with children. special administrative .purposes; going 'strongafter its first 25 .. that,.t~ey:.~~part,.tQ th~lrst!l-, A busy" modern .hospltal.of· years. Being a very•. practical .4ents .a . sPlflt·.~f . ~espect : and more than 600 beds, ·Santo Spir-,' man he probably wouldn't even' r.ev:er!,!nc.e: for prmClples of.· the· ito is one of, Rome's largest pub-: Announdrig th~' ~pe~ing. of···, try to predict whether or not. the.' mora~: law andiby a variety of· -lic hospitals. Its flow 'of ,human·.·· " ' Institute will live to celebrate' practical teachm.g .. m.Elthods, try· ,'miseries and human. joys is; . ·:~·CAMP· its Golden Jubilee in the. year ...to ge~them,int0.;th~ habit of' about' that of any large hospital ,.'\' . ,c'.' .' ' , ' " ' " '.' • . " , ' : 1985. ... . '.' "" \apply~ng:.these',prmclples. more' ,in a' big' city.;' , . ..... 'il!'- ',new, camp for :boys' . For my ownPllrt; ~r cei"t;tfnly:..:;effectIv,ely ~o.thecompl~cat~d:;. ··r·· . UD.;'su'al:Jtis~i-j .' :'. ", ". ·'I:AI<E.SEBAGo "MAINE~" ,.. ; ., , '.hope it 'will. TheXavierIristi;;"··problems t~at-confrC?nt.,.them"·k'B·'··t~:'t'" 'b':': ;'.' '!''''th'':, ....,.., ., .... " .... , .. '.' .,.- . . ;: .. ':: ~ . '" .' . .." ever~ d y' th f' Id 0f I 'b ' . ut 1 .s :...IsQry,. eglnmng .WI. . . . . i 'Co'ri'~'ucte<~ and ,Sta!f~!:f Iby ,!he'" "... . tute and SImIlar scho.ols~~ many mana'ge~e~~reft,.Ie ., , a.. or- a" pope's dream is··,unlike.·tha't: . ~~h~r "W,es... thJ;ou,gh?u,t .y~~." I:. This is thei/~~r:~ip~l.j·~b<" of any'. other.'. hospital in: the:: • -'Holy Cross' Fathers - Broth~rs...;.· S'eminariai1$ . mted ~tates are.. \Ve~lmgh !n-.. . ' .. . . . . . . ,world. . . 8"14' .:. 1 ' ; .•.. ; ' .. ; ,I :.. ~'" "',;4 w~eks J300 ' dispensa~le. More ~ power. to: ".MlonaYg 't~hmeeY'tgO o:on. dOWmg. It.flodrba,,' : The hospital was fo'und~d by ,j~,~~,25 'tc:i ~ug: 2(f .. ·... ·. :'!' '-' '" .,".' .;.'. 8' ;N~'~ks 550 them~arid a 'special' "word' of'" ' . ~. 0 c me.., e ,wau.. e p' '1" . 'IiI'" 1198 '. . . '. . . , ....,.., . . . X'" ~., the· poorer without them-and' ope .nl1ocen t .. ' m. .... . :.;' "j REV; 'JOSEPH' A. HAt\olN4';' CS.C:, 835 Clinton Ave, e.~~gratJulba~ions ~od' aVlt.ler on, It~:", ..by ~'we:'I "iriean 'not only,:. the' ,Legend' has. ;i~ :thatthePope:,' .,. ',;: .- BRIDGEPORT "4, :Cb'!'lN~"::'.F.orE!,~t'? -nS2 . s I ver· U,.I ee. . mu os aJ)nos.... , .... '.' " '. .:. .. ". '. . . dreamed one mght that an. angel ; ~~~~~~~~"~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~~~~~ .' . , . Cathohc,community as such but· I h-' R ., . h .~_~~;"':;'_''_~_";';_"''''';''i.o'......,;. .• i.o'......._-...;;,o!-_.............;..;.....;.~ PrOfefiS{)f's Trib~te .... ' .... labqr and.managemeitt·and the' t~d ,lm!Jf,~~,e.s~!f;~~?,rn,l?L7:,.\.,'i) I')"; , " " ' , - ; '.• " .';''',!' C th I' lab . "b' I'" d':' 'cbuntry as' a wh'6Ie"" '.', ,;' .,e.rs 'who threw theIr newbOrn' ~: . a ~ ~c or ..sc, .~.Q S ,an, ...... : .. : : ';".'1":" : . children into the.;:,I:iber:-' ..,.,. " , . ~abor-management mstItutes are, .;.. ". B 'df" :. Whether the' legend is ,true . Important for a number. of rea- ....... e.w.e or~ .unlors not;: infanticide" did exisi and. sons too .numerous to.11st.. For .!' N~W ·Bedford members of. t~e' the Pope ordered it ho'spihil'for: pr~sent purp~~es sufflc.e It, ~ .. .;ru~lOr Daughters of'lsabella WIll· the newborn to be built on' .the ruins of the SchooI' of 'the Sax- . c;en.ter . attention. on ,t1,le . one. ~t~nd ,: a p,?rf.o~rnan"c.se, of whIch ~s.emphaslze~ by ~rofes-. ,Pl1at~ ~ D.au~hter.MIss~oyce ·ons.:The school, foimded fn727' Bor. Sey.mour M.. Llp~et o.f the. St;rong. lS ch~~rman of arrange- oy King Ina 'of the 'West Saxons' Vmv~rslt~of Cahfoa:ma, B~r~e-: .:- .J:?ents ~~d ,wl1~ a~~ept~eserya:-, ... iii England, had' housed' English : " l~y, m. ~IS ne~ b!>o~ PolitIcal tl(~ns.unt~l..tom!>I:rl?~,''f?~ grQ~p, seholl1 r s in Rome; but had1alleri'.J' i: Man. "~, , WIll ~old apenl1~ s~le, In.AprIl:, iitto' disr~palr;: ;',.,"< : '. . . . " ., : On Sant'e;' Site., ':;: I . ., ·Today ih~; 'sprawlirig • Santo .",:,: . Spirito Hospital, is .Still<,located:·::!' I, on the. site selecte'p :py ~he i'2tIl,:,:\ .. 'century Pope:i:t'is directly' under':· , the Italian Ministry of- the In- '. terior and has 'its own statutes ' .. and laws. It still owris about·
$3,375,792'
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. MEE'r IN FAR EAST.: .Marrion· McGuillicuddy of:' Brooklyn, left, 'and Dr. Patricia" Smith' of' -Seattle' chat' on the steps of the: leprosarium in Vietnam ,·where,ihe' two.' . young .l,a~lesare working with Sister;Marie Louise;.pione·er.\" : . , nun-ml~slona:Ity, -,:w:ho nas. ,b~en ·servmg- . th~, lepers1-of,~the;
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i~~rs~Nie~~~-;, 1960 11 Toledo CQi~~olics
Educator Sees'1970 Catholic Populace Near 60·Mi·llion NEW YORK (NC)-A natio;nally known superintendent of Catholic schools has told more than 3,400 New York teachers the U. S. Catholic population may be as' high as 60 million by 1970. This will mean, he said, that the parochial obliI '" h' h '. 1 ,_ . school teacher's . . d ,a mac me w ose mam goa .. gabon <?f trammg lea ers production's sake. . will increase COrrespondingGreunther Warning Msgr . Henry ly• Bezou of - heard ,Gen. C . The teachers also
New.Or.leans, president of t~.e Alf.red M. Greunther (U.S.A'. \ f USC th li assocIation 0 " a 0 c Ret.), president of the.American school superintendents, reminded Red Cross, say that' only a '''new the teachers from 327 area and tremendous dedication to parochial elementary schools service can meet, the fanatical ~h?~ ~ey must foster "st.ud~nt zeal of the Soviets to capture mltIatIve, intellectual curIOSIty, the minds of men." indepen.de~~ thinking' and self The General scored compla~ expreSSIOn. cency in the face of the Soviet If ~~tholic population reaches t,hreat. "We are faced by a group 60 mtlhon, as compared to about ,which has implacable' hatred for 39 million now, members of the ,our system," he declared. Church will account for one' third of the population, the Must ~ No Luxury Louisiana ,prelate asserted. "They are on the, rise and we "One solid reason why' this 'ar~ ·on a plate~u,. where we are projection of the population is . fauly ell satisfied: Most of ¥s· accurate" he said "is that in' 'would hke to remam there and the 15 ;ears betw~en 1955 'and' have people quit bothering us." 1959 more than 16 million Cath- . Gen. ~reunther warned, howolic 'baptisms were recorded in ever, that the U.S. will be "in this country." real ,trouble" ~nless it becomes k t th 16th' more world-mlOded. ,Msgr. B ezou spo e a e annual New York Archdiocesan Tlie Red .Cross president,. who, Teachers' Institute. He is presi- .. is.a Catholic, said Catholics are dent o~, ',:the .I>ep~rtment,,~ ...~,O.t,:~h0"fh~g·suffici~nt !~te.rest Schoool $uperin1endentsof t1)e .V~·l.~~«:rnll;~l(~nal affairs:,' In my National Catholic'Educ~tion,experience;"he deClared; "Cath.' Association 'Washing'to.n· as' welf . :olic groups have been less inter-' ., .of ' 'New' '" Or::". 'uatio~ally ,,,,,,.' as superltl'tlmdent minded than ,groups., leans archdi6cesan·schoOls.·" '. of'o.tlier religions. 'Interest in, Msgr. ::;i;I~zou ;a1So::':told :·the":in.~et~ation~l -~r.?b.lenis: il!.~ DO: teacl,ler,S i .tttey must, .alert, t~eir \ '~l ~o~g~r a luxur~, It IS a ,~~.st.. charges ·to.,the fact,.that th~ dif-, 'H'"'' . " ' 0 ' ' 'p'" 'I':" ference between the 'c~mmun~st. " ... ngartan .' re ate·"
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:~f~e~~~:r~~t~~~da·.a::~i~~,'.'t'0~or~'~by'Fran~~
Provide 3#596 Pints of B~c@d
TOLEDO (NC)-Catholics of 96 Greater. Toledo donated . 3,5. pmts of blood for hospitalized fellow ,Catholics within a 20-month period. . The Catholic group participation was disclosed in a program report of the Greater Toledo Regional Red Cross Blood Center. According to Father Lawrence J. Ernst, moderator of the Diocesan councils of Catholic men and of women, the donations insured all the blood needs of 30,000 Catholic households with approximately 110,000 indio viduals. . About 50 per cent of the blood donated was used to help those protected under the group program. The rest was processed , into blood fractions, supplied to veterans' hospitals or used for indigents. "Not a drop' was wasted and not drop was sold," said Father Ernst. Reduce Quota The regional Red Cross il"aug"rated the 'group particiIfation' " '. ' . . plan here 'in January, 1957. At. .• ' WHIT~, HOUSE DELEGATE: Ohve BaIsh, 16" of :lirs't the 'ijuotil 'wi's Set at 13 W:ashington, ~hown as,aide in,GeorgetqWn University Med-: ' pint$:' a year per' 100 Catholic" ... ". ical Center, is one .of:ten. teen-:-age vo.lunt~~rJiospital workers' households. Last"July 't was rc-' . . , , , . . ,. d d t 10 . t E h . 'sh se.lect.e.d. , by A.me,ric.an Hospi-.tal· A,ssoci,",."t,.,ion" to'··p·..ar.··.ticipa,. t',e, . h.ua.~ea quoo·ta'. p.,ln. ,s;· ac.. ·part :. ... u WIth adults m WhIte Hom~e.,· C,onferen.Ge .,onChlldrenand. . Bishop, George' J;, Rehr.ing of Youth to be held March 27-April 2. NC Photo. "Toledosaidth';-~ortis a credit·, ': . " :,,: , ' J to the Toledo De'aileryCouncil of Catholic,Women, which assists . . '. , . ", " . " ., " '." . in'directing the program.
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"rooted" .. in the, Judeo-Greco-. , ',", W:ASHINGTON . (NC)-¥~gr. '. WAr-SAW. ,(NC) . .,..,.... Poland's, . ~~nt' Sente!1ce,of six months for. ChristiaJlJr~ditioris and.one that.; ~el~. Va~ga, l~ader .of, free Hl1D-,. s'upreme .:, Cou,r't ' bas ,. 'uphel<t" a' ..o.btaining.< .newsprint illegally: is avowedly atheistic. . ... ga"'l~ns 1D.exl1~ and last·.freely lower courtdecision;-that se?'-"'abd for vfOla'ting :foreign'ex:': . ~C ·t I'· . .d d . . elected president of the, Hunga~nc~d a priest to two years m: h' .' . It': b" II···· apl a Ism an ,emocracy '. P' l' t '. d th . . jail. for censorship violations,. c. artge regu a. IlJns y, s~ mg. nterprl'se may come rl.an; ar lame.n , rece~ve e In-· . b . t· t H D . and free e veraee_•...,· -.. o· omo el' · " .M B' dId sIgma 0 f 0 ff lcer 0f th e . F renc h . b.ribery and' on other ch.arges. su s,cnp.lons d an go, sgr. ezou ec are, Le' f H 't' thO F h abroad. Father Pirozynski was Distributed by "but the irreconcilable will al~on 0honor a e renc Father Marian' Pirozynski,' also. fined 4,000 zlotys' (about. ways be that· to. us man is. a em assy ere. C.SS.R., publisher of Homo Dei. ($190).. religious being, endowed with .. The decorati9n was _cQn.f~l'!~d· (Man of God), a, periodical for an immortal soul that can be . on behalf of France's .President priests" was arre'sted and' im. He pleaded· guilty to the charge Beverage Co. in relation to' God and' is ac- Charles. de . Gaulle by .. Herve p'risoned' in June 1958 and' of censorship, violation blit said, countable to Him while to the Alphand, French Ambassador to- brought to trial before the War-' the other ac~s ?e w~s.accused of. ·331 Nash Rd., New Bedford WYman 7-9937 communist he is iittle else. than . th~ U..5.,. in recognition of. the: saw district court' in February ,were· not cnm.mal. He also de- , Monsignor's valiant and coura-: 1959.' . '" ,. . ~l~red ~hat wnen he .got. out of , . " MOYi~:' officers geous assistance given to·French· ., . . , .' '" Jall ~e would, continue hIS work " •••...•••••. ~"·····i"· and soldiers .,who, dui-ing . The. Redemptorist . priest was of spreading the; word of God by' . Soard>StcU'ts W.~rk' '; World War II, escaped from senbir)ced to a ·two'~year'. jail all ,PossIble'meahs,-:" .'., .. , . ' . . . . .. HARRfSBURG (NC)- The German prison 'camps toiIuri':" term: ,for 'br~pi~g 'employees to ' " • FARMS.. ~ new State Board of Motion Pic- gary.. ' .. . . pr.in~ his penodlcal wltho,u~ per- : :.• S'OYHA'V'"E'N'. •.. h' • . S F i h • ' 1 ' . . . . .. 'mlSSl0n .from the 'cerisorshlp' of.. ... . , . . .145 Was l~gton .t.~ ar aven : C tr ture on. 0 has b~n dlfected . The MonSIgnor orga?lzed· ~e..;. f~ce or the Ministry. of. CultlJre. : West Newbury', 'Mass;' •• BAR~IB-Q Chickens . to start operatio~s Immedla,tely, hef work for French pnsoners of . T ' .... d" . th ' ". •. , despite a pending court· test on' . ' . ' l . P r h' f" 'h" ·he court Impose atwo-.mon ~ Conducted by . • CUT-UP Chickel1s . its constf~utionality. .. ;ar. d~~"" e 0 IS r~.ugees.;;.o C9?C~rrent, se?te~ce·. ?n . the.~ .'1807 BrotherS'ofCharity i959· • • DAY. OLD Eggs;. . ' . '. oun ,av n near IS pans In prle$t for'pubhshmg WIthout a' ,'. . . • C C EN P' T.he . b!>ar~ IS e~po~ered . to. Balatonboglar, a resort village, censor's approvaL... , ' . .Privdt'e B~arding' ,School. . •• ,HI K . les . . ..' '..... . .' ,for' B~ys IGrcide~ ·5~~-~~~.· " ••. TURKEYS . . reVIew mOVIes and mOVIe advf., at Lake Balaton. Through, the tising, and to bar:t movies or ad!! Monsignor's organization 2,200 He rec~lv~d. 'ilnother: concur-"Write.' Call' or co~e' .for. ; "" ' ..•• Jl.OA~T CHI'CKENS .' found to be obscene or in~iting French officers and soldiers i n - " I n f o r m a t i 9 n . . . ~AK~t?· ~EAN~ . to crime. elUding 300 Jews, were ~hel. Tea HOmestead 2-4663 • (week-ends)'. . The 'order for the board to tered, as well as some 55,000 '. ~ ~• • •l begin functioning was given t,y Poles. He aided the French to State Attorney General Anne X. reach Gen. de Gaulle's Free' Alpem, who commented: "W·~ French forces and the Poles to ,New, York and' Washin'gton believe the board is a duly con· enlis.t in Gen. Ander's army '. PILGR/~AGE', ~ - ". aUtuted ~enC¥." u-om WUer-controlled Europe. 7. .Daysl and.·6 NIgh.ts $98.00 . '. . , Arran~e",ents 'by. the'. 1.... 1 _ _
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READ YOUR CATHOLIC PRESS: Peter A. Sharkey, advertising manager of The Monitor, newspaper of the Diocese of Trenton, N. J., holds a copy of this year's Catholic Press Month pos.te.r,. which,. h,~designed. It will' appear throughout the country dur.ing Febrnary, 'Catholic ,PreSs' Month. NC Photo.'
