'R'e'ports
'The
ANCHOR
Fr'Qm' 'First Five
Parish'es
Show Anchor Circ'ulation Gain
Pastors, priests and parishioners throughout the entire Diocese, are rallying to the support of the second annual subscription drive of The ANCHOR. Preliminary reports reveal a decided circulation gain over 1957 when this Catholic newspaper commenced publication. The first five' parishes to report to The Rev. Edward J. Gorman; ,pastor,; informs us . ANCHOR have each attained or surpassed their that his parish, St. Patrick's in Somerset, again parish quotas. We sincerely hope 'every other this year is up with the diocesan leaders who parish will follow:suit. ' have reached their quotas. St. Roch's pa,-ish' in Fall River is the new And, the same 'good news comes to us from member' of the select group which has met its Rev; James A. Dury who relates that Corpus quota. Rev,. Adrien Gauthier, pastor, and Rev. Christi parish in Sandwich, too, has attained the An Anchor of the So'Ul. Sure and Fir~ST. PAUL Reginald M. Barrette, assistant, both ardent sup assigned 'parish quota. porters of this dio<;esan newspaper, note an ever The comments coming into The ANCHOR office increasing interest in our newspaper among their during our first year of publication pointed to an parishioners. ever increasing interest in our paper among the .Our Lady of the Isle in Nantucket today re faithful of the diocese. The numerous laudatory ported it has exteeded its quota.' This most messages indicated an increased circulation ift PRICE IOe Be.ood CIa.. Man Privilewea encouraging news' came from the pastor, Rev. 1958. The reports of the, five first parishes bear $4.00 per Year Authorized at FaU River. Ma... 'Edward F. Dowling. out this optimistic feeling. We are justifiably Rev. James E. Gleason, pastor, also notifies us proud that the thousands of readers now await that St. Patrick's parish in Falmouth has exceeded the' delivery of The ANCHOR each week. its quota. ;
Fall River, Mass. Thursday, March 13, 1958
Vol. 2, No. 11
Batista R~jects .Unity, Plea' of Cuban Bishops
Bishop Connolly to Ordain Needham Native March 22 . ,
Most Rev. James'L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Fan HAVANA (NC):-An appeal River Diocese, will confer the Sacrament of Holy ,Orders by Cuba's hierarcl1Y .for the for Saturday morning, March 22, in St. Mary's Cathedral OIl mation of a "government of na Rev. Mr. Edward J. Sharpe of St. Joseph's Parish, Needham. tional unity" to el,1d this count ,The son of Mr. and Mrs. The Orders of Diaconate, Ex ry's ·two':'year-old· rebellion has orcist and Acolyte will also be been, turned down by President Richard F.: Sharpe of 45 conferred on seven young meD Fulgencio Batista. Ch estnut S tre~t, N eedham, of the LaSalette Order, AttleThe refusal came as the Cuban Rev. Mr. ,Sparpe was ed\l- bOro. Receiving the diaconate cabinet resigned in a move ap cated in the ,public schools of will be Robert Campbell M.S., parently unrelated to the hier archy's appeal. l!:leven of its 16 Needham, SS~ Peter and Paul Guy Gervais M.S., Armand Gir members are runnigg 'for office Seminary in' Detroit and St. oux M.S., and Raymond Hubert in next June's elections and the Procopius' Seminary, Lisle, Ill. M.S. Rene Bisaillon M.S., Ed law requires them to resign from He will receive an assignment in mund Bourque M.S. and Alberi the Diocese of Fall River. Pard M.S. their governmental posts. . In their first public statement on the turmoil created by the rebel forces of Fidel Castro, the Church authorities, led by His Eminence Manuel Cardinal Ar teaga y Betancourt, Archbishop The Acies, the Legion of Mary's most impressive' and of Havana, made a plea which amounted to asking President important annual function, will be held this Sunday at 3 aatista to modify his personal p. m. in Notre Dame Church, Fall" River. The Most Rever control by admitting opposit.ion "nd Bishop will preside. groups into the government. The word "acies" is taken will be the Active and Auxilial'7' In rejecting tj:l.e~ hierarchy'. .:'rom the· Latin and means. m,embers of the nineteen Praesi appeal, President :Batista said he would remain .in office. .The an army assembled in battle dia, or groups, of the Diocese. A processio'n of the Active mem govermnent asked that publica formation., It is an" appro- bers will begin the ceremony. tion . and broadcasting of the priatE~ name 'for the ceremony Each Praesidia will be identified. bishop's statement be withheld, ' In, which : legionairies,' Active by a blue and gold banner con but its requ~st ~as ignored •. \ and Auxiliary,~gatherbeforeQUI" taining the title ,of, the Praesi
Lady's SI:1rilJ.e, 'to renew their, 'dium, which Is always named.
..~~, 'ealty and consecration. ' . . after a title or privilege of Our
With the simple words,-I am Lady.' .ll thine, my Queen, my Mother; Following the recitation of the md all that I have is thine- opening prayers and Rosary. countless legionaries through- Bishop Cotlllolly will preach the At~byle out the world renew their con-' serm~. All Sl?iritual Directors Registratio~i ,for the fall A chapter in American Church history began 25 years' JJecration 'to Mary, Immaculate and Active Legionaries will t}len term at Monsignor Coyle High each year. At Fatima, Our Lady, . renew' their Gonsecration' ia -.go this March 17. ,Most Reverend Amleto Giovanni Cicog School, ,Taunt9n, will be held asked. for consecration to the pairs before Our Lady's Shrine. nani was named Apostolic Delegate to the United States on Sunday, March 23 at 2 rmmaculate Heart. it is fitting The ceremony will close with and Titular Archbishop' of Laodicea on St. Patrick's Day o'clock at the high schooi. All that the Legion of .Mary, which Benediction. applicants must bring with aspires to spread the' reign of 1933. This gave a new di- any Apostolic Delegate before Officers of the Legion Curia them the last report card Jesus through Mary, should be of the Diocese are: Spiritual Di;. I'eCtion to a career already him. received and, be r~ady to . among the tlrst to comply with rector, Rev. Edward A. Oliveira; remarkable for its service' Archbishop Cicognani has undergo an ~xamination of her wishes. President, Jam' e s Lenaghan; 110 the Holy See. It also led traveled in, and knows more in one hour. :" ' , : ' Turn to Page Eighteen . Taking part in ,the ceremony to impressive new achievetimately, more of the United Ments and had a far-reaching States than any other prelate Influence on the Church in the ever to Come to this country Vtlited States. from abroad. He has visited in WASHINGTO~ (NC)~ven society's by-laws. The'c>rganiza-' toO. present at their meetings, every State in the Union, Hawaii 'lIhe'sixth prelate to head the and the Bahama ~slanas, which . Presidents· of the, United States tion was: founded 'in Philitdel- ,'not ~erely 118 a. guest but as an Atlostolic Delegation establish- are in his jurisdiCtion. He .had Irish ancestry. and ,Gen~ phia on March i7,' 1771 for, "the active inember; 'Noting that the eel in Washington on, Jan.· 24, knows and is known' by' more George ·Washington was "Irish relief of emigrants from Ire-', list'.of honorary members who .lapd." It has been non-sectarian were not of Irish birth or des 1893, Archbishop Cicognani has .Americans, non-Catholics' as by ,adoption." , These . ·.interesting facts were from its,..beginning. .', cent was .fuil, Gen., StepheD in that post longer Ulan' Turn to Page Twenty, recalled here ¥ Irishmen-by In the early days of the So- Moylan, the society's first presi birth an~ ;bY heart-gather for . ~iety it was a 'common oCcur- . ,cient, Offered a solution: the' tradItional observances of rence to elect military and naval "We hope, by adoption beCalM St. Patrick's Day, March 17... Dfficers to' membership; It was melllbers of the young republic Historians iT). tile. I nation's: iesired to· have Gen. Washing- of America, and are thereby capital, which owes 'much to the Americans. Why then not the Irish for its independence and Society of the Friendly Sons of OMAHA (NC) - Americans, liberty, cited Pr~sidents Jackson, St. Patrick make Gen. Washing NOTRE DAME (NC) - When ton an Irishman by adoption?" must "rid themselves of the idea Polk, Buchanan, Arthur, McKinthe 1958 winner of the Univers ity of Notre Dame's Laetare that America has a mission to ley, Wilson and .Truman as havHis suggestion was well reMedal is named next Sunday, remake the world in the image ing Scotch-Irish paternal ances- . ceived and at a: meeting on Dec. it will be the 76th time that the of America," Gen. Carlos P. try. 18, 1781, the minutes show that famed award is bestowed on an Romulo, Philippine, Ambassador The 10,ve that Gen. WashingGen. Washington was "unani outstanding American Catholic to the United States, said here. ton had for the Irish officers and . mously adopted" as "a member layman. Otherwise, he told an audi troops under his command was of this Society," thus making an Irishman out of him as far as Fifty-nine men and 16 women ence. at Creighton Un~versity, evident on many occasions. For ! it was in their power to do so. have received the Laetare,Medal the United States will be in March 17, the day the British since it was established in 1883 danger of losing its battle for evacuated Boston, he ordered At a special dinner in his the minds of men. tIO honor those "whose genius that the countersign of the day honor~ .on Jan. 1, 1772, the gold has ennobled the arts and sci medal of the society featuring "The contemporary world be "St. Patrick." And again in ences, illustrated the ideals of without the countervailing force the New Jersey campaign of St. Patri~k trampling a snake, the Church, and ,enriched the of American power," Gen. ,Ro 1780, the ~amp parole for March GEORG'E WORE GREEN was presented to him. "Give " : me leave to assure you," Gen. b.el'itage of humanity." .. mulo said, "would 'be a world 17 was "Saint" 'and the counterA. gold copy of the official Washington said in accepting the Soldiers and statesmen, artists cringing 'in fear for its ,freedom sign "Patrick" "and "Sheilah." Member of Friendly Sons medal (reverse side shown medal, "that I shall never cast Illld industrialists, diplomats and before the ,uncontested, tyranny', It was also, recalled, how here) of the Society of the my eyes upon the badge with philanthropists, educators and' of Soviet might." . . k . which I am honored but with The current "balance of ter Washl' ngton bec'arne a member F' scientists-men and women em nen dl y Sons 0 f St • p'at rIC f th• grateful 'remembrance 0 e bodying the ideals of American ror" between America and the of the Society, of the Friendly 'W",'" pres,en,ted· to, Uadopt,e d'.' pol't and .affec tI'onat e' mann'er ...~ 1 e' Soviet Union, he added, "is, at Sons of St. Patrick when neither eatholic leadership -'- have re the moment, our only insurance he nor his parents ,were born member Gen. George Wash- in which it ,was presented." eeived the distinction. ill Ireland, as stipulated 'in the ington.in'1782. , " , ' TU,D to Pare, EiBhteea TurD to Page Eighteea Turn to' P~e Tea
Legion of Mary Will Hold Annual Acies Sun~ay
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Archbishop Cicognani Completes, 25 Years as 'Apostolic Delegate
Regist~ation Marc~ 23
Histori:ans Ci'te irish Contribution to U.S.