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THE "~.~S~:9.~;:~{~ese of fal'..Ri~er-:Thg.~~., feb.,)~, 1.!~O _ . .
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O'f" P.resid~nt's Confid'ant'
By Most Rev. Fulton:J, Shee~. D.D.
:The' United"Stateii is full of. p~ila:Dthro~:i.' .and: fta~/~e aD well.Jmown, T.he,.United S~!\tes is fuil 01 "cbaritlsts." but 'they .are . knoWll.only to ,G!>d. ~~t, is the:differencie between a·,:"philan. thropist" ·and a "charitist'!"· A .'.fp.h.ilanthr!>PJs~" gives for a human reason; a "charitist" gives for a .pi-rlne reason. What is given maY aid the needy equally. if the amoUnt is the same. But. the big difference is in the motive of the giver, not in the amoWlt of the gift.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr~ John·S. Kennedy. ' ! ~ .' In ·The Invisible Presidency (Rinehart. $6.95),Profes-" sor Louis W. Koenig-is writ,ing of. the:confidants. of Presi-: ". J<lents of the' United' States: men who, although holding no . , eledive office, .wield tremendous power as intimate'advisers of the chief executive. Inev- . tiations-for the Versailles peace itably, his series of chapters treaty were in pr9gress. concludes with a long one The colonel, alas, for all his about Sherman- Adams, He discretion, made the mistake of
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Hence Our Lord said that a drink of cold water given in His Name would receive a reward a hundredfold. He also suggested that those who gave simply to be praised or to have a building. named' after them, "already have their reward." St. Paul, developing that idea, wrote that if a philanthro·piSt emptied his vault of· stocks and bonds for the poor, but had no love of Christ in his ,heart, it would not add to his merit. "I may give all I have to f~d the' poor; I may give myself up to be burnt at the stake;:if I lack c~arity:, it goes for nothing."
shows, however, that Adams had plenty of predecessors.. Iri fact, the first of the
throwing his weight around, of . keeping Wilson wll;t1 ,,;' ·-·"dle he liimself hobnobbed with Allied officials with whom' he had breed appeared become very close, of letting his' during the term oft h e' fir s t self.importance "how through, NATIVE BISHOP: Father President; AIand of criticizing his chief. An Joseph Kilasara,· C.S:Sp., 44, · exander Hamil. iron curtain descended be-veen 'ton had Wash;;' the two, and from then until a member. of the progressive .: in g ton's ear Wilson's death there was no Chagga tribe 01'1 Mount Kili, . :and was vasUY: communication. manjaro, .Tanganyika, East . ~:~t,:: ·influenti.al: It F. D. R.'s Corcoran So inany are' Christians; so few have t.itAfrica, has been named :' is Professo'r The fall of Thomas G. Cor'ftaespirit· of' Christ!' ·So. many. think .they 1:;;0.\\ .- .. KoEmig's·coJi,ten.' coran from Franklin D. Roose- Bishop of the Diocese' of " acquit their.~bligati~D· religion' when 'ffi']l' Moshi. NC Photo. . . :, 'tion that a he::'" velt's right hand is, in' ~')ntrast, ,they give what they have. Actually what ..@ ., bind-the-scEmes . . attributed to the failure' 01. Our Lord: really WantS is that they receive·';l ,., mover andsnaker' in ·the White courses which Corcoran advo.. Dis Spu-i~ So often we hear "he is an "outstandinA' Cathollc,'" House l.s likelier in times of cated, notably the at~--~t to when all that Is meant by this is that he gives away a lot of erisis, than when conditions are pack the Supreme Court and 5 money. Our Lord, however, regards' impiety IlOt just as a refusal placid. that to purge membC'c; C'~ Conto give something, but as' a refusal to aecept something, namely, . A President beset with many gress who refused to bow to the Dis MincI. Bis Will, His Spirit as our very life. 'problems ~nd with. batteries of President's will. officials contending for attenProf~ssor Koenig says that -' RICHMOND (NC) - Vir- . , ';tlonand dominance turns, as if Marguerite·Le Hand';-~-~d Cor- ginia's House of Delegates .' ,.Ten y~ars as National pirect.or of the Holi Father's Socie.tY. for i' by nature,to a single in'dividual cpran's way into the inner circle has passed and sent to the the Propagation of the Faith have c.orivinced us that 'noone loves ':w"ho is !>rimarily devoted to him because "special. ties" existed Senate 'R .b'll . the MisSions unless of Christ.' One can' love I to prohibit the ' . he has .'. the'1 spirit ';". and is presumably otherwis~ dis- b e t ween t h em smce both were philanthropy without it;. one can lov.e gymnasiums, sCientific ·intElrEist(ld. It is personal loyalty Catholics. conduct of nonessential busi- laboratories, $1.00 a plate .dinners, bronze plaques and stained glass 'which ill the chief recommenda- _ Although there are in the book nesses on Sunday: I windows with the family:name;' but· one cannot love the spread . Cion 'of the confidant. . . - many instances of close coopera· The bill would prohibit the·' .of the Kingdom of God,' the conversion of Ii Zulu, the sanctification " . Free' of Restrictions' " tion between Protestapts and 'Sale on_Sunday of jew"'-", toyS," of an Uba, the vocation ofa Vietnamese, the catechi;dng of a Korean . , "This advisor' takes 'in' the between ,Jews, this. is the one clothing, furniture and ap. .w~thout a deep,. burning 10've of Christ' and Him Crucified. To aU whole range of the President's case in which identity' ~f reli- . pliances, hardware, farm equip- . oUr readers who: have the .Spirit! of Christ, we beg a prayer that ·.,"concern:9, aiways"'observimt in·" gion is ilpeg~d~o,b~.,a\Politic_a1.- ment and. any f~d ..that has to more Catholics .may. live by that Purging' Passion, and above all ., ·the boSS' interest, 'reporting' on. ,factor,Pecu!J.ar., ... ' .. '.' .. , .. I?e cooke~. before ~,t, is. c;on- ··that philanthropists may ·~come""charit1sts." Our national average ,""an that he observes;' ~nd' tack-. . COI:,coran~s ,s u.c,c ess 0 r. was· sumed.:: ." ,.... ; .:.,.',:. ; 'of 26c'per Catholic to·the 'Holy Father: every' year wm;increase:not " ' "lIng any job of any· sOrt "which Harry Hopkins, who moved right The. bill's sponsor, Delegate' when we become richer, Out. when we become holler. "". :ttie 'President wa'ntS d'one:' into the White House. Hopkins's Toy. Savage i}f Norfolk, said the' f . , " " ' . ' <. .,: '. , , • , , •• . He is free 'of the restrictions forte was action: taking it him- measure is aimed "primarily at .GOD 'LOVE .YOU to R.G.D. for $483.35 ''I don't now I 'of Cabinet procedure, is not - self and getting others to act. the large department stores and happened to receive a copy of your magazine MISSION through answerable to the Congress,'and He is also credited with skill and' chain grocery 'stores which sell themail nor why it happened to come when it did, but I 'read it has responsibility to the Presi. daring. as an improviser,' not" aQout every item imag;nable." and instead of putting my' ChristIlUUl bonus. in the bank for lIlT dent alone. . . being guided. or bound by any Doubts 'about the adequacy of old age, here it is for the Missions," ••• to M.L. for $20 ''for the It is Professor Koenig's eon:. grand philosophy but 'having a the bill were expresed by Dele- poor of the world." . viction that; in the main; the· .quick. pragmatic, evell'opPQr- gate E. Ralph James' of Hatnp-' _ cohfideJ~tial adviser is interested tunistic, sense. ' . ' _ .' tOn,' -- who had' proposed all .' In the .common' man and 'seeks On one occasion, "Hopkins re-' amendment to the bill"to make The ideal gift· for priests, 'nuns, seniinarians or any of' your to shape .policy to his· benefi~. plie~ that he reached 'his con-' the purChaser" equally ',guilty _.' friends is a year's subscription'tO WORLDMISSION, a quarterly One mIght suppose that;"bemg clus10n very much like' '.rli~Hce with .theseller'in S'uriday~I ~view edited" by' Most· Rev; Fulton, J: Sheen'. The price is' $5.00. unrepresentative and exempt Holmes reached his verdicts. 'I actions. The amendment was. The address is' WORLDMiSSION, 366 Fifth :Avenue; ·New 'York, from the democratic procelll!es, had a hunch where. f wanted ~o voted down by the House. .J . N, Yo' ."":. ',\'.':)' :.': _. '.'..') .: t · • ..: '. • person in ,such a' position come out,' he. said, ',and then Mr. James.said the bill passed _would probably not concentrate ·looked around to find some by the House "won't close super. ;"Cut' outiliiil column, ~lli yoUr :sacrifice to it and mall it to the on ~he rights and needs of the reasons to justify the hunch'''. markets." " Most Rev. Fulton: J .. Sheen, National Director of the Society for a.verage citiz~n. But the rec~rd, . T~e occasi?n, incidentally, 'was '. "All they'll have to .do," he ,.' the Propagation of the Faith; 366.Fifth·Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., iilsofar· as i~ 'lS' open to scrutIn,Y dir.ec~ dealmgs with Stalin. said, "is put cloths over the meat or your Diocesan: Director', itT. REy., R~YMOND T. :CONS1D~E, .and .acc~r4mg ,00. ,the aut~or s Sherman Adamo . co"nter; the vegetable counter': 368 North Main Street,. Flill River,~ss." 'lVeadmg, mdicates the OPPOSIte. No.favorite has. ever •. _~ scope and the frozen food counte~. You' - "-....;_..;.. ,,i,,;, .i. • .House and Wilson comparable to 'Sherman !-Adams'; '. can buy milk and you can buy" PAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL:' . . Qf t?e . ~r7atest. flloment to according to the professor. And, eggs, t()O, if you. tell them you're_ IIIYi~. y~n~ .~rls. ,(14-23) to labor_1B mo~t r~aders,. p~rhaps, are the although the pages alJout. him going to eat the eggs raw." Chrilt." Yf:IIt. v1~oyard as GIl ~poBtle of the WhIte H'Ouse. mSlders of his own can scarcely be. said: to b e ' Editl\»ns: PreIS. Radio. Movlol and '010t~es, and It is to these that weighted to his advantage, the visioa. With' the.e modom mean,,' the.e more than half the huge book author readily concede~ that the Missionary Sllte" b;1ng Christ" Doctrine is devoted: . authority Adams held was not Continued from Page One 10 all, regardle'l of ra~. colOI' 01 creed. · The rev1ew~r, f9r exam~le, 19 seized by him but Willingly rectly interested in education as FOr information write to. ef an age which ena?les him to granted to him. ,.' a teacher, religious prefect, and. REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR 50 SV. PAUL'S AVE. 80STON 30. MASS. rememb?r t?e reportmg and the . It is also stated that he did'8 president of Notre Dame Unispeculatmg 10 the press concern- reina.rkable job of organization, ' versity. After t)le Second World . log Colonel Edward ~. Ho~se, ran things effic~ently and "held War, during which he was Aux-' who was such a factor 'dunn~ the Adininistration 'to' a pre..iliary Bishop of New York in most of the incumbency of dominantly liberai " the military ._ordinariate, he .. ' . COME IN' - SEE -- and DRIVE d t' 11 Wpoodrfow wilKson" His .:taul~ are s:~rst: have sponsored Catholic school con,.".,,, ':.", ,,'.,.i' ,.'-';'~~ ro ('ssor oemg e a s , been th . £' .. . struction in the diocese of Buf_.•", U H " r'se d the d s of hi . oseomlslupgment,prin- f ,""'. ,',." . ' ! l ,"0.• ..·t• • , ... ,~, I"':>. ".;"l. '.:' ' 0 " ' : . " : .... "'... " OUS7l'g' lautahn't Hay Isos. Cl.pally because as a rillp. his alo. b ""'" .,. ll','!Jhe. Worldfs"Most Bea-~··lly.. D~--"ioned Ca-·~ .. _ ama z m . ~n~. .: ,e. a " :.: jtrdgments .were not. $ubjeeii to·: ,.Ejito~e~.ill, College, fo~~ded V J •.. ~-, ' . • ~lTvn .. dwe~s on t~e ;fav..?r.\t.e s~:~,~"'!pt' . , higher review: ;\ ',:~ .".. . or'" the :HolY'- Cro$s Fathers In 1948, ~;·.'_I·:· .;,j :.>; ~ ,. "." - at ""f-";' ;~":~.":'\:~ and IrreverSIble fall. ThIS took . Fr . . is coeducational. It is an ac- ',:. . 'place in Paris, when the negoPr { equ~tly .C1~m~y . credited college and a member ,;:; .. ' '-:t . ' . ~.".
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.his of t!J.e of:t. " .···R· '. '.'5' . Certa~nly in some respects it is~Olleg~~an~, ~f~ Jhe:. American . ,.' L .-, not a how-to-write-itbook. The . CouncIl of Ed~ca9on.. . ' , . style is. frequently. clumsy ("the .... "The new d?rm1tory w1~1~. be . FO.RD . DEALERS" FOR OVER 38 YEA,RS .increiise of h,is friends were,few,Ule fourth· ne~ coll~l.{e .buIldmg. '1344·86 :p,~'r~h~se New Bedfc»rd, his critics great"), and conden_'on the 558 ,acl'e .campu~ ,In, North; ,,-_ _,.;.'_ ....,;;;:,':.._.~ .....;. .•'.. ' _ _~ ,;",;....;,._ _....!"·. .......'.;,; .• ·...i.c_ _~ sation 'wo'uld' h'av'e' b·e' en,. a d"· .' ..Easton and, Brockton. The.,' c.am_ . . V1S". able.. .. " . ' '" . ' '. p.!1 s is IOl:lated about. .20 .. miles . One.wearily lifts an ey,eb' . south of-:Boston,: ' .,. '.'. ,,: too; at some reference~, ~uc~o:~, '. Temporary ..dor';IlitQ,i'y,.<facili- . , ~ . '. to "Jesuitical machiriationand ...ties for men :wIll be a~-I1able on ..... maneuver." Still, the person' ~J;1e campus. ~or th!l fal~,~einester who will study t.his lEmgthY text of 1960, F,ather: ·Sullivan also· : ,.... ' h' .. can learn something about what noted. to do to obtain the role of con- 1~;::;;;;;::;;P::;;;;;::.::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;::;;P::;;;;;:::;;;;=il fidant ,t,? the grea~, a~4 even' . JOSEPH OIBRIEN more about what not to do if one is to retain the role. \ . fo~merly associ~ted with
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~N}I~ W" D E AN: Rev. --:"' $dmond . B. Benarq,: Spriqg. field nat i ve, has ·been ."appointed Deart . of"." the School .of- Sacred Theology at Ca.tholi.c University.
SACRAMENTO tNt,: ~;;T1i(t SacJ:'amento. Jumpr" Gh.amber,.o~ Co~merce IS supporting: a move of' the . LOs'-Angeles ··Publishers Association to curtail' the publi.:. cation of offensi.ve fUm advertisements. It has urged' daily" papers to refuse .to run lurid film' advertisements of crime, .yiolence and sex.
O'BRIEN SUPERETTE, INC., .
has joined the staff <if
·,,··tefe:~dre'·& iB6~le
as'm'anagerof their' store' at
177 Cottage ·St.,FoR River . By"calling 2~6941. he' will continue -to' serve his· many friends with the same quality food he is accustomed to handling.
COM'PARE
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'~iNl~TCH:>TO '.
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Sun6eam BRE.AD
Mass:.
.,. ··C·horges ·Federal·· It's Busy Life'Belng 'Stu'dent BOdj' Pie~ident Thurs.; TH~ ANCHOR-- . 13' Feb. 18, 1960 Authorities Fail \ . At St~' 'Mary's High'School in Taunton Over 20 Veteran In Smut Fight '
~ES MOINES (NC) Federal auth9rities are failing in their duty to help · keep obscene magazines out of Iowa, State Attorney General J"Iorman Erbe has charged.
' B y Marion Unsworth
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Physicians J 0 i n ·Mission Doctors
The world of the high school. senior is a bu'sy one, especially if that senior .is Lucille Dem.ers, who also is president of the student body at St. Mary's High School, Taunton. As LOS ANGELES (NC) preSIdent o! th~ semor class and consequently of the 150 students attending the high school, LUCIlle fmds her hands fun planning . ~ssemblies, dances and other activities in Twenty-two Catholic doctors addition to the many details and dentists have voluninvolved in everyday school teered to help a new organiMr. Erbe declared that federal zation in. the Africa missions. life. Lucille also demonofficials are not enforcing Fed· Founded by Msgr. Anthony :1. eral laws banning interstate strates her executive ability Brouwers, archdiocesan director shipment of obscene material. in her capacity as business manof the Society for the PropagaThe State Attorney General ager of the yearbook, the Corona. tion of the Faith, "MD: Mission "We've held cake sales and a made the charge in an address Doctors," ,will staff, supply and paper drive to benefit the yearto the Advertising Club of Des support Catholic mission hosMoines. Last September Mr. book, and we're now planning pitals. a fashion show," Lucille said. Erbe initiated a crackdown on Veteran Medics ""That will be at 8 Sunday night, 42 magazines he judged to be' First to leave is Dr. Thaddeus obscene. His action has since March 13 in the school hall, if Cwalina, a 42-year-old physician been challenged in a suit insti- you don't mind the. commercial," who has given up a 10-year-old tuted by 20 publishers of DlaMa- she added laughingly. practice in northern Califorl)ia. The tall, blonde attractive senzines involved. He is now enroute to Nigeria, Mr. Erbe said in his address iOl' is taking the college course a predominantly Moslem area. that he has neither the 'luthority and plans to attend either the Msgr. Brouwers said the group ,nor the intention of censr:ring College of New Rochelie or . will send doctors to medically magazines. What he did in ;tead,' Regis College, Weston. "I haven't \ 'primitive areas of Africa, where he said, was' to advise Cl)Un~Y' decided on my major subject," there is a ratio of one doctor tc · attorneys to enforce Iowa's ob- she said, "but I wish it were every half million persons - or scenity law, inform the attorneys next September and I was get-, more. which magazines he consi 1 J~ 3 ting started." The 22 volunteers' included obscene, and notify magazine Full Program five dentists. Most volunteer distributors of his action. doctors have been out of medical Meanwhile, she is interested in Social Evil school for 10 years," Msgr. the normal activities of a high Brouwers said, "and they are Mr. Erbe said he believes Iowa sehool senior, including skating, giving up good practices lor is the first place in which action skating, dancing bowling, and mission work. Three recently against objectionable' publica. cheering for Coyle at football finished service with the Navy" tions has been taken on a state- and basketball games. he said. ' wide basis. , . A member d' of the National "thtimatelY, MD plans to PreThis was done, h~ said, in Honor Society, Lucille also is pare entire staffs for mission order to achieve "unlft',.~ en- a Sodalist and a member of the hospitals\ doctors, nurses, X-ray forcement" of the state obscen- Rosary Club. She took part in and lab technicians and hospital ity law in all 99 Iowa counties. productions of the Coyle DraLUCILJ"E DEMERS administrators will be sent overSt. Mary's-Taunton .' The Attorney General -Ie- matic Society during l;Ler sophseas. omore and junior years. clared he disagreed with the "MD's goal," h17 continued,""}s Thl'l Demers family,' which 'Seminary in Brighton; Robert is 1957 graduate of Regis College contention that sale of obscene to maintain a continuous medical lives. at 14 Danforth Street," a sophomore at Boston College. now working in New 'j~rsey magazines should not be banned service to the people of a miS/iioB as long as the link betwp",'l St'''' Taunton, is very active in, St. She. has two sisters: Pauline, a 'and Irene, now a senior at Regis. area. We do not wish to make magazines and sex crimefJ baa Paul's parish. Lucille's brother, 'rice Christians' or 'aspi'i. not been scientifically proved. Richard, is a student at St. John's Christians.' We wish to exemA survey on honesty con-, Report cards were distributed plify the law of charity. You C 00 S 0 IC 0 . ducted by the sodality concluded today, with seniors leading the can't make Christians out of people unless they see the law of ~I thattherewasanincreasedsense . student.body in honor grades. U •• I~O U IC Upi S of 'person~l honesty, among stuCatholic Book Week, Feb. 21 _charity in practice," he said. Four years ago, Msgr. Brouw_ ST. P A U L (N C) _ The Herbert Latvala of Nashwauk, - dents, but that more c;c)'lild be ,through 27, will be noted by propresident of the Minnesota 'tracing the past year's. events do.ne . ~ influ~nce ~t~ers. ~ grams on the theme. "Read to ers organized the Lay Mission School Board association 'has .touching on education in MinneS~mor ~lal11e: Plvlrotto and Know. Know. to Love.;~·. Library - Helpers Association, which now praised the state's parochial sota,·· said an incident "of jum~r .-,Elizabeth ,Carbonneau ,aides "are responsible for talks has 56 lay persons- working ill schools, but said be OPPOSeti particular concern to me" was ... )ll~ve. received. gold medals in on the 'works of noted Catholic ·overseas mission at their OW& ~ciflc skills. lll,lowing t~eir PlJP'ils. to rid~ on the appeal made to. the interim rec~g~ition . of accurate ~rping. authqrs. . p~~school~se~ ~~lati"ro~m~~Mooed~>'''' ~_ _~ ~~ ~ ~ ~4~'_ o
St. Ma.,y's· High in Taunton
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·Vlncent Cr,onln WinS, aid to parochial school pupils. Mission Book Award . The appeal was made, by NEW YORK (NC)-The son .of novelist A.J. Cronin has received the first Pierre Charles · Award for the best mission book of 1959. Sponsored by the Institute of Mission Studies of Fordham University, the award has been presented to Vincent Cronin, for his book, "A Pearl to India," w.hicb is the story of Jesuit Father Roberto de Nobill, 17th c~ntury missionary w~o was t?e. f~rst. p~rson to establish C~rl&t4.amty 10 the interior of IndIa. The award, named for the lata .TesuitFather Pierre Charles, wbo beaded the Missionary Week at LO\lvain, Belgium, Wall made at the eighth annual Fordbam University Conference. 01. MissioD Specialist..
The Only, ,:. Theatre in . New England, Commended by The Nation C1 1 legion of Decen~
priv~te citizens at a co~mission
hearl11g at the state capItol. "'I am aware that parochial schools in Minnesota are doing a terrific job in educating children," he said. "However, our public schools are dedicated to the tnsk of educating children to live in a democracy without any special ideology or' religion being emphasized." He added: "We.have created the greatest democracy that the world has ever known, and a free, educated people resulti~g from. a public schools program haS made thill growth possible. . "I do not feel that we call . ' afford to lower the barrier ~on pub~ic funds that are 'ded'icated .. public schOOls." . . '. ;
1363 Pleasant St.
Fall River
FREE! FREE!· 3
VACA rlOH FOR TWO . ·of.
NASSAU'. in th".e BAHAMAS
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executive director.
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Think of' itt Ali entire week for M.O ~ Nassau In the Bahamas, tt\e . world's famous Island paradise. You will enjoy the lavish hospitality of the Fo~ M~ntague- Hotel overlookirig' the '-un-swept Carribean .... your ·taste wilt revel· in the unforgetable Cusine prepared by Continent~ Chefs ••• Y9U. will never forget t~ golden beaches ••• -the glas&. bottom' ,boots '••• the thrilling exper;en.ce. of Bay Stree~s fabul.ous Shopping Centers and the hundred and one other attractions at wondwful, wonderful. Nassau. .
NO .OB'LIGATION WORLD REFUGEE YEAR: -Thirty-nine' delegationsi from widely scattered parts of the Free World gathered in; Geneva to discuss the current refugee problem. Here are Msgr. Giovanni Ferrofino, Charge d~Affaires, Papal Nunciature, in Berne (left); JamesJ. Norris of New York, Euro·· pean director of NCWC Catholic Relief Services (center) and Msgr.John F. 'McCarthy, assistant CRS-NCWC
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Simply come to th~.Strand Theatre Lobby and 'sign the ,,registration blank. It' is not even necessary to buy an admission ticket. 'Comeevery day if you like......the more often -you register the better y~ur chances to win. Regist~ationl will be limited to one a day fOl' each mdividual.
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, . . By Joan Meadows O:sear Wilde once· ~ai({, '''I~s easy,tdbe. '~do<f in die' eountry because tIiere- 'Is no temptationthere/"\ Whatever , your ,feeling" on: 'tna:t, .'tpink most' 'w'illagtee' ~that. the':' eountry.IS' peacefut;: frHts' natural ;tranqtiiIity~'God":'seeIt18' ,. . lose' The" ... 'dom'.e'; o"f' very c· looms. • '.' .nearer " 6 tablespOons. butter Heaven: >, and 1 gl:een pepper,. chOpped'. . the stars.'/ are.' '. a..'p·.·p.3.r,·,entl.·y·. 2 cups: milk . . " ~. teasPOODl pepper' , i, o~lyan. arm's'length away. 1 4'oz; can: sliced muShrooms,..
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St. Augul!tirie Diocese, has criti~ ciZed' the Governor for' askinit friendlY, hospitality ,for. "the representativ.es of· a: 'state which denies the Du;stelemen,tary free, doms to its peopleS.'''' , ., ' 'The communist' group,' made " upo! the eqiliv31ent of, 'SOvie~ gove'rnorS' and rruiyor~ is ~)li :Ii '' . , 24-day 'of tb:e United stateS: ' "T'h'e' ed1'1o" r''l'a'l" ;,;.·,'d· t;,,;:t' "free-"""~.: . , , Chr'iStia'n ·:Floriw<i.ps would do welt'tosho'w thelt utter· indiirili:. '
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.Sponsors..of, Cafh.oUe ·B·.l)le We.',er(' ,'.,; mi;i0u:~;~tts,".theanPdr~sthene~:'·~det.tesh~.~'oti)on':n~ Pfan.nin, Nove.mber Observance '.",
m:a,d,e sounds are a sort of a. ." : 1 , • Bacori,: sliced! Or c o o k e d ' ~ ~ Wi peacefUl . noise;. a reassuran~ Meit'butter in saucepan;, saute 9~,. o~;tli()s~'wlio·'des~oj)ibeftY. ~"" that. God'is God,and·'all'uh,veu. oni41n .and: gr~en:. pepper' until. . " persecute the Chur h of God. do. the '. coWitrY; :the" 'illite-' transp. . areaL Stir.: ffuim iIito, sa~ WASHINGTON (NC) - The Week at. the re~lar, time,". , . " ,. . '. '. . ~:.. . .... . , .'. "',' . Catholic Biblic- 1; Association of, Yath'er Fa11otl~s 'statement said: . ~~,went. onto Sil,y" hqwever , ~~. bodied don't sleep, with. the. siln ~vegetablesn.int.if.well'miXed.. - . . , ."., , . . . ' ... , "ili' . 'to '. h too . . ,,":':'; . . Am'e 1·ca. h'as·announc........ .tl;lat, .''This . faH WiUptii'WliJS ca~ . " ~ V:1S~ rs. ~re pe~ aps, , .~n~ itt,' their faces.: The:: da.y 'b<::i;IDS' Add'. milk... s1Owly.~" stirrmg'" t o · · CU' '. , "-' , '''' • 'tan" t f' . .. .d '. early and'there.' are , . neartY' , .,"appe:. ., ' blend! in. smoothly'; Acfdl sart,': 'p'. ep-', ,C'atholi'c' Bible Week will be OD-an. unp_or. ' . 'apparent, '" duplication . . 'of , sir t" ".' ,or any mass em~ . 'Th . a 10':1'.. ." "essed the. Utes: with-meals to. match.. b:en per,', and Worcestershii:e' sauce: 'served' under' its 'sp'onsorship Catholic . . Bi'..'e' Week ·thiS. 'year," . d'1otial . ., " . thiS' year from Nov. 6 to· 12, he noted adding: "However, .' e e 1, expr. . the heartiest eater -ana'cook"stirring.constantlyu.n.til' rathe'r than in. Febru.,i"..,. " ,' " .. doubt, , h. ope.th a.tGOV,. C 0 11'lOS'''Be K'd. . . . will ' . .find ',. such a" duplication.will, no .rn. delicious. and·,'satisfying. respite 'thick, Add,mushrooms,andipiini:" -, " T K'll W k" '11 be " " b l' f' . ," "::1, I T'he c'"'ange m', .. ,-·tes has. been cauSemor.;)· good thaiiembarrass- . 0 1 ers ~e, WI '" ~ in It big, ow 0, steammg.. ,lJU enoo\ Blend': in cheese' and: corn:. ~. Wit merit."'·· , . most impressive· faUur: e ," rich spIi't pea, soup, Its. delicate, Remove from, heat.. Mix in.. egg; - announced by Father Joseph, E., tastefulflavor'just naturallY-acts Pour' into butteredi baiting.. diSh; Fallon,· O',It,·· chairman oftbe" W"intrigile the appetite 'during' . aSsociation,Bibl~Week commit-, . ".["s· P·.'·WID'· ter. d'a'·y··s··.;FAr' a"U' 'Of'"l''''' Sp~inkl~;~i~ Qapri.k3:.. , B.ake In\ . ~ U .... a' preheated 37$ degree oven. far' tee.,:, He' is' 'statiOned at the .Ji)o,. .. mouthwatering, hearty gO()dness;35:niiiiiites~:Garnish,'with bacon. minican House·of Studies. ;'at pea ,soup is extremely'inexpeit-. curls;, if- desired. ~'" ' 1 . , ' -Ca,tholic ,Uni:versfty~, of AmeriCa siv:e. If iii. also loaded with· nu- . ,Your method of' :prepatatfon,' here in th.e nation's capital,', b:itive val'ue,oefrig, ·an:. impcct- ifi.. yow ' omit 'pimientos;' mush-: "1.0 the' past; the observance has' ant· source of' natural: protein, rooms and cheese, will be, a ,little" been heId:,during the week alter: vitamins and.·minerlils.·' ", different. You will also want to Septuagesima· Sunday, ,w·h· i C'la' .,. .SPLIT' PEA soup' '.' .' leave 'out theoflour;'and:',reduee this year fell on Feb;;14., " ..... ..::J. . (MEATf,ESS.)i:: the· amount· of: niMk. to:'l~ "cUps' Father ..Falion'sai.dl.the' change . Oil 5 5ellVingli .' • as ¢l1e .additionaL eggs will. act W;ill make .Bib~~ We.~~ Ii follo,w;" ·1 cup: CT, 'oz..), spIit.pell9t, 'J' as the thick:ening, agent. 'NOW up to. MisSion Sunday" widel,.. ..! . 4, cups boiling, wlrtell :". ' ',. you will' have more Of an 'egg- . observ.ed Cathoiic 'd1urches 2. ,labIesl1oons. £i.nely, diced, can-ota . . t d b th on'. 'th'e la'st S"un''da' y 'of. O·ctob'er'',"':. i' 'tableslJo~n fine;ly, diCed. onioll:.. corn-cus ar ~'utone" at is: l~ teaspoonS' ,salt .. truly'delieious~ Just mix-the!'e-" , and .also, puts :the .o,bservance !J5 teaspoon' bUick pepJ>8'l' ,maining: ingredients: all ·together closer to National ,Bible Week, Combine all ingredients: in with the: well-beaten eggs, and Sponsored' during the third· week - heavy cooking pot; covel!~. Bring milk.,· Bake, in slow to; modeE'ate in . October ,by a non-sectarian to boil; L~t boil genUy fOI: l'.Jh oven,' '325, to> 350, degrees, until laymen's aSsoCiation' in· New hours" !!tfrring. occasional:ly~ Pu- knife: inserted in center of cusYork." . , reE!;, Measure;, If, necessary,. add tard 'Comes: out clean'. Bake, if . "Some schoolS; seminaries and enough. 'hot: water to ,make, J possible, in a'heavy l?aking dish other Church institutions already quart.. or' place dish in a, shallGw paIl' of have gone ahead' with plans fOr MEAT FlAVORED' " . water.. the' celeJ:)ration ofCathoIic Bible ... . SJP,LIT ,rJ?A: SO~ ..... , - • C'. • 'Yield: Approximately _I qua~, Give.supper a happy e~ding' ~.'\'l 'i'Or' 51serii~~·. " with' ,','Peach .Cranoerry. Crum,I smaHham. shank .. ' .' . . ble.~' ThiS. easy dessert is, made:' Cold \\later ,to'..cover c' from canned: cling:' peaCh halves: ,jIA",eup. eoa.rs~IY cl10pped ,.~nio~ and' ci'a'nbel'i:y sauce·l'iaked: with: ,,J, c;tt,p ('l,.o~.L spl,it peas., " a, crumbly'"brown sug',n, top'p'in'; 1k teaspoon. salt , " :,' ' , .. ".' ' . -.... . ..... , · %' tel15poolli--hlackc·'·pepper " '~ACH' CRANBElt&Y ,,wash ham shank;, (or, use leall,' . . "~RlJMB"" . bits: of left over 'ha-m)". Place j'in .. ~'.': . .t,:.. t••, ", .~;,: ,'. d~ 'Ii' .. cooking' pot· 'add cold' . ,. 6..can~ed chngpeacm halves: . · , . · ;"tP ' ~V! r 'hanlf'~6~er 'pot" '% cupbrown~sugar '(packed): ., W:~"eI:, ,coyer ~., ,. !. ' .....' .,.' teaspoon: nutmeg'" .. " , simmer:,gen.tly,u~.~~I;~~,~,I,~,t~n-. ",1 eup'crnnbeiTy sauce der. Strain "broth, "cool,. then % CUll,'sifted' allipurpoS!'.:.. ~ur. . .' -'.i"':.. skim off: fat-. ··Measuresk1mmee.. *'eup 'butter or' margarine', '. broth;' if"~ecessary;. add ~no~ Arrange,draiqe<l p~a.ch, ~3Iv~: . Ij.,~t wat\lr, to IIlak~ .1.q,ua~,.. of, cut side' up, in. buttered custard . liquid. Heat broth to b()~.Ulg. cups. Fill centers with cranberry point; ,add onion.. (tf~desrred"ailll sauce.. Combine remaining m.". . , also 1 carrot,' f1~ely chopped,) gredi~ts, and blendt until Add peas with salt: lIlmf' ~epper' ~umpry, Spr,inkle' over t cran- 'CHARLES F. VARGAS ' to broth.' Cover pat; 'b~g ~ berr:y peacn. cups•. Bake' In mod~. ~5~ ROCKDALE AVENUE ' boil, reduce heat and let srmm:~ erate, oven (350 degrees F.)NEW: BEDFORD, MASS., gently for 1 to .1% hour.s; stIr about 30 minutes, or until occasionally. Puree; measure; f browned: Serve warm,' plain, necessary add hot water to make.. or with c'ream~ . serves 6. . . 1 quart, Reheat to rr---e. .-' HelpfUll T~Ps'- , It may surprise you' to- leQ1'8i H'Ci~e that dry split peas do not require JERSEY CITY (NC)-A: milsoaking. 'In fact, soaking. result.s in a loss 'of naturai flayor and lion-dollar residence 'for. Jesuit color, ,When whole peas' are'split .