"'ved
Laetare 'Medal To Be Awarded Next Sunday
Warns Am,erica Against Drive For Conformity
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Mas's Ordo
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Thir,teen ,rue.$d~ySi"· of' .S~. A.tthony;.' :;' . ·'B~gi'n a~·. Our:;Qad}ls· Chapel' .'. ......
P~storal: O~·
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'World' Reiief
.The Thirteen Tuesday~':" in .missions and retreats and was a
FRIDAY-Friday of Third Week honor of St. Anthony of Lisbon chaplain in the Air Force· for
O'IOCE'SE OF FAll RIVER . • in Lent. "Simple. Violet. Mass and Padua will' begin at Our some 12 years.
FAll. RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS
,Proper;·' Second Collect for , For those unable' to attend · :Peace; .Preface of Lent. personally-the proper and de: Bishop's Office
SATURDAY~Saturdayof Third sirable way' to' mlJke this devo · 'Week in Lent: Simple. Violet. tion-the opportunity of follow March .' Mass Proper; Second Collect ing the devotion will be offered Reverend dear Father:.. .for .Peace;· Preface of Lent;· over Radio station WSAR, Fall SUNDAY - Laetare Sunday, River. This station w'iil air' the 'Fourth Sunday of Lent. Double services each Tuesday evening 'of I Class. Rose,or Violet. Mass at 7:45.•. Proper; No Gloria,' Creed; :Preface of Lent. . E~pert. :MONDAY-5t. Patrick,' Bishop 'and Confessor. Double. Wl).ite. , ,Mass 'Proper; Gloria; Second :Collect Monday of Fourth :Week in Lent; Third Collect " :for Peace; Preface of Len~. COVINGTON (NC) 'If a TUESDAY-5t. Cyril of Jerusa parent is generally sensitive to ':lem, BIshop, Confessor ,and the needs of his .children, and ·Doctor of the Church. Double. alert to difficult situations in ;Mas~ Proper; Gloda; Second REV. JUSTIN EELES, O.F.M. their lives, he will sense many Collec.t' 'rue:;day . of Fourth, Week in Lent; Third Collect Lady's Chape't, Ne~ B~dfota on opportunities for helping them," Dr. John P. Treacy, education for Peace; Creed; Preface of. March 18. This traditional devo tion in honor of· Everybody's department head at Marquette Lent. WEDNESDAY - St. Joseph, Favorite Saint will extend University, declared here. "By helping a young person · Spouse of the Blessed Virgin . th~OUgh the Tuesday previous to '.' the feast of St. AnthonY,·June 13. to' make certain.' choices and Mary and Patron of the Uni The devotions at the chapel plans .and to adjust to new and 'versal Church, Confessor. difficult situation::;, he can pre 'Double of i Cla~.White. Mass will consist or" the Novena Pray · Proper; Gloria; Second Collect ers, a short sermon .on the life vent much lost motion, frustra-. tion and wasted energy," the Wednesday of Fourth Week in and virtues of St.\AnthonY,Bene diCtion of the Blessed Sacra:' gllidince expert added. Lent; Creed: Preface of St. Jo ment, and veneration of the relic While' noting that all children seph. of St. "Anthony. The devotions have certain basic personality THURSDAY - Thursday of Fourth Week in Lent. Simple. . will be directed by Rev. Justin needs, ·the educator emphasized .~,'" . Violet. Mass'Proper;NO'Gloria Eeles;O.F.M:.,· whoil? ·presenpy·that each child is unique. '.' or Creed; Second. C.ollect for 'stationed' at the chapel but who. • !'Whatever is unique ina child 1;tils "spent SOme years in giving .,should ,qe recognized and.,guided Peace; Preface of Lent. : .' · accordingly," he said., "The ,ex ·tent to which·. unique qualities are recognized and, guided. de · teJ;'mjnes to· a large ex-tent, the · future success ,of ,a person..,-in "Funeral services were held St. Mary's seminary, 'Balitinore, 'terms of himself, his fellowman and God. Whe.n·we guide·Youth, :M:Qnday morning· in Ste. Hene- Md.' , we guide them. toward some din'e, ·P. Q., Canada, for the laie Decorated for Bravery thing. This something must be Rev. .{\rthur. Gagnon; rf9rmer right if guidance is to be sound. pastor of .Holy Rosary Church, On ·Jan. 18, 1918 Father·.Gag New Bedford. 'n~n, enlisted with' ihe United Basic" Values Father Gagnon, a native of States Military Forces and on "Too often youth interpret Fall River, who has been retired Jan. 29 of that year set sail for success in terms of money alope; from his' spiri~ual activities in . Bl-est, France, commissioned as or of a 'soft' job; or of prestige; the Fall River Diocese since 1932 a lieutenant. Upon his arrival at. or of some other questionable because of ill health, has made Br~st, Father Gagnon was the goal," the educator said. his home in Ste. Henedine with 'only Catholic Chaplain for a "As Catholics they should be • sister, Mrs. David Couture: period of three weeks. . Faithfully yours ,in Christ, considering more basiC values, Ordained in May, 1916 in St. In November, 1932; 'he ~-' such as service to their fellow Mary's Cathedral, Fall River by ceived 'a military decoration from man; Or their own salvation; or the late Bishop Feehan, he cel- the United States government love of and service to God. These ebrated his first mass in the for distinguished .service .in more P!lsic values do .no~ come Sacred Heart Church, AttIe'boro... World War I. ~oo .natU!ally,: in, a ,mate.rial~ic · ,~pin. in Fall River,.&;pt., .7;. Surviving besides his sister, world'" The right spirj~ v,.ri~h.in t·' 1886 he attended Notre :pame ·.Mrs. Couture,: are two nieces, the home can help 'much in .' " Parochial ,School, Farnham' COI- Mrs: .• Theophane. 'Lavoie: ;·and "lege and ·St. Laurent Colleg-e, Mrs.' Henri Lescault;', and ".·a ::'" ;. .. I Canada and completed his nephew.. Ernest Gagnon, all of "If youth are to choose intel- •... :,.