• faculty members ·of St. Peter's . . the hard', water;res~:o+":-~ ~over" CoHege has:' been dedicated; by' HOUSE 'FURNISHINGS ing' (which> protects the. porous, Archbishop, Thomas; A.. Boland. .' '." . Our MONICA GUILD, Dollar-A~MonthMISSIONCLtrB trtes absorbent inside kernel), is re- of~Newark,' .", to furniSh a humble Chapel of our Lord. Will you become II Caned St Peter's HalF, the' moved, For this reason you need'. member or perhaps donate one of the following? ' to puree' split pea" soup ~~ ''Y , resicf'ence 'wiil ·proviae· living Mass' Kit .' .,$100 IChalice ... ,.,. ,$40 /vestments •.•.. $50 . when y'ou especially ~nt ft: ~o: quarters forBl faculty:'niembers. . Altar ,,'.,.,. 75·Ciborium , ' 40 Mass Book .••• , 25 Thefour-,story, split-revel struc~ , be very· smooth.. '. Tabernacle .. .'. 25 Monstrance ,.~Stations %5. <> tote has 'a main' chapel and 17' , " .' To reta'in the subtle i'f~~or of , . j., split peas, start·'S'oup with.,water .minor: chapels" .,. .' FEEDING THE POOR IN THE ,NAME OF THE LORD' , St, Peter's College" condti.cte"d, that is already boilingJ ' and' cook Our PONTIFICAL MISSION FOR PALESTINE REFUGEES by Jesuits, was. founded in 1872. in a tightly covered pan. . cares for the,siek.2U1e homeless and·.llie hUDg17refugees of the· ", " . . CORN pUDDiNG,:· "", .' ~Boly' Lan~"MolisiitiOr: Ryan ,from tllis!lilice 'is on the scene' '" • toiling d37 aDd·nigtlt"to hel,,:Y.ren.,.Woodd,;vou like'~ feed. sUl-' :';You'llnl:led a 9"·square·baklng. .A lOAIF 0; MONK!S'UEADIS fering human~b?'st'our $10 FOOl) .PACKAGE will keep SOJD&-'" dish or a llh qtiarlcasSeroie:for ' .,CH IiNOUGH,; 1;0.81 .A,.... one allve.:in'deep,gratitucle we wiU,send,y01l an OLIVE-WOOD" ihis delicious 'corri puddrriifthat . '" ROSAB~:,~~e~em. ! ",;".~. <', ';, "';.' is flavored to a,queEmstaste. T,his recipe is delicioi,is but if . ,GIVE ':TO\ ;$AVE T~ w'6iUi) :'ii'oa,CHRiST: ., , ";':" ' : " ' . ' : ' ' , ' I·,"! . • • , . . . . . you do" not. :rl:ways, have . tlie 'ingredients ,-°11'.' ~Ad;: "f¢m~ber " The T'appist::'monka who' deie~'.• dlio: delicious loaf. eu:- aU mear, 6dr..: . you can gJ'eatly simplify- it,·"as 08&s. Bread.. /e. lhe backboQ~ of dick. ·well a~1 reduce its cost by omit':" ~~j i ' i ;) : FIANC.s . CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PresIdent . .; . siinple'dfer. qnlY die linesr i~grcdleiIa . ting the, i'nushrooms, pimientos. . . .. IIbgr; reter'. Tuohy, Nat'l SecT '. ' .... nd. 'TnppiSts Iia:... beeQ. &aioQi. and! cheese.. If' you do: prepare: it " ." . ;'send aU cOmmunications to: . , , .... . ,. lOr chelr bomt:omadC ~ fa&, 390 'jaa... hrinus. these: ingredlentS" 'be sure •. cATKOUC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOOATION to add two' ema eggsl·.and' faIt.. . low a different method, of prep, 480:lexingtol"! Ave~ ..at 46th'Sf~ New York 17,N. Y. /' , .. .. . .. . aration. . ., ..;. 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Pope John Warns Against Marian Devotion Limits
Dedication (jl St. Matgaret's, Buzzards Bay Thurs., Feb. 18, 1960 15 Marks Father Lyons ,Pastorate at Sandwich Society to Honor
VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope' John has made the International Marian Academy a pontifical academy.
By Russell Collinge The construction crews for the Cape Cod Canal included a number of Catholics and, of his concern ·for them, Father McKeon arranged to offer Mass in the home of Mr. Reynolds of Bourn~ale. Then there were Catechism classes for the children in Sagamore and the first Mass was celebrated there in January of 1912. Father McKeon also celebrated t~e first Mass in Pocasset i n · " . 'uIY' of. the 's~me .year. A pretty good record of ahievement for the 18 months he
Giving it the same status as eight other learned societies of , pontifical rank, the Pope warned against excessives .in devotion to Mary and in claims concerning her. He also cautioned against playing down her part in God'. plan for mankind. In honoring the Ma),"ian academy, the Pope spoke of the gre.at progress made in recent years both in devotion to the Blessed Virgin and in the systematic study of Mary' and her place in the Incarnation and Redemption. The papal aciion was taken in the form of a "motu proprio"-a decree issued by the Pope on his own initiative. It reiterates' the warning Pope Pius XII made at the time of the international Mariological congress in Rome in 1954. Of Pius' stand, Pope' John wrote that "it is cautioned that Mariology, based on * • * solid foundations, must not go bey(md truth as a result of a false or immoderate boldness,. not must it be restricted within too narrow limits in considering that special dignity proper to the Mother of God and to the Alma Soda (dear partner of Christ the Redeemer)."
Easter Seal Child Quadruple Amputee CHICAGO (NC)-A 10-yearold boy who uses steel hooks instead of hands to pray the Rosary every evenwg and walks to Mass on artificial legs has been named 1960 Easter Seal Child of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults. He is Johnny Kemp, a daily communicant and an aboveaverage fifth grader in St. Anne's school, Bismarck, N. D. 'He lives a normal, independent boyhood even though he was born a quadruple amputee. His arms ended above the elbows, his left leg ended above the knee, and his right leg ended just below the knee. Fitted with artificial limbs when he was two, Johnny has made a remarkable adjustment to his handicap. He has been selected as National Easter Seal Child, for' personifying maximum rehabilitation in the face of a major handi~ap and as a result of iotal com~ munity services, including those, of the Easter Seal Society.
Asserts Ac:tive Wo~k Youth Program Need WASHINGTON
(NC) -Suc,;, work, ~ based on the active participation· of young people, riot their pas.ive . acceptance of direction, according to the nation's "Archbishop for Youth." Emphasizing that the resources of youth is the key to work in the field, Archbishop Leo Binz of Dubuque, Iowa, who is, episcopal chairman of the Youth Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, says the youth worker himself mut be aware that he is "dealing with the very tissue of future society as well as the present lives of human beings in a critical period of impressionability." ~essful Catholi~ yout~
In Peking Prisons' Asserts 20 Priests
NEW YORK (NC) - Thom~ Cardinal Tien, S.V.D., exiled Archbishop of Peking, said here that there are 20 priest • now In labor camps in Peking. Cardinal Tien blessed an members of the Catholi~ Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare Conference staff and asked their prayers for "me and my people." En route to Formosa to resume hUI work after a visit to Rom'!, be recalled that he was reare1 a pagan until he began his education under Catholie missionaries. He became a priest in 1918 and joined the Society 01. the Divine Word In 1929. He wu named the first cardinal ol the Orient in 1946.
THE ANCHOR-
,
PART VI
was pastor at Sandwich: .. In October of 1912 Father McKeon was transferred tG' Hyannis and Fa~her John F. Downey took over in Sandwich. Shortly after his. installation Father Downey, became ill and died in, Ap'r)1 of J.914. During his illness Father Thomas McNulty handled the affairs and duties of the parish. And in April of i914 Father Joseph Lyons wail appointed pastor. Meeta Problem 'Almost at once Father Lyons nme to grips with the problem of Buzzards Bay. The facilities were unquestionably bad in the Summer and not much better in .the Winter even for·adrastically. reduced' congregation. The r e seemed to be only one thing to . do-build a church. So Father Lyons made his' plans, despite the fact that there were few all-year-round Catholics to work' with and of' the few a number had a deadly "nb interest" attitude. The Summer Catholics gave. the idea a somewhat ,warmer welcome particularly as 'they would share the' cost for only three mont~s each year. Stillthe idea took hold. Enthusiasm grew, aided and spurred by a gift of $5,000 from Mrs. Margaret Hall, a Summer parishioner. Constructio,nStarts Land was bought in the center of Buzzards Bay 'and construciion of the church was placed in the hands of Thomas Kelleher-who had built the church in Sandwich 15 years before. The church of St. Margaret in Buzzards Bay was formally dedicated on July 4, 1915 by the Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, D.D., Bishop of Fall River. The choir from Corpus Christi in Sandwich was actively and fittingly in attendance. It is interesting to' note that the seating capacity 'was' 31?oand stayed at that figure until this year when ttle new addition to St. Margaret's will provide.' . 300 additional Seats.' , ."
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While Buzzards Bay could be justly proud of its new churcb- ; . Pocasset . wall' . another. '&tory. 'There were nO Winter services; the Catholic congregation was' made up of Summer viSltori from early June through Sep~mber. They had to be satisfied with a barn-which was also the stable for several horses. There were no kneelers, no choir, no organ, no inspiring windows, no statues, no decorations, and only a portable altar. But they had the same Mass 'and the same graces; they offered the same Sacrifice with the priest; they were part of the same great Sacrifice. The barn at Pocasset, . St. Margaret's in Buzzards Bay, St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York, Notre Dame
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ST' MARGARET'S CHURCH Buzzards Bay in Paris, St. Peter's' in Rome ..• in all of them the bread and wine became the Body and Blood of O\lr Lord. ·In 1914 the Cape Cod Canal was opened-and while it split Sal).dwich parish in two it failed to bring the expected advantages and prosperity to Sandwich and Bourne. Father 1)IaxweU Father Lyons was transferred to Wareham in April of 1918 and his place was .taken by Father George C. Maxwell. Sometime in 1902 the Keith Car Company had followed the' example of the Plymouth Cordage Company and brought a number of Italian workmen from Bologna to Sagamore. These men found everything to their liking and sent to Italy for their families and friends so that there was a large Italian colony in Sagamore. The Sandwich priests had always taken care of the children in so far as First Communion 'and, Confirmation classes were concerned--'but any other spir. itual need or'duty called for a trip to S\lndwich., To make 'things easier, Fath~ Maxwell began to celebrate' Mass in Sagamoreevery other Sunday. . ~iD8 Parish,ioneril' ~ve 'The influenza' epidemic of 1918 did not miss Sagamore. But here ·the ~aJ:lY' prob~emB of fig hti l1g the epidemic· and caring for the sick' were conlp,licated. by. the almost hysterical. fear which' . gripped the Italians; . Father Maxwell devoted him-
Filipino President Hails Pax Romano
MANILA (NC) .....,. President Carlos Garcia of the Philippines has warned against a "false nationalism accompanied by a hatred for foreigners." Speaking at a benefit for Pax Romana, inter. national movement of Catholic students and intellectuals, he praised its efforts to bring ahout world peace and halt the rising tide of materialism.
·A·TTENTION
·.INDUSTRIALc~~~sSERVI(E Why Buy - We Supply COMPLETE RENTAL WC?RK UNIFORMS
SHOP TOWE'LS Also Reclaim Industrial Gloves
COYNE
INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY Successor to New England Overall & Supply Co. 10 Howard Ave., :New, Bedford Phone WY 9-6424 01' WY 9-6425
self to quieting and reassuring the colony. His days and most of his nights were spent with the ill and dying ... sitting at ,bedsides '. .. going from house to house with comfort, help and encouragement, He had no thought for his own danger and w,eariness, and his example of selfless and tender charity won him the love and trust of the Italian and the warmly expressed admiration and respect of non-Catholics. (Read Part VII next week)
Baltimore Pastor For Mission Aid NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., (NC)-More than a million dollars for the missions in the last !lecade-that is the record of the Baltimore J;astor who is to receive the 1960 Damien Dutton Award. Msgr. !.Quis J. Mendelis, pastor of St. Alphonsl'<; "". ····~h, i8 the first Diocesan priest sl'lectcd to receive the eighth annual citatJ'ln of the Damien Dutton Society. The award is presented an, nualJy to a person who has made .an r.utstanding contribution Ja the field of leprosy, either through research,' education or philanthropy. . Helps Lepers In ~nnouncing the award, th8 board of governors of the society said Msgr. Mendelis is being ,cited. for -his, work in raising .more than $1,000,000 in the last 10 years for the missions of the world, in particular in raising funds to aid leprosaria through his annual Christmas LeprosY Fund. This fund always includes Msgr. Mendelis' salary for the month o! December, the board disclosed. Presentation of the award wiD be m'ade March 19 at a 'unch_ eon-meeting of the society. The award is a plaque bearing the likenesses of Father Damien and Brother Joseph Dutton, T'" cionaries at the leprosarium on Molekai, Hawaii. ' The society is dedicated to providing, under Catholic auspices, research, relief and reerea t ion for leprosy patients throughout the world, regardless of race, color or creed.
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STONEHILL COLLEGE INSTITUTE OF ADULT EDUCATION
Co-educational Tuesday evenings, 7:30 to 9:30, March 1 to May.24 (omitting April 19J. Rf'gistration by mail or 7 to 8 P.M. March 1 and March 8' in Holy Cross Hall. IV. prerequisites. Credit courses. Fee ~15. jor 12 sessum.s. CERTIFIED PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY REFRESHER COURSE..;. English UsageMary V. Yasgandes, M.A., Dean, Stonehill C.allege.· Business Administration and Secretarial Accounting - Professor Henry M. Cruickshank. M.B.A., Chairman of tbe . Department <!f Business Administratio~, Stonehill College•
UNDE.RSTANDING ADOLESCENCE - Moderator, Mr..Law~ence.S. Stepelevich, M.~ Instructor, Stonehill College. Seven Authoritiei on adolescent. psychology from the ,VA Hospi'tal, Brockton, Old Colony Association of Mental' Health, Massachusetta Hospital School for Rehabilitation, Bridgewater Correct.ion Center, and StanehiU College compose the faculty for this unique caur.e. 'HOW TO START, STAY WITH AND SUCCEED IN REAL ESTATE SELLING TODAY - Mr. Henry W. Palmer, Greater Boston Real Estate Board and Multiple Listing Service, will present 12 lectures covering 24 fundamental steps in building greatet' success in real ~state salesmanship. INSURANCE - YOUR CAR, YOUR HOME, YOUR BUSINESS - Mr. Abraham Brooks, LL.B., Insurance Expert, Lecturer at Stonehill College and Northeastern University, "It is wiser to have insurance - and not need it than to need insurance and nat have it." MAKING YOUR GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY PAY' DIVIDENDS - Build confidence and facility in correspondence, communication, and composition (beginning and advanced). English Department, ~tonehill ~ollege. SOS (SCIENCE OR SUPERSTITION) - The Science Department of Stonehill College will present the FACTS and FICTION of satellites, radiation (fall-out), the human body, heredity, the chemistry of everyday life, geology of our area, plants and animals and their diseases, "SCARE" publicity. CHRISTIAN UNITY AND DISUNITY.- Reverend Thomas Brennan, M.A., Instr.ucta., Stonehill College, surveys the Protestant Reformation and Eastern Schism with .... eye to the prospects of reunion and the coming Ecumenical Council. EFFECTIVE SPEAKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MEETINGS - Herbert A. We..ling, M.A., Assistant Professor, Stonehill College - "Learn how e'asily you can gaiD a mastery of yourself and be in control of the situations which confront you." PERSONAL INCOME TAX PREPARATION AN'D 'PLANNING - Mr. Daniel J. Looney, Jr., B.S. B.A., Instructor, Stonehill College. Preparation of income tax returns. Yau'IS 'IOve dollars this year and plan your nellt tax year! HOW' TO ENJOY AND APPRECIATE POETRY'- Rev. Joseph A. Lorusso, C.S.C.,· M.A., Assiltant Professor, Stonehill' College '- Emphasis on enjoyment. Course will consist of the critical reading and informal discussion of poems from a comprehensi~e but inexpensive anthology. For those w~o want to deepen their appreciation of poetry as well as for beginners. _ SKETCHING AND ETCHING - Mr. Fred, Patrone, Commercial Artist and Art Teacher, Brockton - Minimum .supplies required. Beginners and experienced sNo dents may devol.op ahol:iby or pursue commercial advertising. Please register with: Director of Adult Educaiion Stonehill COllege North Easton, Mass. Hame Addre
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TH~ ANCHOR":"'f)i~eof Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 18,1,960
A Proclamation ,by
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This Timely Message Is Sponsored By TUDe following PubDu4: StpDli'ited , Indnviduals OlfiJco'J BOJisu'nes~§ Concerns l@cated in Greater faUn R.over '
May r John M. Arruda WHEREAS: ' 'the athletic program plays an important part in student activj,ties ;inGur High Schools, and
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• WHEREAS: organized athletics in our High School help to instin sense of courage, perseverance and fair play ,in the' young people who will be the citizens of the future, ~
Durc) Finishing Corp. Enterprise Brewing ,Co.