;' studies for the priesthood at .Fall ltiver. , c • liMntlythey imlst know thEiir :" ' "
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3, 1958
I
Guidance
Stresses Role , Of Parents
,Funeral·Service··Held in Canada
·For For~er .New· Bedford Pastor
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i~~~~er~ctifti£ ques,tion~b.le;'~ife. ~~' ;;;~;~~~';'~''~;;;~. ~~,~. ~:~'~'~'~' ~~~~~,~,~(;
~~~~~~~~,e;:~:~cr;~:~:.i~~:;:~~. :::.... :~Le ·'.·~,· . V,·,e· ,. ";"Ro""un~·~tI'.e·',.r.·."::-:; fFath~~' ',G~m~$"~nci ' Doctor Bu~kiey._ "should' know' the"essential' facts ,: D ·,I,t " about marriage, about the priest".: _,. -'l1li IIlIl' . iii,. • ~.. ~To. :Spe.ak at. Fo~um ":Co~fer~nc,s '."'. . hood and the religious'vocations, ' ' '. G,", , "
11.111
Speakers at ·the fourth,' in a male and female psychology, "eeriesof Lenten Forum' conJ'er- .}~ve, as. the ~Q,rld see~ i.t,,·the . :ences 'for you'ng" adults; .. to be Christian cO:ncept of love, differ :held next Su'nday 'at· 7:30 P.M., ences between emotional infatu':' will be Rev. Anthony M. Gomes at.ion and true .~ove, the purpose at· Catholic Community Center, and duration of courtship, keep .Fall River,. and Dr. Arthur' F. ing steady company, and dating. iBuckley at Kennedy Youth CenDoctor Buckley's topic will be iter, New Bedford. "In Sickness and in Health." -": The conferences with love" He will explain spiritual and .and marriage .. aSl 'the 'general ". phy~ical .heal.tJt, and problems ;·theme,. are open to high school to be consideredbefore choosuW .'juniors and seniors and 'other a spouse. . A qu~stion and answer period . 'boys and girls 16 or over. They :are sponsored bY' the youth or will' conclude bOth conferences. ,.~anizations in cooperation with f lithe Diocesan Family Life' Bu-' . -"reau. . I . ~,~ ,," Father Gomes will discuss ST'LOUIS '(NC) - Seventy five diocesan priests converged on St. Louis State Hospital .here FORTY HOURS for what is' believed 'to be the first hospital-sponsored psychia DEVOTION try clinic for priests in the March 16 - Espirito Santo, ... country. Fall River Purpose is to,acquaint parish Our Lady of Lourdes, prieSts with '. new psychiatric Taunton methods in pastoral counseling, March 23-our 'Lady of Per according to Frnnciscan Father Fintan McNamee, chaplai~ at .petual Help" New ,. .' B~far~.. .~ .' ~e h~s'?~tal, and a, s~aker' ~t the clmlc. . .',.; ;.' .$t. .Toseph,' North Dight It was sponsored by the state on. hospital at the suggestion '; of , ~ March 3O--St. Boniface,' New " PrOtestant and Catholic ch~p, Bedford. _ , l~, undez: tlie direction of ~r. .' / ~ St.; P~ter, ..S9u~: D~ht . Louis ',.H:· "Kohle,t, a., Lutbera~ on. . ... . .medical sUperintendent of the hospital. " i:~': · April 6--:-St. Francis Xavier, , ,,"" . .,', ..{\~s9het. ,,' '.' .:' ,St. .Tam~s, Taunton. MEXICO CITY. (NC) - More THE ANCHOR than 134,255 Mexican Catholics Seeond-elass' mail" privileges authOrised meri1l?ers of the country's at Fall River. Masa. Publiobed_..,. Thursday at .10 Highland Av-eDue. 'Fall Catholic Action and participate River. Maaa.. by the Catbolie'PYeae of the in some' 2.022 various actiVities, Dioo""e 'of Fall· River. Sub.eri"tioD price .it has been announced here. '. . "_ mail, ~tpaJd ' ••00 per :re..... ,
'Priests Probe Use: Of Psychiatry,
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M'exican'Catholics
'are
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"and about the main . groups 'of !,';::"~;,,',ClERIC:.CASS'O·CK-: "occupations in' today1sworld. Otherwise it is a· matter of the
biind guiding t~e blind.'1 .
Dr. Treacy said' a parent should be ,"an eloquent listener." - ..
· He' said parents. should give youngsters an opportunity to shoulder ,.responsi,bility, should I help . children develop values, standards•.andideals. , . , :.( .." . ':
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, . MONTREAL (NC )"-:JLeaders . <>fall major :religious den9mina- :' . tions here.. have issued a joint dedaration' requesting . offiCial action lag<Urls(ooscehi! ,literature , a'Iitr'~oi~1 s~o~i., ..'1. . . '_Meeting .at ·..th,e ihwitatioD of His Eminence, 'Paul Emile Card inal Leger,' Archbishop qf Mon trea~, the churchmen agreed on the text of·li'400-word manifesto caliirig upon the ·:Mqntreal. au thoritiesto adopt-appropriate measures"'t6:~''c6rtfroi':Jthe situ ati.on.
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. of D~cency' The following are to be added 'to ihe lists in tlieir" respective i'tIaSsifications: " , . .
egion
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" . . AnUable ill .dIe fall_'"8 .iJft _ Romm I1yIe GDJy. , ,
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UnobJectionable for General ';, Patronag~· -'- ~a~; Man:s Co~n , try,.Mark of the ,Hawk, Rawhide .' Trail. , Unobje<;tiona1;lle:. for,.!. Adults. :.. . '. and Adolescents-Blonde Black "mailer, Teenag~.Bad G~rl;, - Stanton Unob§ectionable for Adults Hell's Highway, Seven Guns to
Mesa." '. .-.
......Objectionable in Part··for .All '. -Bride and the Beast, Cat Girl, . 75 WEBSTER STREET ,Jet Attack, Srea;mmg Mimi. . ,;
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Gowns for COnfirmation '-' 0,·
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WORCESTER, MAss..
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Worship Comes First at Parish .That Could Serve as Model
THE, ANCHOR-
,3 '
Thurs.,March 13,1958
Priest Learns To Fly for Mission Work
MINNEAPOLIS '(NC)-A con viction that "worship comes first" has earned St. Richard's 'church here its right to be 'known as "a parish that really lives."· Under the guidance of St. LOCKPORT (NC)-Francisca'n Richard's pastor, Father Alfred Father Francis J. Verheyen 'Longley, a former student of from Weert, The Netherlands, , Bishop Connolly at the St. Paul has enrolled in the aircraft and Seminary, the suburban parish r mechanics course at Lewis Col has achieved a unique reputa lege here, and upon completion' tion for bringing the liturgy of his studies Will be assigned alive to its parishioners. permanently in charge of flight operations at Franciscan Mis The youthful parish was estab sion Headquarters in Dutch New lished only six years ago. At Guinea.' • that time it had about 325 fam ilies: Today it embraces more When he take$ over the 'flight than 1,000. Most of the Pilrish post in New Guinea, Father Ver loners are young couples with ~eyen will transport missioners children. A large percentage are about the island, fly the sick to college graduates. hospitals, orphans to homes ,and This is the background of the transport food and medicines. parish-together with the spir First Pilot itual background which Father His plane will be a Cessna 180, Longley is now endeavoring to Father Longley describes him a gift from the Catholic Mis give it. self as a priest who has been sionary Travel Action Group of Father Longley says the entire "steeped in the liturgical move program at St. Richard's "has ment," the spirit of which has The Netherlands, wh"ich now is being shipped to Hollania, New meaning only from the one aim been long' abroad in Minnesota. of parishioners to know, love, He was ordained in St. Paul in Guinea, where the Jrranciscan workship and serve God at all 1939, and Eintered the U.S: Army mission headquarters is located. It will be the first plane, and times." as a chaplain in 1942. In 1952 he Father 'Verheye~ will be the "At St. Richard's worship retired to become pastor of St. first pilot, to serve the communi.,. eomes first," Father Longley de Richard's. ty. The assembly of the plane clared. In his student days at the St. will be under Ithe direction of The pastor believes that the Paul Seminary he felt the lead Father Ivo Ruiter, another mis practice of the liturgy Is an ap ership of such prime movers in sioner, who formerly was a propriate way to help save so the liturgical movement as Lewis College aviation student. ciety, and "return all things to Archbishop William O. Brady of Father Verheyeri said that a Christ." Thus, participation in St. Paul, his professor and rec plane is a vital need, not Ii lux the Mass and the reception of' tor at the seminary; Msg~. Wil ury, in New ,Guinea. He said' Communion is of first impor liam Busch, noted enthusiast for there are no r!iilroads or high tance. the movement; and the famous ways on' the island, and that At solemn Masses on Sunday a lit~rgist Fathe!' Virgil Michel. walking is the only other means vested choir leads congregational' From these and others, Father of transportation. Father Ver singing, under the direction of heyen 'said that; two missionaries a member of the Minneapolis Longley said, he learned that "the, Mass is the central theme died because of lack of adequate Symphony. Low Mass is offered of the liturgy." Later, as a serv transportation'. They became ill at an altar facing the people. in a' remote section of the is Families are urged to receive ice chaplain, he added, "experi ences in the Army proved to me land and di~d before th~y could Communion together. On Holy that the apostleship of worship is be transported' to a hospital for days there are two Masses in the the source of true Christian me'dical care, he said. morning, two more in the eve ning. A dail~ High Mass is sung health and growth from botll a b4' children of the parish in the spiritual and social point of view." morning. Also at St. Richard's an abbre viated Divine Office is chanted in English. Neighborhood groups, LANSING (NC) - Gov. G. called "little parishes" chant Mennen Williams of Michigan Matins and Lauds every morn said here that "without private PITTSBURGH (NC)-A let ing. School children' say the and parochial 'schools, our edu ter writing campaign to combat Day Hours, Vespers and Com cational 'problems, would De. mail order pornography was pline are celebrated each eve worse than it is.'" urged here by Postmaster James ning. These hours are chanted ,Two elements stand' out in the C. Smith of Pittsburgh. according to the parish prayer book, "God's Family Prays and The postmaster's appeal' was ""thorny problems of public-pr~ vate school relations" the Gov Sings," compiled and edited by made' after a U. S. Senate 'com Father Longley. And the Divine mittee estimated recently that ernor declared.I He said they are: L Americans "generally and Office accompanies the burial of 'dealers in obscene material do parishiol)ers. 'an aflllual gross mail business of ,rightly" recogniz~ - that parents have the right to sendtl1eir about $350 million. Apostolic Activities c!ti,ldren to religious schools. "I' A~ostolic activities, too, are Stating that present legisiation hope the day will never come stressed at St. Richard's. A par allows distributors of pornog when there will be lilly serious ish institute of theology is con' raphy too much 'leeway, Post effort to impair or withdraw ducted by' the Franciscan Fath , master Smith said:' , , this fiJ.n~amental right ,;, . .'; , ,ers of Assumption, Seminary at "If, people would write 'to .: 2. "Without: private ,!lnd par nearby Chaska. 'This is attended their congressmen and, senators, by several hundred Catholics;, asking what a'ction they ,have ochial. schools, our, educational and by many non-Catholics, taken to introduce a bill to'pun-, problem ,would be worse than
from October to.May. ish those directly or 'indirectly ,it is. If the children now being
The 'parish library is known concerned in the publication or educated in private schools were
suddenly to seek admittance to
as the best small theology library distribution of pornographic lit in,the area. A we~kly eight-page erature, movie films and post public' schools, th~re would not
,be enough classrooms or teach parish bulletin, 'prepared by the card pictures, then we as indi pastor, goes by 'mail to all viduals; as postal representatives ers in the state or the country to acco'nmodate them. And the parishioners. . - 'also, would have no problem tax burden on, the general pub An active Legion of Mary is , with filthy literature.'" at work in the parish. There are ,"The laws of the land have to lic woulp be greatly increased." " 55 "little parishes," the prayer, be strengthened," the postmas study anu action groups into ter stated, "and only Congress which the parish is divided. can give us nationwide policy Their members meet weekly the for effective enforcement." year round, striving to sanctify themselves, their families and their neighborhoods. Use of the missal and the bre viary, and recitation of the Rosary are urged and encour Joseph A. Charpentier
aged. In the summer a regular Reg. Pharm.'
aeries of seminars and work~ 1902 ACUSHNET AVE.
shops on pastoral liturgy and BOWLING - SKATING NEW BEDFORD
the parochial ministry are held Special Arrangements FOr TEL. WY 6-0772 for ser.ninarians. Other Services BANQUETS PRESCRIPTIONS There are extra liturgical lICrvices on motherhood night, for new and prospective moth ers. Father's Day is celebrated with, seminarians of- the parish. and :their. fathers serving as aco lytes <at solemn Mass. Laetare' Sunday is ,observed as Vocations New Bedford' O~,'-y. Aut~o~;zecl '.; Day, with spiritual" a~d" social events aimed at encouraging CHEVROLET DEALER' vocations. Yet Father Longley insists the NEW BE[)FORD, MASS. , 545 MILL ST. parish'isn't remarkable from all these manifold activities. "It is 7~948~ only remarkable in so far as the ways of God in the Church are wonderful," he said.
Governor :Lauds
Church Schools
Letters Can Curb Smut
BROOKLAWN
PHARMACY
CHEVROLET
INTRODUCING ST. MAURICE: Rev. Francis X. Wal lace, left, a captain in the Chaplain Corps and a priest of the Fall River Diocese, receives a card bearing the history of St. Maurice, patron of the Infantry, from Col. John T. Corley, right, president of the Fort Benning, Georgia, Holy Name Society. Father Wallace, whose last Diocesan assign ment was at Corpus Christi Parish, Sandwich, has been iIi the Army for seven years.
Archbishop Finds No Bitterness In His Stoning by Protestants LIVERPOOL (NC) - Arch bishop John C. Heenan of Liver pool said he does not think "there was bitterness" involved when some stones were thrown at him in a Protestant neighbor hood here. Actually, he said, Protest~nt Catholic relations in this city have never been "more genuine ly cordial." The incident took place when he visited a bedridden widow in St. Anthony's parish in the tough Scotland Road area of down town Li verpool. A hostile crowd, made up mostly of teenaged girls and children, shouted insults, SP!lt at him, and threw stones, bricks, wood and vegetables at the 53 year:-old prelate and his car in narr<>w, congested Robsart Road. The Archbishop was there to visit Mrs.. Winifred Denson, a 40-year-old w.idow with' two small, daughters, who has been bedridden for two years. After chatting with Mrs. Den son and praying at her bedside Archbishop Heenan emerged t~ face a second small barrage. He was unperturbed, eve~ though, one missile hit his biretta before police were able to disperse the crowd.,' The prelate was not hurt, and announced that he would return to the Scotland Road area later
in the we~k to visit the Catholic sick. Police, who made no arrests. pointed out Robsart Road is just within the strongiy Protestant area on the fringe of the Irish Catholic quarter and has been the scene of a number of out burs'ts of ill feeling in the past.
Fam,ly Holy Hour At North Attleboro As a, tribute to the Sacred Heart, the Thomas P. McDon ough Council No. 330, Knights of Columbus of No. Attleboro will sponsor Family Holy Hour next Sunday afternoon from 4 to, 5 in St. Mary's Church. Rev. Edward B. Booth. pastor and chaplain of the Council, will officiate. James McNamara, Catholic> Activity Chairman, announces that the public is invited to at tend.
'TRI-CITY Office Equipment' TYPEWRITERS - ADDING and ACCOUNTING,MACHINES FURfIlITURE an,d SUPPLIES ,E(;hvard J. McGinn. Mgr. 427 Second St.. cor Mor~aD ,Fall River OS 9-6712 ,WYman 2-0682
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4
O,ne;,;,t,hirod IliIu,manitaria'n
'Miillii,t\olry As:sii:stolnc,e' 'Gets
Pr,iests Told To Stay on Sideline$
Tw(o~Tlh!i!rlds JO·f iFo:,eig!nAi:d
~y
-THE ANCHOR Thurs.,March 13,1958
1DonaldMcll.onalld
IDavenpor:t ',Catholic ',Messenger
" Lastw.eek !I t06k to task a fellow~columnist f()r his . incessant )b~ffiJtlin:g :attacks ,on :AmeiJ.ca',s pI1Qgram ,o:(aid' to peop'leiin (other ,countries. He has ,consistently I1ef.erred to '8uCh ,aijd ,as ''':One gIleat giv,eaway" and as mon~y"tpoured - down ..:a. ',ra:tbdle" :and on'. 'One our ,national wealth i~ ,being de h occ~s1on e icategorIca:l)y vQted,to ,(foreign aid);" SuCh a'id
declaI1ed that the, .on'ly .,must :be given,"he -said, not :sim-.
"bl1othet" :of ,an American 'is ',ply ;because we a1'e :afraid Soviet
SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Priests engaged in direction of the lay apostolate "should stay on the sidelines and coach," a priest experienced in lay apo& to~te work said here. "The lay apostolate," Holy Cross Father Louis Putz pointed out, "is, after all, a lay aposto late." Father Putz is a professor of theology at the University- of Notre Dame and president of Fides Publishers. Laymen, he added, will not accept their responsibility iQ the mission of the Church unless they learn how at an eady age, at home and in school. Young Years Best It's like learning how, ~o play footbaII." he said, "or learning to love music or learning to be come interested in science.' The best years' of training are the young years', and the home at mosphere is the best atmosphere. A sense of mission, Father Putz declared, is missing in too many Catholic lives today. "To be a Christian," he said, "you have to lie apostolic. Confirm ation gives you the grace of Christian adulthood. But you must learn how to use that grace." It is the mission of the lay apostle, he explained, "to inject Christianity into life."
another American. Russia will ,otherwise draw the
W:ell, Ido 'not inteP.d ,to ,go needy into their own ,oIibit,obut
over all that '\ rather ,"in the spirit ,of j!:lstice
and because we haNe ,a moral again. :All :of fh,e per-tinentr.esponsibiIity .to do :so." addresses, ;a'llo- ' And tinally Barbara -Wand, the c u tt 1 ons :and. British economist, :said the West BISHOPS SMITH SEE PRESIDENT: .visiting Leba ChI',istmas M e s - , t o d a y '''l'ealizes it mustrema'in non':s White House, where they were received by Lebanon ,sages ,of the
committed to a :pr.ogram ;Of eoo present H:o l'y
nomic :aid ,and' development for President..:C.amille Charnouri, at center~ are AuxiiiarY,Bishop Leo R. SmIth ,of Buffalo, at left, and 'Massachusetts-born F'a1t,he,r, :as [
,under~de;veloped,countIiies."She pointed ,out 'last
:added .thai; .the ~rise of ·national- , B~shop Eustace J. ,Smith,O.F.M., Vicar Apostolic of Beirut. w,e,e.k, :are a
isminAsia,andAlricais'accom B1Shop Leo 'Smith is Episcopal Moderator, National Council massive coiltra panied by the cries ·of these o~ 'Catholic Youth, in the U. S., anc;l has led an American , diction of this
"new 'peoples" for 'help. 'In this, pIlgrimage for opening of centenary celebrations at Lourdes. tnational 'egoism
it"s "the story ,of -QUI' 'Worst -ene NC Photo. ' ' ' and.chau.v,inism.