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The Exterminator Co. ,Fall River Electric light, Co.
WHEREAS: .the members of the athletic teams give freely of their, time ,and efforts for the enjoyment of their fellow citizens, and
Fan River Trust Co. Glol)e Manufaduring Co. Kaplan Furniture Co.
WHEREAS:
Kormon Water 'Co.
the' athletic teams at B. M. C. Durfee High ~ School deserve ,the active support'of all of our pe,ople:'in recognition of thei~ efforts and in tribute to their excellent records, which have brought Fall .River much favorable publicity, and '
Mac:Kenzie & Winslow, Inc. 'MaSlen Furniture Sihowrooms MOcllney & Ce., Inc.
Now Therefore I; Mayor John M. Arruda, Mayor of the CitY of Fall Ri~er, Massachusetts, do hereby proclaim the week of Fe~ruary 14 to februory 20, 1960, as
Newport Finish_in'g Co. Plymouth Printing Co., Inc.
DURfEE BOOSTERS' ,WEEK
Shel'rroy Corporatioll1 Scbii~off Brothers
S~ell'ling Beverages, Inc.
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'~nd' urge
StrCIIlnld TheatrlS
an cJtizens, young and· old alike, to support Durfee'
High athletic teams by becoming' members of the Durfee Boosfters' Club..
TedUe Workers Union of America, Af,l-CJO
'ils JOHN M.
ARRUDA
Mayor of the City of Fan River "
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Solon Condemns Sacrament of Extreme' .Unction Fills Patient Effort to Soften With Hope, Strength 'and Comfort Abortion Laws By Rev. Roland Bousquet
NEW YORK (NC). - The American Law Institute proposal to liberalize existing laws on abortion was eon-
demned here by a New York State legislator. Assemblyman Fred W. Eggert !lllid on a radio program that there is "no legal, medical or moral basis for liberalizing the existing law."Under present law abortion is permitted only when the life of the mother is in danger, the legislator explained, while the American Law Institute is seeking to permit abortions for economic, therapeutic and psy. chiatric reasons. Common Argument The legislator, who represents the North Bronx-Riverdale areas, ' said the most common argul'" ~ ....t used for more liberal abortions is in cases where a mother contracts German measles early in pregnancy. He said medical statistics disclose that the possibility of a child's being born retarded under such circumstances is remote and that 80 per cent of chil,dren born under these conditions are normal. Assemblyman Eggert is a member of St. Frances of Rome parish here. He debated the issue on the radio program with Prof. Lewis Schwartz of the University of Pennsylvania law school.
THE ANCHOR.....:
St. Joseph's Church-New Bedford
No one hesitates to call a doctor to the bedside of a sick person. This seems to be the most natural thing to do even when we doubt the seriousness of the illness. It is better路to be on the safe side. After aU, a person's life may be at stake. This prudent attitude often changes entirely when the matter of calling the priest is brought up. We try to hide the patient's true r-"~--;-~'.................".....,.--_ _ condition for as long as we ,,1 ' -.can. The presence of a priest who may administer Extreme Uncti9n will upset the patient. Some parents will put off calling the priest to the last possible moment or wait until he has lost all consciousness. Priests on a sick call often finds the family more upset and concerned than the patient himself. As a matter of fact, it is much more difficult to calm the fears and anxieties (often without any foundation) of the rela路 tives and friends than it is to console the patient. He is quite happy to see the priest and welcomes the comforting prayers of the Church. The sacrament of Extreme Unction is the sacrament of strength and peace of soul. in time of serious illness. Pessimism not路 Christian Extreme Unction should not be looked upon as a sentence of death. It is true that this sacrament cannot be administered unless a person be in danger of death arising from old age, sickness or accident. It is interesting that the word death does not appear once in the
ARRANGEMENT OF SICK CALL TABLE St. Anne's Hospital
prayers of the Last Anointing. - Church. Here he was met by But the prayers do contain many the cleric carrying a procesreferences to health. The .priest siona,l cross. The priest mixed a prays that God may restore the little Holy Oil to Holy Water patient's health if it is His and sprinkled the sick with it. Divine Will. Pessimism has This ,reminded the sick person never been a Christian 'charac-' , that Extreme Unction continues teristic. The Church always be- the work begun by Baptism. The lieves that while there is life baptismal water removes origthere is hope. And She practices inal sin., Extreme 'Unction '.'1Nhat She believes. The prayers cleanses the soul from the reof Extreme Unction express the mains of sin. hope'of the Church that God in The seven penitential psalms HONOLULU (NC)-F at her earth move under our feet, His mercy will restore the were recited by the priest and Joseph McGinn, M.M., is a though not alarmingly." patient's physical health as well his assistants. Blessed ashes were pastor of distinction-one of the Father McGinn said he, went as his spiritual health, if God then sprinkled on the forehead few with an active volcano in to Pahoa again on Jan. 12 to so wills it. of the sick to remind him of his parish. offIciate at two funerals. The Extreme Unction prepares the the common lot of mankind: The Maryknoll missioner is next day, he said, a couple from soul to accept God's will. It "You are dust and to dust you pastor of Sacred Heart church in his mission told him of severe rell'lits venial, sins and cleanses win return." Pa" ,os and his parish mission quakes during the night and of the soul from the remains of Sick Room Preparation distriet takes in Kapoho, scene a roaring under village dwellsin. The temporal punishments Today Extreme Unction is of the recent volcano eruption ings. He gave them the key to due to sin' are remitted in part usually administered in the sick and lava flow but all'of Father the mission hall in Pahoa in case or wholly depending on the dis- room of the patient. Before the McGinn's parishioners were rethe village had to be evacuated. pt)sitions of the patient. We ren- priest arrives with the Oil of the ported safe. The eruption occured soon der a gI;eat dissep/ice to the sick Sick the' family prepares the person by wiuting till he has lost sick room. A table covered with It 'Was Father McGinn who afterward.' Cracks appeared in first observed the action of the roads and in homes, Father consciousness before calling the a clean white cloth, (the more volcano. He told the Hawaii McGinn said, and that evening priest. While conscious, he can simple the better), is placed near receive the sacred anointings' the patient. A crucifix is placed Catholic Herald, diocesan newsthe sky glowed red from the with piety and devotion. 'on the table with a wax candle. paper: fountains of lava. The Mary"Is anyone among you sick? This candle is lighted before the "It all began the day after knoller said he made an inspecLet him bring in the presbyters . priest arrives. A dish, containing Christmas. I had gone to Kapoho tion trip with some parishioners. of the Church and let them pray six small wads of cotton stands to administer the last sacraWeather Atrocious' over him, anointing him with oil 'to one side of the table. The menta. Coming back in the early "I was astounded" he reported. in the name of the Lord."St. priest will wipe his fingers after evening I observed steam puff"'The lava was spurting hardly James 5, 14. the anointings with a' few small Jng in an unusual chug-chug more than a stone's throw from squares of bread. Another vessel I'il'st Centuries fashion just above the 1955 l~va the village in a long 'serpentine eontaifls ordinary water close to The rites and prayers of the flow. I followed a. plantahon line. I was gratified to learn that a towel. We may also place a Last Anointing (as Extreme road throu~h towermg cane to the lava was flowing away from vessel containing a little, Holy Unction was often called) were get to the Slgh~ of the steam. The the village toward, the sea. Some Water with a piece of blessed area was curIOusly warm but small dwellings were tilted the quite simple in Apostolic times. palm. The above n;"t"r n gives By the eighth and ninth cenwithout distinctive odor. ground shook almost consta'ntly, turies it was administered with a' good idea how to dispose the I'aets Impressive cracks widened' and' in some all the solemnity at the Church's various articles on the table. It "On my return to Pahoa I places the earth had 'sunk to command. When time permitted is good to leave the center telephoned the bare facts to the considerable depth." the sick person was dressed in portion of the table free for Volcano Observatory. ApparAnd all during the upheaval, white clothes (a counterpart to the Holy Oil. (Next week the Sacred ently the ''lets interested the Father, McGinn said, "the the white garment worn by the specialists. The newspapers soon we9ther was ,atrocious," 'with newly baptized) and carried to ~nointings,) began to quote these specialists continuous heavy rains. As soon 8S recording tremors and quakes as the evacuees were settled, in the lower PUI. district. Occathe Maryknoller said, the sightsionally, we residents felt the seers began to arrive in droves. SYRACUSE (NC) - Msgr. ELECTRICAL James E. Callaghan has retired as superintenc;l.ent of schools of CONTRACTORS the Syracuse diocese, a post he Residential - Commercial held for'10 years. Industrial Bishop Walter A. Foery of 633 Broadway, Fall River Syracuse, said Msgr. Callaghan's retirement, will permit him to OS 3-1691 devote more time to his job as pastor of Holy Family Church, in ~, By Brian Cronin suburban Fairmount. free Delivery 3 Times Daily 1. Luther's original heresy concerned: (a) Matrimony? (b) The The Bish{)p said a successsor Immaculate Conception? (c) Indulgences? (il) Papal Infal. FAI~HAVEN will be anriounced in June. libility? Until then, Sister Mary Remigia 2. .In what book of the Old Testament are the Ten Commandments and Sister Ann Celestine, diocewritten: (a) Genesis? (b) Exodus? (c) Numbers? (d) Leviticus? Complete Selection of san supervisors of education, Fasting is mandatory o,{ everyone over '21 and un,der: (a) 59? I. MEATS - GROCERIES will supervise the school system. (b) 60? (c) 61? (d) 65? PROVISIONS . During Msgr. Callaghan's tenThe Doxology is another name for what prayer: (a) The Con249 .Adams St., Fairhaven fitoor? (b) The Hail Mary? (c) The Grace After Meals? (d) The ure as superintendent, the numWYman 4-6441 ber of scho(j)ls increased from 52 Glory Be to the Father? to 78 and the number of pupils 5. In wh~t part of the altar does the priest stand while reciting the Pater Noster: (a) In front of the Tabernacle? (b) The :from, 20,240 to 36,305. Gospel side? (c) The Epistle side? (d) The foot of the altar? e. To whom did Our Lord say " . . . this day thou shalt be with WMWY is the interest you pay me in paradise."? (a) Lazarus?(b) Nicodemus? (c) The Good ST~ LOUIS (NC) - St. Louis 011 lnMlble befOl'e it 4:Omes. Thief? (d) The blind man of Jericho? University will increase its tui. T. What does the word "Eucharist" mean: (a) Thanksgiving! tion to $800 annually, effective (b) Supper?', (c) Sacrifice? (d) Communion? with the opening of the spring REYNOLDS路DEWALT I. The Holy Ghost appeared in visible form when Christ was semester. The increase is the William & Second Sts. baptized, and on what other occasion: (a) The Crucifixion? second $50 raise in tuition in the (b) The Resurrection? (c) The Ascension? (d) Pentecost? last 18 months. Rates are still 'New leclfanl WY 6-1234 Give yourself 10 marks fQr each correctariswer on page 18 below those charged "for eomparable lmi.vti'sities~" Jlatini: 8O-Exeellent; 7o-Ver7 Good; 6O--Good; 5O-Fair.
,Maryknoll Priest f'irst to Observe Eruption of Volcano in Hawaii
Diocese of Syracuse School Head Retires
AIME PELLETIER-
How'DoYou Rate~ on Facts of Faith
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Thurs., Feb. lB, 1960
Book Publishers Battle Industry Decency Code WASIDNGTON (NC),Magazine and book publish. ers' representatives have told a House sub-committee that industry-wide decency programs in their fields are neither practical nor desirable. This was the substance of testimony presented to the House Postal Operations Subcommitiee by Robert E. Kenyon Jr., president of the Magazine Publishers Association and Dan Lacy, managing director of the American Book Publishers Council. Price of Freedom Mr. Lacy told the subcommittee, 'whose members had expressed concern over "borderline" objectionable publications and movies, that the presence of such material on the market "is part of the price of freedom." He said book publishers are "completely and unalterably oppased" to ddoption of any "code" or self-policing program within their industry. Mr. Kenyon, like Mr. Lacy, assured the subcommittee that the members of his organization are not engaged in the produc..! tion of objectionable publica": tions. He identified the Maga-J zine Publishers Association as a voluntary organization of 93 publishers of 247 magazines. Mr. Lacy declared there is no , need for a self-policing progra~ among members of the American Book Publishers Council, because they do not publish objectionable books.
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Publishers' Positions M-lilreover, he added, "there is not any possibility of establishing among the sorts of book publishers who make up the council any machinery for the collective exercise of editorial taste and judgment." , "No responsible publisher is going to be willing to Co * * be a keeper of the consciences of hill fell~w pUblishers, nor is he going to submit his own editorial jud.gment and integrity to another's review," he said.
Michael C. Austin Inc. FUNERAL SERVICE
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Trinitarian Fathers BOYS WANTED for the Priesthood and Brotherhood. lack ot funds NO impedi-
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BoItimore 8. Md.
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SUWYAN BROS. PRINTERS MabI Glfiee aDd .1aM
LOWBL, MASS. 'Irefepbone LeweO
Tui,tion Increase'
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Bishop Observes .Growing Interest In Catholicism
C.ommuni'on B,reakfast
-Th,e Parish' Parade
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD The parish CYO is sponsoring 'the: Minstrel Show, ,"Circus' Ti~e" in the Parish Hall on Saturday 'and 'Sunday evenings" Febr 27, arid 28, at 8 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Antone F., Cardoza are ~he directors. ' " . "". Manuel l~. Raposa is in charge of tickets, ,co'stumes, and props, Ernest Perry will be the circus· barker., , Tickets may be obtained from any committee' member, CYO member or at the door 'the nights of the pedorm~nces. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER , The Council of Catholic Wom-, en will sponsor a' Communion breakfast opim to all women 'o~ the, parish following' 7 o'Clock Mass Sunday morning, Feb.' 28 in the parish hall. Tickets should be obtained before, Thursday, Fe'b, 25 from Mrs, Henry Camara, chainnll11, 'or .. any menlber' ~of committee, Next regular, meeting 'is at 7:30 Monday evening, M:arch 14." ~ , . ,
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ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISr. NEW. BEDFORD ' " The League of St. FraQcis of 'Assfsi ,wiii 'hold ' Ii .I surprise .m~etinga't 8. Thursday '1ight, Feb. 25., A potluck supper will be held in Ma.rch, ' ST. JOSEPH, . FALL RIVER. The "'{en's Club 'will present a play, '!The Womanless Wedding", at 8:15' Monday' an,d Tuesday, nights, Feb~ 29 and ~arch 1 at the parish'· hall, Brightman. Street. Thomas Sullivan is director. , ' OUR LADY OFANGELS~ F,ALL RIVER . <The 'Wom~n's Guild wHI'hold a malacada supper and' dan'ce beginning at 6:30 Saturday night in the parish hall. .. The CYO will sponsor a 'Valentine dance 'from 8 to 11 Friday night, Feb. 26 in the parish ,hail. ' NEW' DORMITORY: Re~. Ja~es -Y. "Lowery, C.S.C.• HOLY ,CROSS, directoro{development at StonehmCollege,Jeft, and Rev. FALL, RIVER, , , Richard H. Sullivan, C.,S.C., president, look ov~r plans for The PTA will hold ham and '. ' bean' supper at ' 6:30 ' Saturday' , CardinaIO'H;lra Hall. 'night.in the parish hall. .j , ST.' HYACINTH, ' : . ~ys 0 .IeS ' ;~e,·. ~ti :.~.-" r~a
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NEW YORK (NC)-Inter, ,est in the Catholic Church is growing rapidly among non~ Catholic Danes, according to :DeQmark's o)lly Catholic bishop. Bishop TheQdor Suhr of .Copenl1agen detailed signs of inereased interest in the Church ~when. he 'addressed St. Ansgar's Scandinavian Catholic League. The Bishop said: that during .the Chair of Unity Octave observance in January so many 'non-Catholics, came' to visit St. Ansgar's CathEioral' in Copen,hagen that at times there was a line of people outside the Church 'waiting to be admitted. Bishop 'Suhr' also said that Danislinewspapers are full of discussions of the Church written by non-Catholics, and diS:cussions on theological points are being conducted by'Catholic ,and non-Catholic theologians'. , N ew Moveme~t Part of the ,interest in Cathoiicism, he said, stems fr0"':' th~ new "high church" movement among Danish Lutherans. T~is inovementhas already result~ iii the restoration of the "Kyrie Eleison" and '''Gloria in Excelsis Deo,'~ to, the liturgy of ,the com.' ,: munion service in Copenhagen'•• ; j ~utheran Cathedral. ., , , Bishop' Suhr, pointed out, how-' , , ever, that the Church in ,Den-' mark is hampered by, the small size of the Catholic p"'~\llation-, Danish Catholics number some 26,009; only. about one of every 175. ,p~rso~s '~n 'the tot~l popula~ ,tion, he' .said.' .', ,..