;mies ,being our best friends" I :return ,to .this matter ,this .because ",the 'Sovoiet 'l!Tnion ~s week for t.w.o reasons. F'irst, a acting ,as .ourconscience. We ! U Q, . number of'peopl!'! 'in recent aays must not 'fail to listen to the The Girl Scouts marked the have reiterated the traditional cries for help;" .NEW YORK (NC) - Greet' anniversary of their founding i " Christian reasons why America 'Obli t· t U I d in,gsto the' ,Girl ,Scouts of the , ga IOn . 0 'nemp oye must gi\\e help to less ifor.tunate U.S.A. on the 46th anniversary yesterday. The week-long ob ell , now. ,~ur hard-headed of their fo.unding were eXltended servance during whiCh a differ peoples in the world. Second, I think a closer look at the :Ad realists-Chnstians :all---'wiII re by the ~piscopal Chairman of the ent soout activity.received dailY: ministration's proposed $3.9 bil jom: "There are 5,700;000 un Youth De.par.tment, National emphasis in manyobservance~ in the namon will end next 5at lion foreign aid program will employe~ workers in the United, Catholic Welfare Conference. 'urday. reveal that even this is not as States. Isn't our first obHgation Ar~hbishop Leo Binz of Du Archbishop Binz said that ··we ' altru'istic or disintel1estedly to these workers ,and their fam buque said 'in a message ,to'Scout would take .particular note of . " . Christian 'as 'it could 'and. Should ilies?" headquarters that '~your leaderthe. achievements of your volun be. 'Certain~y, ,our fitstobligation ship and -.your membership reBERLIN (NC) - A Catholic In an, address to 10,000 Italian ~s ,to 'o~rown 'ill1e~pl~Yea. But m'ind us 'happily of the great , teer leaders, whqse· efforts are so important to your splendid 'newspaper in the Soviet sector worket:s last week, the Holy If meetmg that oblIgatIOn means, power for good which 'is found success. _ of Berlin has been banned by Father'pretty effectively smashed we must ignore ,the :Samaritan in YOl,lng people;'" . "As wen, we would ,express . the communists for printing a "the egoism of exclusive self obligations, then I say the United . ' , our admiration' for your sound . partial text of the Lenten Pas ipterest ,when .he .said: "Chris-' States is in v:ry ,bad sh~~e .in and well-balanced' programs 'toral of Bishop Julius Doepfner tians do not consider anyone as deed-economIcally, pohtically which relate so meaningfully t~ of Berlin. ! a fOl'eigner :and :are a'lways,reaay and morally. both the spiritual and social de to help everyone." Which ,b~ings me .to my.second velopment of our youth." '\Charity Begins; • .' point. Break do~,n ,that$3:1}bii CHICAGO (NC) - His Emi Bishop Fu1!onSheen, 'speak lion foreign ,aid pr.ogram ,now nence Samuel Cardinal Stritch ing ,at the bi-,partisan "\Confer being proposed by the .Admini~- will l1emain in Chicago "until enoe .on ,Fol'eign :Aspects .of U. ·S. tration and short-sightedly at after Easter" ,before leaving for Nationa'l Securj,ty:' in Washing tacked by Americans 'inside ,and Vatican City to assume his new Many feature the 1958 ton, 'had ,this to 'say'.a'bout 'Iol'eign ,outside of Congress. How,muCh duties as P,ro-Pl'efect of the Sa aid: of 'th·is$3.9 billion is really eco cred Copgregation for the Prop Lourdes Centennial plus Fa tima and other Shrines in _'''ilt was ,a ,pagan, 'Terenc:e, ,who nomic aid and .technical assist agatiol). 'of ,the F.aith. said: 'Charity begins at ,home.' ance and ;how much' of it.is 'Dhis _MIas disclosed lin a 'Hlittle FRESNO, Calif. (NC)-Some ~urope • • each will be ac companied by a Spiritual It 'Was ,Christ, the 'Son of .God, nothing ,more than ,guns.andmis- message" :addl'essed Iby the 'Car sile warheads and the;II·ke,? dinal to the 'c1er;'"' and ,the near thing ',unique in instruction Director. Wide range of de 'who -in the parable ,of !the 'Good 'OJ ' Samaritan s~id ,that charity be oMt:. FJannery -wa~ right. We ly 2 million faithful of the 'Chi books for -children and ~nverts parture dates and iti~eraries gins away -from -home with shouUd ,be ashamed ,of Ihow ,little' cago archdiocese, most .densely h~s ~en made available here, at' popular prices. people who .a1'e .not ,of ,our race we ,are giving in the way '0'[ non Catholic ,populated See of the according to an announc~ent , Call' or write' today for , t ry . . .. tal0 f:$2 1635; Church "in ,this countr.y. . or coun _ .mI·l·I·ta ry h e 1p. A It 0 The Cardinal ,told hl·S ' ,"'eople by the Academy Library Guild. ' details •• on these or our OWD "There are ,'se:vet:al 'kinds of OOQ,OOO - almost ,two-thil'ds ,of .hl·S. . - ' "Ca,techetical Scenes," by Sa that si,nce ,being notified .of., 195~ PERSONALLY CON need. We ,need to justify ,ol,lr ourso-called "for.eign .aid" :pro I' F DUCTED TOUR •• 12 Coon wea1th by sharing it. There is gram-is alloca.ted for ",miliulry appointment to the Vatican post, ~lan ath~ M. Coerezza 1 c:oo-' the \burden of 'being undel'priviassistance" ,and '~defense -sIlP-, --'he is the 'first U. 'So 'born pre- . _tall~s cl.ever~y designed sc~nes:' ,tries .• ,52 days •• ,dep.arti~ ",oly 1st. No obligation. l~ged,; . ours, is, -the burdeni of port" .of other .mitions. ,Only" late named-to the Roman Curia whiCh ,rlse out of th_e ,textl w,hen being overprivileged. It is their $1;265,000,000 carL honestly be,' ~his 'great consolation "has been the pages are turned. Made' by ,stomachs -that are empty; it described' ,as iHsinterested hu-' that I 'know you are praying for. in.Hong and printed could Ibe our :hearts that 'are manitarian, Christian heip'.to me Clnd '~re 'begging 'God to give ln ~olor, t~e elgJ:1t. volumes. are empty." other peoples in the form .of: me -the lIght and strength to do available ,m EnglIsh.,.. Spa1'!ish, & CO., Inc. technical ,assistance, :health aid' His HolyWBl in 'a'll things." Portuguese and, Chinese. " , help for refugees, ,etc, ' The ti.ties ,of the volume's in Quotes Sen. Kennedy clude: Confirma.tion, The Mother ,Senator John Kenned.Y of Mas 'W·itlessGenerosity' '. ,of God, God and Man, Confes-' sacllUsetts spoke at Loyola Col 101 R1VET STREET 0f our genuine ecoriomic .aid sion (2 vols.), The Blessed lege, BaltimOl'e, .and insisted 'New Bedford total, only $20 million is allo 'Truck Body Builders EuCharist, The Words of .Jesus that "the key to 'the future" is WY 3-2296 cated 'to the Uni~ed Nations A:lum'illum or Stee'l and Christ Dur Redeemer. . , held by "millions' of uncom T echni~al Assistance Program mitted peoples whose greatest which, perhaps more than any / 944 ·County Sf. need is technicians .and .techni ,NEW ,BED.FORD" IMASS. cal assistance." , ~' other .aid .progr.am, is best calcu101ted to accomplish long-range , W ' / ( ' '2~66'1:8 In another address to the .John permanent improvement in th~' Carroll Society of Washingto'1; Senator Kennedy observed ,that Jjfe of underdevelqped nations with a minimum erosion of their '\in the world of nations, the rich The IOnly Oath-olu College tn the Ihocese of Fall R'l.vef' are getting richer while ·the poor ow.n pride .an·d self-respect. Compare o'ur $1 14 billio~ of are getting poorer. . . Pouring econ9mic ahdtechnical aid with. new billions into our missile the $60-to':$70 IbilIion appropri program will 'ndt a:lone' pJ:event the loss of a .disillusioned India, '<ited each year for military· de fense. 'If anyone tells me that an embittered Tunisia, or a cha the fust figure '11epnesEmts sim- . otic Indonesia. ' "We mu~t 'reformulate .aid pIe-minded, witless generosity and ,that it is the 'road leading to programs wh'ich meet the spe nwtional .bankr.u.ptcy (a favorite cial needs of under-developed alarum of th~ nationalists), I will countries suffering from capital starvation. . . 'We must -provide 'have to 'concll:lde that he has taken leave of his senses. funds which _can act as 'seed' capital to private investment both from this country and ,fro~' Europe-for in'igation .and har~ bor improvements, for the ,pro A't .OUR lL:ADY -OF duction 'of.capital ,goods and ,in Re'laxing Between Classes vestments." I':' THE ASSUMPTION Spirit of Justice GET AtQUAiNTED WITH YOUR COLLEGE GHU~.c-H ..Father .:James L. \Vizzar.a, :S.J., :80•. Six:th an:d oberJ:Y Sts.· vdce-president of the 'Nationa] -V1.Sttors Are A:t:"~aY8 ,Welcome _ ,New Bedford 'j Cltthc;>lic ;Rural ,Life Conference, HELP YOUR cOt.LEGE TO GROW descr.ibed' technical assistance Daily 'Evening Mass '. and', economic ,.aid .as "our, 'na .(Except Sunday) ~ Main Of.tice tion's answer to a n!1ig'ious ana 5:11.5 ·,P.•,M. R,ev. THOMAS C. DUFFY, C.S.c. moral impera'tii've:" Union and Pleosant Sts. Dai.ly Stations of the Cross Dtrector of ButMt7lg ,Fu7tdSumc.hill CoUeg. Harry M. Flannery, .president ~o,.,th End .8r:anch Of the Cathdlic 2\ssociatiof1 \101' , ~'2,:"(O 'PHON~ Cedar 8~'2221
1200 Acushnet Ave. International Peace, ,said -.the ,Co.nfessions 'before all Mass~8
Member' Federal DepoSit' ,NQRTH EA_STON, ~SACHUS~nS American people' "wou'la -"be ' 'Fathers of" the Sacred . Hearts 'Insurance Corporation : ,., " •. 1 , aShamed to realize how little of.
Pre'Jot - 'Scouts . , '·,e C on,gra t i t·es
VI.