NEW BEDFORD .' " ," . Continu¢d Page One· iserititle<f., "Can CathOlics Sepa-' HELP NEW BEDFORD ' A par.ishb~zllllr will ~:~eld ' , . -' , . 'Ch 'h' d Stat'" H ' •, " . ' . ' Thursday, FrIday and S,aturday, tat:y chaplainspr~gram 'at ',~ov:t<l ,~ate " . u,-:c. a:n, ':, ~. . e , The Rosary Altar Society 't'lll~~ Feb. 25 throlJg h 27. "A,~hHdreri's ernment exp'ense;. ':''. strongly ; 'd~nounced the artIcle hold card Sunday, Feb. .sessIOn .." WI-11 b e 'h e Id' 'f rom " "2 t 0 '5"' ;3).,by'accepting Federal ,aid';llth.ough he,re.pe.ated,:a la Mark . ' a. .party ' " 'N' church ext F' nay, "d b "26'·,an ,. 'd" a 11· 0• th·er, 'fo'r ·sec"tarian hospita,Is. ' ' Antony, over' and, over: ,"But '%8 , .In . the " . .basement. . , . 'F e.. ~gular ,mheeatmg ~ set for, SlJn-, s~ssions will be from 7; to' 10' in Favors'Competitiori jF~the,r :O'Bri~n, is an ,honorable «Jay, Marc . 'the evening. Prizes, iric.luding - The Methodist' Bishop ob_ man.", .' ".",' :" \," . \ ST. :PATRICK; 'df)or. prizes; will, .be' awafded' served', that 'c'ornpetition i.: 'Forgets HistOr,.· , FALL, RIyE. " each ev'eningandthe:aff~iirwill healthy, in atl~letics,' politics an~' In 'his' general- ,attack on 'the A, beef ste'Y' supper,spo~sor~c:l' 'take. place inAhe parish' hall,': busines~and' also --in, religion.' Catholic" Church, Mr; Archer's by the HoJy: Name Society: will corner. of Rivet and'" County, He COlitinued: specific targets ranged from the' be held in the school cafeferia Streets. " . "Tne spi,-:iiual. life of ~ny ~hristian Brothers of, Salifornia New: Jersey Hosp'itai' , at 6:30 Saturday everiing,' Feb:, ST. LAWRENCE," peop'l~'stiff~r's, whe)l 'the jstimJ.1~ ,,(."Wh,at ,ar~, they doing, in, th~ . 27. The public is ~nvited and" NEW BEDFORD ' Ius of, c'ompetition is l(e~oved. , ,~lquor, busIness,' anyway?") ,to Planni,ng Exp'a~s"ion " tickeJs'may' be purchased. at th~, ': The Couples' Club will hold a Monopoly" breeds ,misuse ¥ral}ce'~ Gene.ral; Charles de NEWARK (NC)-St. Mich": "', ~oot.. Door pr~zes, wLll be party at 8'Monday'night, Feb. 22; po,wei' in business, politics and Gaull~, who was ,accused of Hospital has applied, for perawarde9' in Knights, of .Collimbus, Hall, religion, This takes place not ~aking a "deal" with,the French mission to' be included in NewST. PIUS X, Mattapoisett. Square dancing, because bishops,' cardinals, and, c:lergy, to, obtain political' power. ark's redevelopment plans. SOUTH YARMOUTH will highlight the evening and popes-are 'bad men, but becal:1Se . The POAU executive director The hospital is the largest The Women's Guild wil hold refreshments 'will beserve,d. they are' human beings' subject said: "In Boston and throughout Catholic hospital in the state pre-Lenten dinner dance at lVir.and' Mrs. Vincent Hemingto the temptations which make Massachusetts you have less arid the second Catholic institu7:30 Friday evening. Feb. 26 at way are chairmen. insidious appeals to all, of us, and ~reedom thana ,living ,democ~ tion to seek particitktion in Hyannis Inn. Daricing will ~on- ST. PETElt, blinded bY',the temptation to, racy. In .the .matter of bi~th Newark redeve~opment projects. tinue until 1 and the' affair is, DIGHTON believe": that.if anactlon enc;ontrol you enjoy less freedom 25 acres in downtown Newark open to the publi,c. Mrs. Joh'n T. The Women's Guild wjll hold hances the po ~r, standing and th!ln benighted India.", His ref- have been earmarked for a new; Crawford is chairman. a meat pie .supper from '5:30 to glory, oLthe ~hur~/:Ii then' it)&" " ~,renpe, was to, the stat~:s ,a~ti- campus for Seton Hall Univer..: ; A drawin.g will be held .,:!-,ues,7:30 'Saturday"'night, Feb. 27, at rig~t.:'" . " . . """ ,c.ontr,ac:ptiv~ laws, ~~i<;h were sity., . day, ':Mayl!> fpi' a' '~Cape, Cod Dighton, Elementary" School. ' " Rants and" Raves c ",pas.sed In the 19th cent)JI'Y by: a, St.' Mjchael's proposes to ex.Vacation" a:t, West Yarmouth.' ,Mrs. Mary Pavao aild Mrs. R~Se Dr. W. EarIHot~l~ri,.e~~cu,ti~e'',"p~~~o,m!J1a~tly .:protestant ~t~te, pand iis" bed capacity to care for, Mrs.' Dennis J. 'O'Connor' is in Borba areco'-chairmen, director cf the Louisiana' MQral' !:,elp~.1atlJr:e~ 650 plitients, '230 more than it charge o'f arrangements. Other' ,and 'Civic' Founilation' BatOl(',:, ,,'Hot Air Galore, can now handle. If the applicaplan's for'cc,ming'mo~thsinclude' ;~~~ER~V~E;" Rouge; who earlier 'haa !leliv;-',',', MI'. Archer cited frequent antL tion is approved by city' 'and' • ru'mmag,~ sale, chick,eo' 'pie " , ,. . , ere~, 'one, of, the nios't'vehement c~mmunist statemepts m.ade by Federal "agencies, hospital ..-ex-' llupper sale. ,'A" Past' . 'enThe Catholic Worn';; nti-Catholic ,addresses, of the'" Richard Cardinal Cushing,' Arch- "pansion w 0 u ,I d cover' three',,'" ' . and Penny". " willCouncil hold: of instailati6n cere:';' , , Presidents 'Dinner 'will be' held' 'n. appe.d " inonies at 8, Thursd.a v.., night,: ,, convention,' . " , ,throughout'., t>. ishop of' Boston. "He countered . "blocks and cost an estimated ·$10, " Tuesday, April 26. -' .. the Methodist bishop's 'talk. . that"Evangelical' 'churches ha~e million. ' 'The HoI); Name Society will" Feb. 25 at 'White's RestauraIit:' Dr: Hotalen; accused the Cath- ,: 'less ,freedom in ,Catholic :coun~' .ponsor ,its' annual pre-Lentett 'Mrs. Wilfre~". Garand." 'an~ MisS: olic "Church' of" promoting 'dirty' ,tries than in the' Soviet' Union whist, party at 8 Monday. eve-' M~dora DupuI~ are c~w,;-,cI'lhlalfrOmlleOnW'/ p,0litics,: ighora~c~, .. crime, a~d' •a,nd dec.larE7d:· '~We not ' ~ ning; F,eb, 22,' Washington.'s A musical program , " .. 'poverty: m: LOUISIana. He saId, ruled' either' from Moscow 'or Birthday, in the, church hali, 'the'in'staiIa'tion.'· . Catholics· have an' ','inhuman; Rome." ,Station Avenue. Frank Ormon ST. ~RY'S~.. ",.' unscientific, "barbaric" medical The 'Archer version of a reU:' is chairman and announces that TAUNTON:. , " codean.d, t~,e dovvnfall' ,Ilf th,e. liious, test for the U. So' Presiprizes will i~clude$25. of meat, Rev;1 Charles, ,H. Poirier ,will'l:!nited, ~J~t~~)s}~~~at!-!ned'u~:", 'dericY '~as':, ',"The basic iss!1e 'ill' of the winr.ter's,choice.' ,.. 'sp~ak, at .the 'Women's ,GuiId:·less, ,the Ca~hobc ChU:I:c~ ~~ , ~hethe,-:,we a'regoing to have" CITIES SERVI~E ' ,The public is invited,,'refresh-' meeting planned for, ThursdaY,'lit,op~ped;"',:'" '. ,President-"vho'carl stand on his DI,STRIB"TORS ments"willbe' served and' ticket. ¥arch,' 10; with' Mrs:- Edmund " , "', A'ili/'M:.rk AntOni' , : "own" two' feet~ If-'a~'and[date' will be available at the' door. ' , F'itzgerald '~s'programchairman:· ,,~ Dr.''H~t~l~ri~was'\Viae"awake: 'kMels kiss il'bishop;s Hng, Gasoline· ST~ MARGARET, : .' 'ST: MARY"S'CA:rilEDR.~~' Wb~h ,,'ihe"'firiaLspeaker;, ad:':.': \lVa~t tGknow. wheth~r'it'is onl"" BUZZARDS BAY" ·'FALL RIVER': '_. , ., dressed 'th~:'con~eritioh antCthe, his body ,that kn~els ?r also his ;, Fuel and Range' Members of St. Margare~ Mary 'Miss EleanorR, Shea will be "ine'eting, got· back'to"it{; familiar. soul.", " Guild' have formed discussion' hostess for the March meeting" track~ attacking Catholics and,', " group~ whieh will ,meet during" of the Women's Guild., , "their',Church: The fiQal spea~er. , "Facts on F,ciith Lent' following the Stations 'ot" " ,... ,was Glenn Ar~her, POAU exec~- " ANSWERS: -1 (c); 2 (b); 3 (a); Olt BURNERS the Cross ~t the. home of 'IYIrs.' , ~~~~T~~LY;" ti~e dir~ctor, who asserted that 4 (d); 5.(a); 6 (c);'7 (a); 8 (d). Rose Brady, Butlerville." ' , ' Newly-organized Holy Family "if amari,stands up to de~end' G.E. ~OILER BURNER UNITS The' Ways and Meiuis Com-, , ' the Constitution,', he" is 'called a , Guild' will have 'as· president mittee have'scheduled a ,rum:" bigot.'1 For prompt delivery . mage and white elephant sale Mrs, John M. Valadeo. Serving 'Mr. Archer viewed with alarm with her are Mrs'- Joseph Quill, SCRAP METALS & Day 8. Night Service for Saturday, March 5 from 10 vice president; Miss Mary Joan the publication in Look magaVi ASTE PAPER - RAGS to 3 in the school hall, Donations Costa, recording 'secr.etar'y; Miss zine. of an' article by Father Rural' Bottled Gas Service TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR are being received by Mrs., John A. O'Brien of the Univer, . , Louise' Homen, treasurer; Mrs. PAPER DRIVES Charles Fuller, Mrs. Jameson William R. Powers, co'rrespl.>nd':' sity of Notre. Dame. The article 61 COHANNE't CHURCHES, SCOUTS and Risser, Mrs. Arthur Wills, and' ing secretary. " . ' . " TAUNTON CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS Mrs. Lee Buffum. : Mrs. Alfred Amaral and Miss' 'Portuguese Attleboro - No. Attleboro 1080 Shawmut ,Avenue ST. GEORGE, Elsie Amaral- will be hostessell ' I,.ISBON' (NC), - Portugal's, Taunton New Bedford WY 2-7828 WESTPOR,]~ for the next meeting. , \'gi:al)t to Catholic ,mis'sions in The Women's Guild will pre-:- ' Mozambiqu~," Pl;lrtuguese terrisent' a variety shoW. Saturday'- SANTO CHRISTO' . tory' iri:East Afi'ica,this. ye~r night, Feb, ~~7 at Dartmouth High FAL.,. RIVER ,.. , amollilt's'to,$1,960,OOO.It is an ": ,'EUCHARISTIC, PASSION PLAY II SchOol Auditorium. boo~s will' , Th~ Cou'ncil of:CathoHc' Wom- . 'i~2te~seo($441,000 over the 1959 I",,' . (Munl~1 ',(~. 'be 0 eli. at' 7. Mrs. Ral h C.' en, w~ll hol~ ~ potluck; supper,'. grant. ~ : : Souzr and Mrs~ Napoleo;'; Bu's.,.,'·:~nd sl.lent,llucbon at 6:30 Thurll-:o" rr·'!"""~'_'_'·;"' ""' ..-! " ,'I' . ',1M1 TWO OREARST CA'HOlIC EVENTS ~ 1960 ' ,: I ,: I ~VI•.'t "....,. and; t... • MI'acul...... Medal· 1ll,ln.-Luc..... 'II. turlc." ....., _ I siere are co'.chairmen; witli ivIrs.," d~?,n.lgh~, Mar~h 24. Ml's. He le,I1':',':::- ,':, ",BEfORE YO,U '. S~ltE.rl~d;:- Vaduz, Li~ch'.ftl'.i..., In,!lbruck,.' AU'frla r... Germany .. MUft'" I ~illiani EddY,' as dired~r. Music; ,~hvelra.lS c?alrm <";~, ,~'U', Y ~ ,T'RY . I 0Jt Obetamm.rgCMI,_ V~"ic.. Padua, "orence, A'!'., ~d ·e,.,AOI lo~. ,... I 'I will be by Felix Fouruier a~d, •. ~~her" Spru~g p at:l:s , ~nclude •. a , I, . ." 'Genaa. MonN Carl. _ Lour..., , , 'I ,the Sunsetters.' . sPlr~tual,program and ~an~e l~" ,. , ,I: '.. ~ ...... - OIoal•• ' oconoOl~ alr ....v... '.lgh._I"... ·uPo. _ ....... ' ,April; and a' Mother~s Day Com,", , . ' , Accompanl.d 0100 by • 'r'oII 01 Spl,ltual DI,odor. I ST. WILLIAM, munion, Sunday, imd calendar I 22 ...fo......abl. day.:....OIl.' $891.00. A VAlUI you CAN'T .,'010 TO MIa. I FALL RIVI~R supper in May.> A. ,strawberry I W. have ""arant.ed accommodatl_ for tho Oboram ...._ ' .... i.. ,..., I The Women's Guild will· hold ' 'festival is on the June schedule. I " and ,'ho e.charl.tlc Cong,-. ' I "O"LO'S'M·0'BILE' a telephone whist tonight. Nex't The Gouncil of. Catholic ' I ,Con.ult your Ira... _ t or ..,1"_ I regular meeting is Wednesday, Women will hold a public' whist ,Oldsmobile,;, Peugot _ Renalt I , international Catholic Travel _ I March 9. George Harrison will party ,at 7:30 tonight hi Fatima 67 Middle Street, Fairhaven I . 1026 1"'" •. , N,W. • MEtropoU_ 8-6675 • Wathl........ O. C. I speak on Serra Club activities. , House. j
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SATURDAY CYO PROGRAM IN SOMERSET: In left photo, Father' St; Thomas More Parish, opens the game for jumping ~enters, Charles Patrick J, 'O'Nem;'" assistaritatSt_ Thomas, More, manifests the same ,Simmons of St. Thomas More ana Richard Curt of the same parish. seriousness of the Occasion as 'players Richard Parker, St. Louis of France; the right photo, Edmund ,Ferr~ira~ St. J()hn of God, Charles Simmons, John Fitzsimmons. St. Thomas, MQre; and John Frado; St. John of God. St. Thomas Mote. ~nd Elmer Gagne battle for rebound.' ' , , In 'the' center photo~ George ':Brough, chief of ireferees; and '& member o:f.: ' r ,:
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Somers~t'" 'B~$ketbdlr';~~()P;<StfJ~~ASs~i~t~~n,'pet~,$~ithj)f$~.Da~~~~!It,:Anch~r,,:,' """ '""S' ",' ,.,", ' ',' f ".'V'! "i,;Jlu,h n,9, "fr~,~~b,ts" M~,n ~,n,,~ ..,eot C~usader Relay Team"";,, Pro~,e,~: ,,~ccess. UI "(~~t ... ,,e Unpa'idCoaches"" ." 'r',~: ,v",
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i, : ' . by!ohn C o r r i g a n ' By 'Jaelt KlDe~~", "'" ,,', " ' : (,"""'" ,.", ,,,,'wlthall the,attentIon f{)Cused (naturally enough) OIl " , 'The 'stre~t8 'of'So~etset' are smgularly bereft:,of boys JOP~IN (NC)'":""""AKmght ,the forthcoming Holy' Oross-ProviOet'lce' College basketbaU / of high school age on Saturday afternoons;' they'repla,ying ",of St. C?regory was bounced 'game;s1ated'for 'Fehru'ary' 28t~nd .f~te.d',·tO'dedde 'the New basketballc at'th~"High School ~ 'i~'.~~e;'.J.1e~lt'f~~~:,:"asa"~I~h schOOl';bask~~ball"EngI~~dh90P title,~~o,~h~r ,sport has,:~~ ,ge,tting com-, ',I 'Somerset CYO League. The. pro&:ram Ul unijer. the, JOInt ,~oacb here because he was parabvely short shnftm •, , . '"I' • \ 'h- . f' St 'J h' ',' f" ,"" ',"" overgen~tous with'his"time and . tow,!, Vl~a.nova, Yale,.Manhat. 8Pc:'nso~ IP 0 ",0, n, 0 , to amend that, there' is also'a' talent. ' '" " these: parW., H?wever, the tan, ,and ',1'{~w' rC?~,k Un~versitYt. .• ~ ~nd St. Th~"!as .Mo~ fair shareoHalent.in the league~" A. F. (Bus) Bowers donated '~rusader'8 ~ulbpolar.'~thle- in the exce~lent time of 7:40:5., " parIShes, and partIclpatIon,ls Leading scorer after seven ga~es many 'free hours as head coach t!C prowess IS equally eVIdent These showmgs 'have prompted open to any boy in Somerset· is Ed 'Ferreira wi.th' a total of of the crack basketball team' at in track~and just ,recently, at the grand old man of Holy Cross of secondary school age. ' 103 points. In close purs~it are McAuley High SchOQl, a private the expense of P.C., to boot. . 'track, Coach B~rt. Sullivan, 1:e Pollce Chief John O. Soare. Richie Parker (101) and Charley Catholic institution conducted by Pete Smith .. of South Dart- declar~, that thIS IS "the best 18 league presSimmons (97). The fi~ur~s were the Sisters'of Mercy. His gener- mouth is '8 member of the crack two-mile, team ever produced" compiled' by Woody Murphy, osity won him the papal knight- two-mile relay team which has at Mount P.acka.choag. WheB ident, ,assisted by Leonard ,official statistician of the league. hood honor-but. it also cost him been exciting Purple-tainted Bart who is m hIS 49th seasOR Shea secretary Although the Somerset circuit the coaching post, because he enthusiasts all season long. The a,s coach, makes a statement and" G e 0 r,g e ,operates independently of the was not paid for his services, runners copped' the Knights of like that,track ,fans are inclined' Brough ref.' Fall River CYO, Fathers Berito B6wers' aSsistant'cOach Loren' Columbus,games in Boston, fin- to sit up ,and take a look. eree - in - ;hief. .. ' R. ~ga and'i'atiick ~:,O:Neih 'Olsen, was dismisSed for. the',' ishedthird in the Millrose Games ,Even ih~~'ou~ndingaccom- ' ; There llre,six ' lealC?e..chap~ai~,expressedthelr, same reason.' , ",' at New Yorkl.an~ then came ,plisnments'are b~il!g shadowed,',-" teamS iD the. ""gratitUde to'Rev.. 'Walter'S~lli-" The MisS<luri'St8te High SchOol back.to comemflrst again 'In somewhat'bY ,the remarll:able " loop and:;,eacbJ, l yan, F. R. CY~ Dlrect?r, for his' 'A c t i v it i e Ii 'Association; ,with the Boston Athletic 'Association' abil1t~ :of the'F~e~~an ~am!l", ,;:; has "a ten man " " ~valuable aSSIstance in the or- whiCh' McAUley is affiliated ,Meet two Saturdays l!lgo.., of which we spoke above Led . ,I. ",gan~~i"n~l ~ages of the ,new" ordered'the dismissals; Th'e"asso~ • "- Pete graduated from Lawrence. ,by Long t~lan'd's' j~hn O'Co~nor. ,': "F roster., S qua <t, ass i g n me n,t. " " ,";" 'pro~~m" .' <' " " . ,:: eiation ',said a rule' adoptedinCentral,;Catb,olic in ~956, and whoruns"iri" ~~' a~ch~r P9Sition:' ,~.. was, made on ,8 talent "dlstribu-, ", ,; SomefS~,b~~l,lg.a "relatIvelY'i958"''teqwres 'all 'coachEis Of' 'between tb«m, I an,d,the time he ,the cubs won' the 'NeW,' England. :, tion' Pattern ,88" a result, of,which ',' 'llffi~co,m,m~n~ty, It"was deemed':'" mem})eio', schooistd, draw' Ii .sSl- < ,entered, ,the, ,.Cross, - his family, Amateur A,'thlEitic Union indoor', ,:'; the competition waxes keen.,,'" "advl,SabJepy Fllthel's :Fragll and,'ary. ' ; " " ,,' ", . ',' moved' to South Dartmo~th. He, ,mile at MIT downing the Prov~ , Chieftains, .coached by Leon- O'Ne~L" to, ~w.bine, resources,"\ "L"sli ped ~p:,1 hadn't, been (' is.a SeaioI'; a.'~athe!I)atics major 'den~"CoiIe~~.:,v:!!rsity,en, route:, :' .~. ard Tessier and Ernest Tev~ ther~by"affor~bnga,greater,num"" It "P" 'th tli '-, WIth a strong mterest in teach-" ,O'Connor mClden~lly is also , currently lJaq the:lea~e' with' ~ ',~O~~, opportunityto,.'play. ','.lae;::;:i~~ :idW.~ister~R:::~~~"7, 'lng, a~d ill des<:rib~d'b! pie Holy, a terr!~i~,~:~lfro:iler: With only a: ,'''~':, a 6:-1 record. Friars, guided by T. ::, ,~OYl~~I>~ ~"the case, ~ad, McAuley principal, who took full ,Cross faculty as "a brlllia\1t stu- 40 yar.d, handlc~p, d.own in New, ; t Art~ur Ma~chand ~ndJames. :;a:rin~YO~~;t~~e:~l :~::.' blam~ 101; ,the new dilemma: But '.d~n~." He has an J>: avera~e, anc;l York, ov~J,' ~hr,~stmas, he ,outran,;, " "TecltDeadlin ,', " " , she qverf;ame her, remorse ,in eliCIts comm,e?ts lI~e these fro~ t~is <:~untry,~ p!in:\ber one Olym- " Colbns, are 10 seco~d place, one' game ,back. Rounding out the The'deadline for Tec: Tourne "time ~o solv,e all, immediate prob:- ,~ports .pUbllc~st BIll Crowley~" ~>lC !I0l?~ful ~,n, t!?:e,...E 50 meter, ,,' Iii' ""'to.' . " " , . y lem She pressed Father James Pe,te IS one of the best half- race. Tom Mu~phy, ~ate of For«lleaIDle s staff of mentors are Fra";,kGardella,'E,dwardLoiselle, quina , lca.loin"ls,tOd~Y-:-::W~l1Chre-. :B 'C"oon'ey' 'McA'ul'e'y reli'g'I'on" milers we've had' in 'a 'loniham andnowof,~e New York, " . , m d s us t won't be the same '' '" . , ' . " ,," ' '''. """ , Denms Raposa,and Henry,Con,.th"'t'D',' ;,J" . " , ,",' : . ' teacher who ,IS eligIble ,under time, " AthletIC, Cl\lq" Th~s took place", , WI OU unee In competition " ,', ' ," " " 'I t "de ' 1' t g " roy:. The 'HiiltO 'er~ bid for a ber+~ , the associatio'n's rules, .into ser~ Wi~lJ. hiD.! on the, t'\iV0-mle ~ " 'Ie ~pm~n amet> Assisting George Brough in f' ~.:t':'1'6PtP..:"\",,, .:",,~"""vice all"'coach, Then'ithe' Mc- t relay 'squad are Senior Don yearlYPJ;ogramsponsoredby~he , ,', .i"", or ...e t' 'd'j)"'th' 11 consecubv~ year .." ,. , h ' of Mil' ,', 'kee,"Sopu"" "AAU to provl'de top' - 'flight co..... - " the whistle-tooting. department ' h.'" ,." "f" i " 'Auley'; WarrIOrs' went, out'· and, 'Mlc aI ski' 'wau are.'a nu~bef,of yp~ng,m~,with ~as '6~g~J~el'F!"he~r,d,~Fe~ ",at, ,"'whiPIied'.'Seneca 'HighSchool bmore Dave HEmderson',()f Troy" 'Petition~or potent~llliOlympi~", l: a wealth 'of b~~k~t~all;.experi- ni:ht.~:O~ a:l~n:::'~lia:~~~~"'58-50'thenight, alter. th~ two ,New '('York, •and, 'Junior'J,ay v , T~~'~t~sh~ap ~~le,reiay tea~'.", , ence' They include 'Ed} Loga.n, On the Tourney sidelines" will unpaid,c~aches were dlsmlssed.~ .,Bowers 'of' Long Islarld, "'SmIth also "cl~~~ed :'up, at the' Mil!r0se ,.,:'_ ~b' Souza, Dan Salm0I1;' BIll ~ Somer~ei 'High. '," '. ' '." "I ~p'polle we will keep F~ther :and Bowers rotate the~~mber gam~~, ,'Yi~h' .~ 3:~0:~, effort-a, ,: Gibney and Al Costa, ;TM' ~atter, BrIstol: County, as 'usUal,will'. Cooney f?r the ;restofthe s~a- ·2 leg and the anchor posItion" remar~,~b~etl~,e--w~uch brought,,, four are college students, Bob have' 'strOng representation' in son,' then' engage' a salarIed At the. K of games, Holy them'In flttSt, ah~~d of the Balti- , >,' Sou~a is a iunio~ at Prov:idence, the Tourney, New Bedford VOeacoach next season,' Sister Rose Cross beat ;Va~e" B.rown and more. Olympic Club, and the, CO,llege an~ a member of the tional, 'Attleboro ,and ,Fairhaven ~arie ,'said..'·,But it' will be a " Harvar~, , fin~shmgfir:st . by 40 highly-tout~, ,Yfilliams R n d Friars' varSIty ~seball team. have qualified, as has New Bed- fmanclal dram on us." yards m a tune, of 7.43,9. (At Manhattan Colleges' teams. Dan Salmon a recent benedict, ford' whih 1 d' t ' t th~se same games the Freshman Smith FiDeScbolar ,.,! ' . .' , c c ose ou amos Rel"ef Agency Allots mile relay four knocked off . ' . is a semor at, the Umverslty of successful season in indep'endent r ' B 't C 11 B to U· To return for 1l moment to · ' . T k o S on 0 ege, os n mver. h h ewon, h IS ball agamst, Lawrence Central, Rh ode I san 1 d were Upp les to . ur ey sity and Brown-in 3'26'6- Pete· SmIth, his ,success on the' numerals in freshman basketball. Catholic Tuesday night. b 't ,h' h l'ttl, 'I t') cinders and i~ the classroom ' 'll G'b former' So m e t rse" . , p.e. in N.I.T. '; ou w atlC the a lMillrose e more,Games a e r . ,two adlv.itj.es '. • BI,. 1 neY', . NEW YORK , (NC)-Catholk: a Then which, especially· Tbe selection of Providence Relief Services-National Catha-. pitted against the best in th~ when undertaken simultaneousHigh bas~~tball and baseball letterIr\a~ . 1,!l ,an, upperclassman College for,'the National Invita- lic Welfare Conference an- East the CrUsadE;rs slackened ly, demand time, and more time, at Stonehlll, w~lle Al Costa,.a tion'Tourney in Madison Square nounced here it has recently 00- off ~ . bit' and finished behind has not removed him from the standout performer at Coyle, IS Garden was greeted enthusias- ¢un distributing relief' supplie!l 'V'll d Y l' H C . general scene. Father -Toho '.' . h' ~eshman year at New In Turkey 1 anova an a e. . . was H " S J' , . " now m IS -4 tically, by Friar supporters in~, . : ," " , ." clocked at 7:47:6, nowers ran the aran~ '.:, ';; ~e" distinguish,~d" Bedford Tech. this area. As w,as ,~he case ,last ~~ .al;{ency ,?f. the U;,~' BISh-,, ,anchor leg here, as he had done professqr ()f, et?I~S ~t t~,e coll:gea Outs~dlDg . PI,a:f~ • year; Catholic colleges will"fig- ops ,s;l~d :~at It, ~eache,~, agJ,'e~-, '.at the' K of' Cevent. Back in' sums i~ u~,. ~hls ~ay: . Pete. I.m-. These: men, .ha:vetheir work ure highly in ''the post season ment WIth ;the TurkIsh Re~., Boston 'at the BAA Meet, how_,mers~s ,~~se1f}~ his, ~tu~he!!> "" cut out for them pp. a given day.". '"classic: •'Villanova has accepted C:es~ent SoCIety ~ Ankara to' ever,' it was' a case of sweet 're-' j3.n~ un'cll~r~e!il ?lI~Se~ ~n .track., '. ", For am6n~. t~~ p~ay~r!l l.s a ,g~n- .' .8 bj~ -and iUs a vir,tual'eertainty dlSU;lbute food ,WhICh is made venge'for HolY CrosS, as the two- ' ,He s .a :re~~ ~e~, mal',l, In ev7ll", " '" erous smaUering,., "of, Somerset, ,t)lat ,defending">chaIhpion"S~ avaiJable by ,the U.S..govern- milers with Smith'now running' way. y~~, tile. ,vvonderful thmg 'C,) Hlghfootball".' playerii' ",Who~'J:t?hn'.(j1i~·'~ back:"'" ",', " me~~ from its ~\Jrplus ~?~k. ancho;, "whizzed" past George- ' about.~i~~s" t~<!t ~e's, ~,w~!l-' :- "... sometimes forget just, ~liich: ,,,,J.lC?l!,:, ~ro~. PI;~§.U~~,p'ly",~in, Mrs. Mary,;Sallou,~,.,Cleve-' . , ' . "...!tnoWn as anyone In hIS ~class" ,;:, game it', Is 1h'at ·they'~ pl~rirlg,. , partlc!pat~,e,lther, In the N,I,T: land\ formerly ,CRS mISSIon diLeMoyne xpanslon has a great number of friends,
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With the Chieftai~s .is Joe Pi-. ~o~ the.N..C.. ~.A .. CODling.:up.Mon~ !Say, p,ight ,is ~e game of the year
Giammo, Ail'-Diocesan ·fu~~back in 1959; Elm~r Gagne,' All-Stal:!3 Class D" tackle, leads interference for the Rams. And sO it goes on down .the fine. Lest you be miSled we haBtea
,in New England, Holy Cross VB. Prp:vidence., ,Many thousands of f8ns unable to gain entrance to Alumni Hall will view the ,game over Channel 13.
rector in Gree.ce, is in Ankara to dire~t operations there, a state-
ment said. The U, S. government requires that whenever surplus foods .are distributed in foreign countr~es.~ American ~itizeB mun oversee its, distribution.
SYRACUSE
(NC)-:LeMoyne" and is the most completely nat- .. .:;. u~l man, around, as well as'
College. has initiated' a $3,250,000 program to build a student center, classroom building, athleticcenter and library fa,,;fities at the 'l4-year-old Jesuit inatitutiOR.
bemg as fr,lendly and unaffected' as possible." ,Good reason, there-, fore, f~rHo1y. Cross to be proud, of ~im-~ the team of whicla, he li. an mte&J;al membe1:.
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20
THE. ANCHOR7""Di~cese of fa.1I F.eb. 18, 196.0 .. '. .River-Thl,Jrs.,. . _ ...