Paper Banned,
Co,rdi no,1 'Leaves
Aft ',·e,r E'a:5 t e,r
,j
CATHOLIC PILGRIMAGES
Scenes Rise From Text In New Books
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~a!1d
~ong,
G. M. LUIZ
Travel' Agents
'S E G U,,1 .N ·.
Complete
B.AN'KlNG S'ERVIC,E
':Duri:ng LENT
- - - - - _. .- ~.
."
Forthcoming Retreat Schedul'e Announced by League Members The Executive Board of Our I,ady of Good Counsel Retreat League of the Fall River Diocese was held Sunday afternoon at St. Louis' Church, Fall River, with 'Mrs, Raymond Hamel of .;\tUeboro presiding. . The meeting opened with a· prayer by Rev. William Mc Mahon, Director of Lay Retreats. Father McMahon explained the . purposes of the' retreat move ment and evaluated its spiritual benefits. Amiouncement was made of the following. committee chair man by Mrs. Hamel: Miss Mar garet M. Leahy of Fall River, Chairman of the S"peakers" Bu reau; Mrs. John J. Mullaney of Attleboro, Chairman of Organi zation and Development; and Mrs. Stanley Koczera of New Bedford, Chairman of Ways and' Means. The Retreat League will" be represented at the Mid-term Meeting of the National Lay women's Retreat Movement to be held in Washington, D. C., on AI)ril 18' and 19 by Mrs. Hamel of Attleboro' and ·Mrs. George E. . Hurley of Fall River. Scheduled retreats at Our Lady of Good Counsel. Retreat House', East. Freetown, follow: Girls (high school juniors and seniors), April 18-20; Sodality Union, April 25-27; Laymen, May 2~4; B'oys (high sc!'lool jun iors andl seniors.)" May 9:..11; Professional Men, May 1&-18; Laywomen, May 23-25. If any group desires a retreat, weekends are stiU 'avail"aJ'>le on June 6-~ and June 13-15. Plans: are being; formulated! for
I WAREHAM CYO COMMUNION BREAKFAST: The monthly Communion break fast of the newly~organized CYO at St. PatJrick's Parish, Wareham, drew 90 members. Seated at the head table are, left to right, Judy Kiernan, secretary, Jean Gallus, vice president, "Tiny" Lopes, treasurer, Rev. James W. Clark, assistant :at St. Patrick's, Thomas Eccleston, president, Rev. John F. Hogan, Catholic Welfare B6reau. Director of New Bedford and Paul O'Connell, 'principal of Wareham High School. THE ANCHORThurs.,March' 13, 1958
Wareham Unit eyO Organized
A CYO unit has Been organized for the youth of St. Patrick's Parish, Wareham, with a pro gram designed to develop the four-point purpose of the CYO -spiritual, recreational, social and cultural ideals. The CYO group for those of high school age has been in operation for a month. Officers are Thomas Eccleston, president, Jean Gallus,·vice-president, Ju.dy Kiernan, secretary, and "Tiny" Lopes, treasurer. Ninety members of the new «roup received Communion and attended a Communion breakfast on the monthly CYO Cominunion Sunday. Speaker at the breakfast was, the Rev. Jobn F. Hogan of New Bedford, director of the Catholic Welfare Bureau in New Bedford and director of St. Mary's Home. He is also chaplain at the 'Bristol County House of Correction. Father urged the CYO mem bers to first teach, rule and aanctify themselves and then' try to carry this over to their eompanions and contacts in lIOCiety.
Present at the breakfast were Paul p'Connell, principal of the Wareham High School; Clement Spillane, football coach at Ware ham High, and William Paling, assistant principal of the Ware ham Junior High School. Members of the CYO are also members of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes, and have pledged' themsel'ves to, the reception of frequent Holy Com munion. Monthly dances, are to be held by the CYO except during the seasons of Lent and Advent. The recreational program, 'in eludes eight bowling teams with prizes to be awarded to the high est boy and girl bowlers, and to the winning team. Plans are now being formu lated for a series of one-act plays to be performed by the various classes. A parish debating team will soon be formed as another step in the cultural aspect of the CYO program. Motto of the S1. Patrkk's Par ish CYO is: the guiding: principle of· St. Pius X: "'Fo restol'e all! things in Christ."
New Bedford Missioner's School
First in Peru to Hold Graduation;
LIMA (NC) - The Maryknoll parish of Santa .Rosa de Lima here recently became the first parish in Lima'.s history to hold a. parochial grade school gradu ation. Santa Rosa de Lima, the first parochia] school in: Lima. estab Iishectby Father John J. Lawler, Maryknoll Missioner from New Bedford, Mass. I"epresents an Important step in parochial life for the faithful: of Peru. Of such imllOrtance was the graduation of the 90 students. each one capable of speaking and writing in both Spanish and English, that Archbishop Juan Landazuri Ricketts 011 Lima at tended the ceremonies and spoke on the significance of the occa sion. In addition to noting that this was the first parochial grade achool graduation in Lima's edu cational history, Archbishop Landazuri also pointed out that it represented the first big step forward toward greater' catho lic development of Peru. FirSt. Vocation Equally impol'tant to Father Lawler, however" was the long-
To Ease Problem LONDON (NC)-A new bill Introduced in, the Hous.. of Com . mons would ease tile problem of finding foster parents for home less Catholic ehildren by allow ing adoption by some couples who are not permanent residents of. Great Britain. The measure was introduced with government approval. . . Under present law, British. children cannot be adopted by persons who are not of their own faith or who do not live in Great Britain, As most Catholic couples already have children of their own, the' number of Cath olic children needing parents ..nlike that of non-CllthoUe _ildren-exceeda . the clema04.
prayed-for realiZatiOn of a voca tion. With great pride and thanksgiving, be announeed that his first graduatiOn class, waa: sending a representative to the' Minor Seminary this month. The mlssioner~ brother of New Bedford"s Mayor~ then. topped' off the gJ"aduatfon ceremonies by announetng that. the first year of the new higb., so4001 will be ready for the begjnning. of the, school term in ApriI~ making it pOSSIble' fot" this first graduation· class to continue studyi'ng and working in the at:mosphere of' the pari~h until the compl'etion of their secondary education.
Aid Seminar.i'ans· MELROSE PARK (NC) Vending machines' at. the Flick Reedy Corporation- industrial: plant here are helping pl:ovide' scholal:ships for candidates· for. the priesthood. Members, of the company em ployees' benefit fund have' senti checks totaling· $Ji,:}:oo so far to' pay for scholarshipS' at th~ Quigley Preparatory Seminal')" in Chicago. . . The money has: come from the' profits from vendfng machine' sales in the plant. 'FIle: profit.' are at the disposal:. of an em-' pwyee commit.tee, wl'1fcl't' has se lected the scholll%Sllip, pllogram as one of the projecla of' the benefit. fundi.
Attorney Harrington Scheduled .to lecture Laws dealing with psychopath literature and obscene' and vul gar literature are topics chosen by Atty. John J.. Harrington, As sistant District Attorney who is engaged to lecture at the open meeting of the Franco-American Women's Club, Inc. next. Wed nesday niglilt at. 8 o'clock in the Old' Town; Hall, Somerset. Other aetivities on schedule for the d'ay are the making of' pads for the Cancer Home in the' morning and a.t 2 o'clock in the' afternoon a business meet.ing. Mrs. Lucienne Penoy chair man of. th~ day. .announces. her assisting committee: Mrs. Maril da Girard, Mrs. Juliette Gelinas. Mrs. Rose: Garant,. Mrs. Bella Pouliot" Mrs. Orner Trudeau, Mrs. AUgdst Dionne and, Mrs. Arthur A.; Plante. The puljlic is. invited to at tend the' ~n' meeting.. .
,..ALL RIVER
MAILING SERVICE ,
2M SECOND ST•. fAll RIVER',
WASHINGTON (NC) - After three years of concerted plan ning, the National Catholic So cial Action Conference has been formed here, it was announced. The new organization succeeds the Catholic Conference on In dustrial Problems, which was initiated in 1922 under the guid 'ance of the Social Action De partment, National Catholic Welfare Conference, to promote the 'study and understanding of ind~strial problems in the light of Catholic teachingS. Louis Buckley,. 51, of Boston. who headed the Catholic Con ference on' Industrial Problems, has. been named chairman of the' new organization. He is a past president of the Catholic Economic Association and is connected with the New England regional office of the U. S. Labor Department. Mr. Buckley haa tatight at the University of Notre Dame, the CathQlic University of America, Western Reserve University in. Cleveland, and Loyola> University in Chicago. The aim of tYre National Cath olic Social Action Conference "will be to stimulate and, aid American Catholic laymen to undertake organized activity aimed at making sound social principles operative in the insti tutions· of American society." Mr. Buckey ex pained..
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Urge Sacri:fice EICHS'FAETT. (NC)~Catho lics have been urged to give up' one meal on Fridays during Lent and contribute its cost to aid the world's' starving: This suggestion, was. made here by the German branch of Pax Christi, international Gath oUc peace' organization.
WASHINGTON CNC) - The U. s. Office of Education. haa. issued' a slJudy 0111 higher educa tion showling. that teachers in' public' eoll~es get. paid an, aver age of about $b,OOO: more than> those in, privately supported: in stitutions. :
I
LEARY PRESS
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a retreat with a Portuguese re treat master for those who mignt be' interested. Miss Helen Chase will organize a Franco-Arnericall retreat for the Fall. Rev. Thomas·F. Walsh, Dioce. san Moderator of the Fall River District, was host to the meet. ing. 'Fhe officers· of the Retreat Lea~ue are Mrs. Hamel, Attle boro, President; Mrs. Aristid~ A. Andrade, Taunton, Secretary; Miss Mary Shea, Treasurer; and Miss; Mary Phelan, Membership. Chairman.