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LAY
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PARTICIP~TION: Outstanding among parishes of the Diocese
John T. Trainor and Edgar T. Fortin. Center, Atty. Thomas E. Marum leads congrega:tion' in 'responses. Right, Frederick Demetrius, one of two ,"early birds'.' assigned ·to.G· o'clock Mass' every 'other Sunday morning~ . explains his j~b .il? his seven childr~n.'· . :
in put.ting into practice papal' directives on congregational participation in :M~ss is Sacred Heart, Fall River.' Left, lectors go' over assignment schedule 'with Rev. John J.' Regan: . Left to right, Raymond F. Powers,
Native Japanese.. Sacred.Hl}art, P ar,lshioners, ~all' ,Rivet, . Talk~ I Bis~()p McGuckeri Vocations Show' I Ch . h dE 'A . \,"Greets Athletes 'Sharp ~ncrease '. '. ,!" : .ur.c,. an ,. veryone,·. .ppr~1)e~ :',: ".~At· Olympics
TOKYO (NC):-Vocations. If' n . lit t 't lk' h B\'P~~i~ia.·M~Gowa,n • h" SQl!AW VALLEY (NC) OU to the' pri~sthoodareiricreas- .:F"ll' R~ a "Url&'d tOh' ad' Int' ~ urfc R"; ~ : lh!'l, IJ YR re athParls ~onhe: of Sa~retdh"H~artt' -A warm welcome for an •. t : · f · t -' t " .a .' lver; ner e lrec Ion 0 . ~v.Jo n . egan, e parIS IS among e 'mos ' army of athletes from ~'dismg a. an. ~v~m. 3;s er e ; . aQvan,~ed in :.th~'Diocese'in the carrying out· of papal directives with regard to CODgTe-' ", than converSIOns In Japan, . t' l' t" t' . M .. N' '1 _. 'f S "d H t' "t . 22 '..' tant ]~nds" to the. "fimiiliar. ' "c th l' . ""1 ' t ' " ga.lOna par IClpa. 'lon .. Ill:' ass, uc eus ,0 acre ear s sys em 'IS a. -mali. group" surrouridings of 'their Father'. were .' . 'd' .. 0 . .' , .',' ......: . " ' '. . . ., th e a 0 I.C . popu a IOn " . f 1 t · · h 'of . the o· 'ne IS" . . parIsh . " .... , ' , come' tIS· h' . .,AbsenteeIsm .' , ' e11 SI'nce the end h as. r·IS " '" ec ora or" rea ..ers,. , have ,already among lectors IS' 'house" was. extended to partici~ar fro~n 100,?00 to: 265,~00.· .. ' on, d~ty.' at·· ev~r-y 'Sulld~y . far, under"!lirection' of the Holy 'very -low; says'.Father Regan;:If pants in .th~ VIII Olympic Win.. To :tJ,elp· tram the,large n~lJl~~ . ¥ass .. tp: lead· the people m. Union Sisters staffing the par~ a man'"can'f come to the'Mass for ~er Games by .Bishop Joseph T. 1?er of Y0':lng ~enwlth,·v~ca~l~ns, ~ Mass responses. and ,to read ochial scho'ol, and 'participate 'in which he is scheduled, he. will .. McGucken. of' Sacramento. the ne~~"$8~0,000 St~, X'a~ler . th E" tl d G 1 f' fh a complete 'dialogue Mass each try, 'to get another to ·fill his place' The "familiar surround;ngs of' . t dO, , aiy is sched . e . pIS e. an . , ospe ·0 .. e . ... . their Father;s'. house" . is the In er lO~esan semIn,., . .- day: . First 'F:riday,) or, failirig that, report to Father; . uled to open here III AprIl. .:, Tti· h df" ' . f' . . Children Help who can alWays find a substitute.. :recentlY.completed Alpine-style ; A four-story structure. de, e men, a . our, or. lve . '. " . . Queen of the. Snows Church .. . d' t' .,. "d t '1"30 t ' practice' sessions "with .Fattier. Tile chIldren help III another The lector stands before the I which was, dedl'cated by Jamea. slgne c, accommo a e· s u' . ' 0.,.· S' th ' 1 g t' 't'b 1 S d .. dents thle'seminary,will- be cori-": ,J;te~an before assumlllg. t!ie~r' ~h~Yld' 1~<:eM' eretls no donH er ta cHongrt~ga lonl! ,JtUS H,e oW adcre. F ran cis Cardinal' McIntyre; S acre ta n , b . h . J . 't' F th ' ,", d,ubes last S p r i n g' Now· '"C I ren S ass a ear, ear s pu pI , IS S 18 A hb' h f L6 A I ' ducted y t e esm . a er.s, .' " ". ; .' ill ," ell tra'ned youngsters' .. ' h . , d' A't" thO . rc. IS op 0 s nge es, on : It is the 'reshltof .the·Holy ~hey're ._"~.r.ofesslo~a~s" .~~,<i, . e· W , - l '. ..' J!lIC~OP, one equlppe. ·.e theeveofthe·star~ofthe·games .. .. .,," S' ' '1 . . ' f ·,th··· smoothly dIrect congregatlons.lll . scattered· through the congrega- beglllnlllg of Mass he requests . Bish ,R b t J D . , f ee s specla concern or e .., . . . . , t' , t· eg 1 S d yo Ma es '11 ·to . t" t . iti'" op 0 er . .. Wy.e!'. 0 d.eveloprrleil~'of.a native c~ergy, ~.~llow~ng.tbe flTosLp!1rt of ~~e. .. ,IOn a .:r... u a:. un a" ':~' ~"" ,.par lClpa e, :usm,g, \ ~lr. ':Reno, Nev,;preached t)1e sermon p~rs(ina~ interest of. ~hede_~ap.al.program for.M~ss,parhcl-· en~()~ra~l7 ..thelr elders to gIve ~w~ mlS~a~S or those, ~':~P~lt~~,". 'atthe'~ dedication' MaSs' of, the" ",' i . parting.. ApQstoJk InternunCio to.. , ,pabon.· ;., ... . :.. :' . ", .. ' t;he Latm .·responses, by" th~· parISh. church nestled in the JIigh. c4:apan,.· N<;hpishop ;Maj~milian. .' S~<;.:ed.H~a~t par~shlOl1ers~lve We, h?ve th~ee, or. fo~! }~~u- ,.~~e~~as,' The, edifice. is: l<x:a.ted " A.~Furstenberg ... a~d th~. gen< the·. sltr~le ..~eS?~ni;le~ , to. :M~~s, .' sand.coPle~ of a pamp\1,~e~,m~~~l . on a sloping site not :far, from" •• !. erosity 'c,f benefactors"'both: in .prayers:.answ.ermgfor.·exampler.. ~~~aI)ged for congregabon~l.l?ar~., the Olympic arena, Directly: be"'. Japan- 'and ~ abroad..' Outstandipg.. "Et cu~,' spiritu: .tuo,'"to. the ·O·.C: ~O' '/ t~clpat"i?n,': sa~d ~ather .~egan., 'hind' the altar;'forming· a.naturaL ;i'!nong ~hose who pav:ehe1pe~ to,' I>rfest:~ '. ~'D;~minus", _v,!lbillc~lll':. " SUBIACO (NC)-A business~ "T~~~,\ are dIstrIbuted, \I~ :,alll. back<!.rop, ,towers, .. ,f,~~~.capped' .\ build thle seminary' is 'JjJseph and. Amen to..' '=/Jllec~s. ,.The, man" in . Miami Florida, hai, pt)ws, • ':.. . . ' . :' , ' Little' Granite Ch,ief.. , . . Cardina~ Fring~; Arc~b~sh~P' Of "Pater ~bster~', is sai<i i?, ~?:,?~us:~ p'ledg~d $50,000 'ioward. the conRai~.HaD;d. .\.,;~ .. " ~ouse'hold, of .Faith. .' . $~OP,OOOg~est~.;: The :l~ctor..ralses~hls'~a~ ~~st:.·, . ~.t ..has 'been ~stimllted that ~4.0': : C()l<;,gne~', Gl7~maily, . wh9~~. See: .' l-fextstep, wIll b; re.cltatlon of. struction' of. _. ' \ Hils ~:adopt~<i" ..the.To~y()· ·arch-.' ~l~pra~e~s nowsal,d .b~the alt:'l~; . hotis~ l!-t "the ·.$tiblaco Academy': :be!~re . ~;~c~: resI?onse r~ . •~cH~; ':per 'cent of t!te skie..r s ,and skat~~ . ,,: dio.cese, ':. . . "',' '. . . ' I DOYS, then· o~ th~KY;l"le, GlorIa,:: liere in Arkansas> ;" ., . ' .: J!l~de.,t? ~ndlc~~e It to the .p,e<rl\lt;i " fro.m 33 nabons .participating hi.. · .:' The' modern hi~torY of priestly. ,', C,redoj,Sanctus,,, ~enedic.tq~a!l<i'l" The" ben'efactOr.· is ,. George.' . T~e men, a ~ fll:stunderstall<i~bly~' ,'the.' gain'es are Catholics, Bishop;: /,'. ~u~aii.(;m in 'J~I>an began' wit!t ;~ ~~mus 'D~h:(TlJe' ,c~~l<ir,e~"of~l1e ... Qoury,-'a:-'1,9~4< grad\,tateof 'the',' ~er:v.ous ?Dout ·facing' a ;lar~e' 'McGucken remind<;ld these' ~ha~: the establishmen~ 9f;,two semi-. '. • ,:. . . . . . " ...... : . '~'.: .. '-: \ BeneciiCtirie Preparatory Sch'ool.· con~regatlon, are now at ease 111 tI~e Olympic competitions trim;.~ riariesby the Paris Foreign Mi!l- Dlocese.Qf ,Llne'oln', ',:.-: . Now 'aidllVestor arid':banker in' ~elr assignment.··. scend the barriers' of. nationalism:' sion 'Soci.~ty, one i~ Tokyo i~ 'PI' . . C" th' d·..·"·. Miami; 'Mr.; C6ury' was rdared' Special. mention. should, be and bring together y. . --'e I87-l- a~d the'. other m NagasakI : ans .~ew a. " e .rc~ ,.' in MCCurtain,' Okla.. He began ~ade of ,Sacx:ed' Heart's ';."e~rly, f~om many 'nationS in friendly , in 1875"j~s.ea.rlY as 158Q,Jesu~t. : ~I~COLN (NC)-Wlth a mll~.liis career as ar'unner for a Chi-' bIrds";, two mep who alternate ' ~ontest; ,. ,~, mission.ers·had·opened two'.semi. st hon-dollar ' ! ' tmen ' t f'" lectoring duties ....,'~-_ .., .,' . . . ." 1 cathed,ralas . d the I ,.key-' '. cago mves Irm a ft er h'e . .. at 6 o'clock . . Mass', . •ri!-~-~';"''-;'-.-~_ . naries, .:but tl;1ey· ~ere closed ,in OIl,<;l, a. on~. rang~ ., eve opment was graduated from Notre' Dame- each' Sunday mo!-,,~ing, leaving· .. " . the 'great persecution': Of H112.; , .p'~~gra~ ~ for.. ~h~ ,73-'year,old University· in 1928 to the other. 20 on, ·the roster the' C,O.RRE'/4, , . 'be used ' 1a t er'I'd~sses;. . They are, F red"· k' .', . "'. .'R,ap Id Gr.owtb. ,' ...... "' , DIOcese h · . . · .of · ' .Lmcoln ,' " . Nebraska· ' . . . ,' , : The, .guest house. 'will er~c . • In 192!l a new.Tokyo semmary" J'~s .been mapped by. BIShop, to' 'd'evelo'p' the' la'y re'tr'eat' pro ' \ DemetrIus, and Daniel Delaney. . ONE STOP . ". " .... ames V. Casey. " , '., -. " . . , was e~ected ~nd dedIcated!? S~.. , , .. .".. ." .' '. ,gram. of the Subiaco Monaste .; ~~Ul1e.Iectors, however, sl;1ar~l SHOPPING C:1NTER ~ F:rancIs XavIer,' The, Holy. See .' Othe~; pr<?Jects destmed for .the. ' . '.. , ,..,~. in the. distinction of mak'ng:' .. " , , , ' , .... . . . " . plannl'ng'boa'rd· the L' 1 ,. ., I and to, serve alumm and famIlIes ' .' '. 1. • ~e,clared It' tl1e regIOnal semmary; ' . . .. ' ,. . ll~CO n pre- . ' ". " . ' . Sacred Heart o'ne of tlie ou-.:.. · 11 J' .. .. 1932 - d 1't g ..., late. Siud .mclude a mother house of the, 265 .stu~.ents of the prep , 'ta'. 'd" ., ., , ,, " , \ . , .. ' ,- TelevlsioD -Furniture' .. f, ~r.a apap·m ... ,a.n. rew: . .. . . " ' . . .',,' ,school FatherMi h 1 L n 'g' s n mg parlsh~s In tl,le ~.1OCese:. - GrooerJ' . ,rapIdly, soon havmg an·.;enroll-' fqr. t?e.. Jl..IerCY~Ist~rs St, . . ' , . . , . c ~e.:', ~ s~, , with. ·regard· ,to carr in 'ut ttl ' . '-l Appliances .. merit of 100' ~eminarians.. ,.:,' F:rancIs,.. DIO.ces.an comm~n~t~ of . q'S'13" IS, J)res.!dent of the ~ca~:-.. liturgicai ideais 'of th J;JI .e .' 104 AileD St•• New Bedford i : When the 'started many of' . ~uns;·.a ,ch~~d care center \ for.· emya~? fath.er. R~bert Lazzerl, Piu~ e .a e .o~' . WYmal! 1-9351 ', e .'the 'profE,ssors were forced· to·, .qomeless chIldren;, at,ld .a, new. O,S.B., IS .t!t .prmcIpal.. ,.'. . . . lellVe' and most of. the semi.: chancery' building, . ." "!YIr: CouI;y, who recently con-' · narians \vlere draftedint<> Japan's' '. ' Bishop . 'Case~ also disclosed'· trlbuted$l00,OOO ·to the stude~t military JEorces,'Those wno ':i'e';" . that. the Fr~ncIsca~.l!'athers, of. lo~n, fund, a~~ot~~Dame Ummairied cl:lUlq. ,pJlrsue their' work tl1~ St .LOUIS pro.vlnc~ ~lan to versIty; ~~ld ~1S g~ft for the re- . only. ull dE,r the,' most. trying clr:'-; ?u~ld, a,$5:00,000~et~~.at ,cen.~~,r ~ ~reat .~ou,se, at S':lbl~~O. was ~ased '. Prescr.iptions called :for cumstances.... A fire' in ' 1941' m Lmcoln. Itwll!,.mclude a . on hl~ ,.bebef that. a man do~s 24-HOUR -WRECKER '. and delivered ' destroyed' three quarters of the: fr.iary, convent,,, chapel".libt:ary,:~:....his j)e,st. :and': .J!lost .. important _ SERVICE· seminary' and, air .raids'· caused . lecture hall, dining' room . arid" thinking whet:\, 011 a·retreat." "'.~ 'HEADQUARTERS FOR" further damage... :.~ . , m:i.vate ri?oms for 60.retrealants. . ' , .DIETETIC SUPPLIES 35 HILLMAN STREET ;'Thisyear's ordinations should; It wilLbe kn~Wnas. the. GJ"d, Mgn·l.ifacturer~ ,Fight. 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 NEW 'BEDFORD b.ring the total number qf Jap-' Counsel·,Retreat. Center. . .... Lewd:Gr.:e.e.ting. ,CG,rds·. . New. B~dford- .. " . ,:". WY. ·6-8343 .. anese diocesan· priests over the 300 mark, .There are more .Iian' ,t. ,Louis University, . "NEW'¥QRK-'<~C)-An asso- '--.-.-..-.~,--------~. , , ' l -....... "'!""" l~O Japanes¢ pr~ests in reli:;i,)U3, G' $250 '000 G'f . ' ciatioriof' greeting 'card manu.. ' '1~~~g~~~~~~;:g;;;~~g~~~~~~;;~] . ets. . , . I t·, facttirers',has .pledgedcoopera-; I. orders throughout the country.. ' ·.ST.. LOUIS '(NC)~The St.· ti.on with ilaw enforcement agen,., · Cai'roU Un'iversitY .: .' '" Uis; Cleariing i~~ouseAssocta;' cies to help stop: a~stribu~ion"of ", " ',..:.. L'b .,', ~.; t1o~' a'}nounced.,a $250;000, <iOna-' o~jectiohaple gr~eting' cards:· ., P.' ans ~"!lew' I. ra~y;' .. "~i.!?ri to St.!Louis'U!li'Y~rsity.w!t~" \E~ecutiVe: \DiJ;ect~r S.. ,Q.... , . CLEVEL.AND (NC;-Jolin Car-: no~ strings attached: ~" ",": ..' '~}' Shani:iori declarecl' Uiat '"~e'cenl1y''' , roll UniVt!rsiiy:plans to build 'II ' ' . 'The ass()ciation,.:is made'uP'Qf .. 'a-: n'u'm b:er" ;0£ unscrupuious $.1:,500,000: library ,with ',:i 'cap.,< ~he :five·'.largest' ·.,.baOks· in! the', .. sources have 'm~tketEid obScerie . . acity. for 360,(lOO ·v.olumes, C~n- ,city; The. gift :brings,..to niore ~asty..and 'sacriligious' so':called ~ ,: . ,., .'FO.R'· THE' TRADE . EVER· .~ . struction will, be completed- iii' "than" three .'million' dollars "the.... 'greeting' cards." . . time, for '. the. 75th~ aimiversaty. . cOiItriQutioD's'.i,' from" 'St..··. Louis; , .' He said··members. of the';asso-' . ", . celebratiolrl'nextyear, More··;ha~\:: ",firms'and i~dividuals t();thetini~'j ciatiori 'wim: :take"drastic; seif.: . . ,'SUCCESSOR TO LOUGHLIN CHEVROLET . . tw~-th.itd~i ,()f the. money:, ~s ,al- ~ versity's .- d~~v.e ,to. ;,x:iIi~ $18: mU- .- policing; m~asui'e.'!·to,ensur.-· ob- . . .. :5':.6' . 'S<M' -:. ·.'·I'LL" S·T'.· :' Op··e. ~ ( E.v~.ry' :E~,n.i.~,g.·· '. '~~.' '1',~9·'48"6'. ,', ready .a:irailable~.'An :anonyui·;us·, lion for campus' .expansion :dur;;' 'ser-vance'" of: decertcy·.standarl1l '. .. _, , YY ;T. . \ ., , ' donor. offE~red.,$500.QOo.·. : ;; ". '; :;. :~g: t.h~· p.e~i fiv.~:)'e..artil.":; :, L . ] :. "on"an: iI14Wi~~wide .bilSiil.",:::;"': ·l~···~,~~;;~·t·~·~" ~~~~~;;gg~~~~~~~~'~' ~,~.~._~
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