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:Hirc;am' Whea·ton , and Sons, I:nc. , 45 SCHOOl. ST. I
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March is Vocati~n Month. It is a month when anxious high'school students are waiting to take their College Board ,Exams. " Many seniors h~ve made application to' the 'college of their choice. The alternative schools have been dulyapplie~ to as well. I ' ',. Guidance counselors are working overtime, trying to help bewildered graduates of 1958' figure' out what they want, what they can afford, what :they have the proper' credits' for, and what they can get into. . , , Parents are facing the fact that their little boys and girls of yesteryear are ready to "go out into the world," as valedictorians will tell them in a few months-and the time-worn cliche penetrates even now into parental hearts. It is a month of choice. It is' a time when young men and ,women whose only major concern until no!" has been, in many cases, a choice of car-coat colors or what to do after school, realize the penalty of 'growing up~they must make decisions. ' The Church reminds them that God should be included in the decision. Any choice of school or career or profession or vocation has, after all, the purpose of bringing a person ,not only happily through life but happily and holily to h~aven. Advertising gimmicks..to the'contrilry, the purpose of life is neither the fun of smoking nor living modern nor the pride of ownership nor doing.. .e verything with the, new improved product-it .is still saving one's immortal soul. ' People go to heaven as members of society. That means the choice of a vocation. Whether it be as a, priest or brother or sister, as a teacher or nurse or secretary, as a lawyer or doctor or engineer or tradesman - the way one goes through life in order to get to heaven'is a vocation. It is the road to God, where one will serve God best and, be happy and holy, where one will make the best use of the God-given talents he has. :, This decision of one's vocation calls -for an evaluation of personality and character, talents and-abilities, intelli.., gence and will, desires and" ambitions. The sum 'of thes.e qualities usually spells' out the answer. This is true if the vocation be a religious one-a'dedi eation in life to God directly as a priest or brother or sister. , God expects a person to read the same signs, to use the same judgment, in deciding if he has a religious v~, cation as he would in' making any other rrw.jor decision. There is no magic formula; God does not work miracles when He has written the characteristics of a religious'vO-: cation in a person's life. ' It remains for the person himself to examine, to pray, to judge, to con'sult with parents and advisers and priests, and then to act. And what better time than Vocation Month.
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ANCHOR'
Thur~'.,March13, 1'958
Weekly C.alendar ,Of Feast Days
TODAY-SS. Roderick and Soloman, Martyrs. Roderick was a priest at Cabra, near Cordova. He was exposed as a Christian by his brother, who was a Mo hammedan, and imprisoned at Cordova. In prison, he met Sal omon" a layman, alsoCjailed for his Faith. The two were mar tyred at Cordova in 857. TOMORROW-St Leo, Bish op-Martyr. The time of his mar tyrdom is not know but the Ro 'man Martyrology records that he was put to death for the faith in the Veranian Field at Rome. SATURDAY - St. uonginus, Soldier. According to tradition, he was the soldi~r who pierced the side of Christ' while He was hanging on the Cross. After the Crucifixion, it is said he ac knowledged Christ to be the Son of God and he also is said to have been martyred. for the Faith at Caesarea in Cappadocia. SUNDAY-Laetare Sunday" fourth Sunday in Lent. Feast of The Yardstick SS. Hilary, Tatian and Compan ions, Martyrs. St. Hilary ,was Bishop of Aquileia. St. Tatia~ was ,his deacon. The others, S8 Felix, Largus and Denis were laymen. All were beheaded by order of N'umerian, about 284. By Msgr. George C. Higgins MONDAY-St. Patrick, Bish Director NCWC Social Action Dept. op-Confessor, Apostle of Ire On March 4 the 'Socialist Labor Party of America land. It is agreed generally that' sp'onsored a full-page political advertisement in the New he was of Romano-Briton ,ori gin and when 16 was taken cap York Times-and possibly in other daily newspapers ealling for the immediate abolition of' capitalism and th~ tive to Ireland. Six years later he escaped and after, his studies adoption of socialism oin the Drucker, and David. Lilienthal, and consecration about 432 ~. United States as' the' only Maritain emp~asizes the fa~t Bishop, he returned to Ireland . . that the Amencan economy IS means ?f aVOIdmg,war and something radically new and as a missioner. He established depressIOn. different in the history of man- ' the Church on lasting fouJ;1da The text of this curious ad kind - as different from 19th tions . throughout the country, vertisement reads 'in part 'as fol century Capitalism as it is from, travelled extensively on mis';' ,sions of preacq,ing, teaching, lows: "Logic' of socialism. churches, opening the situation_ is "The industrial regime inber-: building plain. The cause ited from Europe," he ~ays, "has schools and making converts. He of war' is in now become unrecogni'zable in established the primatial See at Armagh in 444. He died about berent in capi this country. It has been super taIism. It' fol seded by new economic struc~ 461. TUESDAY-St. Cyril of Jimi lows' therefore tures which are still in the mak that to 'end war ing, and in a state of fluidity, salem, Bishop-Doctor. He was we must abolish but.which render both c'apita'lism born about 315 near Jerusalem, , and socialism things of the past." became a priest in 345 and was 't he capitalist Patriarch of the city from: 350 system. To pro New Economy , Why contribute to the Bishops' Relief Fund? Geiger and Colm in their until his death about 387. He I was hungry . . . Relief supplies equivalent ,to 29,500 long capitalism' spent 17 years of his patriarch freight carloads and a train 279 miles long were shipped" in thi~ age of NPA report arrive ~tl substan tially the sa:ne conclusion. They ate in exile. He was celebrated missiles and nuoverseas in 1957 by the Fund'~lear.~eapons ." point out that from 19th cen -. for his instruction on Christian I was thirsty • . . -,Millions of - children in Spain' and IS to lfivite catastrophe... Soclal- tury,capitalism there has evolved doctrine, and addresses to cate 'chumens before Baptism: He Italy receive a glass of milk a day because of the Fund. ism is literally the hope of a new dynamic American econ . ,. b ' t I" ' I was a stranger .•. Of the 37,000 Hungarian rl:!,fu'ge~8, umam y. .. c:'my-about as similar, they say, was declared a Doctor' of the h t th U't d St t 22000 '. ttl .J b : Th~re are ~ few. SOCIahsts to the capitalism of old as, a jet Church by Pope Leo XIII. W 0 came 0 ~ nJ e . a es, , were rese en Y left m the Um~e~ States - and airplane is to the Wright Broth WEDNESDAY-St. Joseph; the Catholic Relief Services. , these~few are dIVIded up a~o~g ers' original model. . Spouse of the Blessed, Mother I was naked .' .. Eighteen million pounds of clothing, 10 many mutually antagomstIc however Most Americans and Foster Father of Our Lord. shoes and bedding were distributed in 53 countries- be- splbiter groups - t~at one can -'they co~tinue, tend to regard Little is known of him, but he cause of the Thanksgiving 'Clothing Drive. ' " o n l y marvel that they were able thek economy as if no substan is described in the' Gospel of St. I was sick,., .. Once every nine hours in 1957 a ship ' to raise ,enough money to pay for tial change had taken place in Matthew as "a just man." Frolll recent decades - perhaps be- . the circumstance of his not, be such a costly advertisement. Two Iinportant Books ment of clothing and 'food and medicine-911 shipments in cauSe they have been "too busy ing mentioned in the history of all-'-were carried to 40,000,000 people overseas. The advertisement itself, living and working amid these ,the, Passion, it is believed he died I was in prison . . . The first surplus food, clothing, which reads,like a musty reprint changes to think about their before that time. Devotions to medicine to go into Poland' since all relief ,supplies,were cut of something from the 19th cen significance or their important him as a Saint date from the off by the communists in the last months of 1949 were ship tury, is hardly ,.worth n~ticing effect on the development of early ages and he was pro.. claimed Patron of the Universal d b h C h r B' h ' except as a reminder that within civilization." pe y t e a t 0 IC IS ops Relief Fund last December. the past few weeks, by coirici-' Maritain approaches the latter Church o~ Pope Pius IX. Tie a string around yOur finger to remind yourself to ' ,dehce, two interesting books point from a slightly different make a contribution Sunday to the Fund. There' are no ' ~ave been published in defense' angle. He says; with character lectuals who have made this 'strings attached to the relief and assistance programs ~on- of the American economic sys istic affection for his adopted point in recent years, Maritain is ducted among the neeliy of. all races and creeds overseas: tern. country and its people, that we probably the most sympathetic The 'number of such, books are too ·modest to 'philosophize in his general attitude with. re . Each dollar. given to the Fund will be multiplied 40 published since the end of the about our accomplishments in gard to the United States, its , times in overseas relief for the destitute and hungry"who ,second World War is legion, the economic order. people 'and its institutions. He deserves to be listened to • receive hope and life itself from tne F~nd's charity~your but these two are particularly. Hurts Our Cause charity. ' ., . " significant: (1) Reflections on As an ardent admirer of the very carefully, therefore, when 'America' (Charles Scribner's United States, he would like to he tells us, for our own good, Why contribute to the Bishops' Relief Fund{? Sons, New York) by Jacques see us overcome our modesty in that because of our lack, of ,an "What you have done to these, my least brethren, you, Maritain, the distinguished ,this regard, for he thinks it is ,adequate ideology, "our lights 'have done to me." , French Catholic philosopher, seriously hurting our Cjluse in cannot be seen" by the ordinary who has lived in this' ,country, the rest of the world. people in the other countries of Those words of Our Lord are as valid for,us today as since the early 30s; and (2) The Because of our failure to for: the free world. they were for His hearers. 'TheY/ref~r just as much to the Economy of the, American, Peo mulate an explicit economic It should be pointed out 'that poor and destitute of Korea, the hungry-rand,' weary of pie: Progress, Problems, ',pt.os philosopl!Y' wQich adequately Maritain, whose affection for the peets by Gerhard Colm and reflects our current economic United States and all it stands P I d t th b d I f th d f Gal'l o ~n ,as p e eggars an. epers 0, e roa ,s 0 1 ee. .Theodore Geiger (National Plan-: practic~, the iplpression is left, for is almost embarrassing at ning Association, Washington, he says, "that America has ac times, is not naive enough to D. C.). . ,.
cepted the challenge of com think our economic system is , Welcome Contrast
munism in the very terms of perfect. He mentions certain' im , Maritain's highly flattering~ommunist· proPllga.nda: Com provements that he confidently reflections on' t~e ", ,~merican . munism ,. yersus " "qapitalism, hopes to see accomplished in the economic system' - in Chap,terAmerica being"the stronghold of futur~notably a change 'for the XIII of his new. book-are in Capitalism.""·: ; better' in' the role and the' func OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF "FALL RIVER welcome contrast to the doctrin"That is Ii gre~t mi-~fortune," tion of organized 'labor and ~ome PUblished Weekly by The Catholic Pr~ss ot th~ Dioces~ otFall River ~ire ,criticism of.so man.y Euro- . lie concludes, "with, respect to way of giving iabora more' ef pean intellectuals, to say noth- the rest of the world's peoples, fective share in management. , 410 Highland Avenue ' lng of the' totally anachronistic lor whom capitalism has kept its It will not be surprising, be OSborne 5-ii 51 ":, Fall River, Mass: .' . propaganda of the - Socialist classical meaning, who loathe observes, if "the creat'ive Amer PUBLISHER ' ~' '~. Labor Party of America. the very word, and who are not ican imagination" brings about Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Ph.D. , Leaning heavily on the writ- ready to die for it-nobody is these improvements within the ASST. GENERAL MANAGER' GENERAL MANAGER lngs of such ptiblieists, econo- ready to die for capitalism in reasonably near future. Let UI Rev. John P;DnscoU' Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. mists and government adininis- Asia, Africa, or Europe." hope that his gratifying confi MANAGING EDITOR trators as the late .Frederick Hidden Lights dence in us will not prove \4) be Attorney Hugh J. Goiden Allen,' . Adolf . Bede, Petel' Of the many European intel- ' unfounded.
New Economy Supersedes 19th Century, Capitalism
Why Contribute?
(~)rhe ANCHOR.
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Cultural. Exhibit to Include New Conception of St. John Baptist A ~ew ~onception of Sl John
B.aptI~t WIll be one of the major
hIg~h~hts of ~ French ~ultural
eXh~bIt co,,:ermg. a varl~ty. of
mE ANCHOR
Thurs.,March 13, 1958
Arrangements for the ex-' hibit, a major undertaking, are being spearheaded by a special committee, composed, mainly of Worcester residents, who out lined plans for the' elaborate dis play at an executive'board meet ing held at the home offices of L'Unionat I Social St., Woon socket, R. I. . MISS Caron Chairman ' The project was initiated by and is being developed under the a.us~ices of t~e..societts co~mIssion on actlvltles With ~ISS Rhea Caron of Fall River as chairman. Among the several exhibits, committee members are planning to include rare French "and American books from the library of a noted Franco-American educator, along with other his torical documents from the Mal let collection, housed in L'Union he3:dq u;arters af).d related to the society s early years. Also expected to contribute to the exhibit will be La Maison Francaise, a cultural center donated by L'Union to Assump tion College, foremost Catholic bilingual institution of its kind the United :States, as well as several Franco-American artists. One section will be concerned with education and music and another with table set-ups de picting the culinary ar~, of French Canada, old and new, and ,the modern version of the Franco-'.Nmerican dinner table. '·Theme' of the exhibition will be ~'Le. Fait Francais en Ame rique,~ .and will depict C~tholic and Fiench contributions to the Cathol~c Church arid to' thiS
7' .
First Doctor
Takes Vows
FRAMINGHAM (NC)-Broth er (Dr.) George Hungermann of Bridgeport, Ohio, is the first doctor to. take vows in the Sons pf Mary, Health of the Sick. His vows were received by Father Edward F. Garesche, S.J., founder and Superior General of the community. Also taking their first vows were Brothers Joseph and James Conlon, the first members from Framingham to join the community; and Brother Theodore Van Trabert, an X-ray technician from Park Ridge, N. J. Brother George Hungermann served in the armed forces in World War II. After graduating from the St. Louis University School of Medicine in 1955, he served his internship. at St. Mary's Hospital in St. Louis. MisSion Service Father Garesche disclosed. that application for membership in the community had b~n made MEDIEVAL . SPANISH CHURCH COMES TO U. S.. by four other doctors. He said The ~se of t~e secularized 12th Century Church of San the addition of such experienced med,ical .personnel would greatly Mart~n, Fue1?rtIdu.ena, (Sego,:ia) Spain, pictured above, strengthen the community's shOWIng p~tIfll view of a burIal ground, will be re-erected prOspects for .prominent service at the ClOIsters, New York, under special agreement con in the mission field. The Sons of Mary, He(llth of cluded by. the Spanish Government and the Metropolitan the Sick, was received into the Museum of Art. In exchange. for the apse, which is being Boston archdiocese by Arch sent.. on an extended loaJ.l baSIS, the Museum will loan six bishop Richard J. Cushing six medieval frescoes from the Church 'of San Baudelio d years ago. During that time it has been approved as a eom to be in. the Museo Prado, art munity of diocesan right. Thi.· JERSEY CITY (NC)-Secre m,~a(}nd.l\!Ie~roPOhtanMl,lseum of Art-NC Photo. is the formal approval given the tary of Labor JamesP. Mitchell community by the Church said here that Christians should through the Sacred Congrega "come out of the ghetto and get tion for the Propagation of the to work in the world." eOun~ry. Faith. :." "Social comment not sUp . 'Major'Paul ;-H.· Koziko~ski~ po'rted' by social action," he de~ F:~r.me·r .Red Soldier
o.r.M. Conv., of Springfield and O.F.M. Conv., of st. HyaCinth c~ared, "is like having' ,a cart Chicopee" and,' brother· of the ~minary, Granby, Mass., former without, a horse pulling it AUTO ·TOP SHOP' Nc»w' London Priest
ass~tll~t at Our Lady of Per late Rev·; Stanislaw Kozikowski yc;ni're not going !lny~here." ····U:>No6N '(NC)""'A former ar petual .Help Church, New Bed AUTO & FURNITURE
.. The Labor Secretary made the tiUerrman in the Soviet Army, O.F.M., Cony." 'former pastorQf ford. ,UPHOLSTERING
. statement in an address deliv':' a convert to the Church from St. Hedwig' Cl(1urch, New Bed Father' .Kozikowski, son of ered at the annual congress of Russian Orthodoxy, is now ford, had a-' prominent role in Mrs. Stella, Kozikowski and the All kinds upholstering
the. observance of Tri-Faith Re ~e New York-New Jersey re serving. as a Catholic priest. of late John Kozikowski, was one FABRICS gion of the National Federation the Byzantine Rite in a small ligioUs Emphasis Week at Fort of four brothers who became of Catholic College Students, L!>ndon ' .church for Russian Jackson, S. C.;' last week. O. E. NERBONNE, Prop. priests in the Franciscan' Order Father Ko~ikowski, assistant 1851 Parch...., St.. New Be.f.... held at St. Peter's College. exiles. . 43 Center St.. Hy.nn;" USATC chaplain and head of They included the Rev. JUli~ '. Catholics, he said, must re Father Constantine Maskalik Kozikowski of Shamokin, Pa., all' Catholic ~ctivitie$ on the member 'that "the Christian 39, was working on his father~~ and, former assistant at. Holy ~nscience . . . is by its nature farm' in' Byelorussia - "White post,. was 'responsible for pro Cross Church, Fall River, and curing ~e 1 Catholic guest a social conscience." Only if Russia" ...:....' when he was con the Rev. Henry Kozikowski an speakers for tl'!-e special week. they act on this principle, he as. scripted' into the Soviet Army. assistant at Corpus Ch~iSti In a message tobis family in .. serted, will they be able to "re A fet;'veht 'Russian Orthodox' he Church, Buffalo, N. Y. Springp~ld, he explainei:: that lJ~Qre order and purpose to a so':' continued saying his prayerS'de Father Kozikowski frequently ciety. in danger of' fragmenta -spite the. jeers and ridicule of the Tri-FaithReligious Emph8 ~isitedhis brother; ' Father Stan tion." . .-. " his' cOmrades. Finally, because sis Week is'deSignedto'offer the islaw Kozi~owski in this city Fort Jackson soldier an oppoi':' and is well known to parishion h~ ha'd. organized prayer Servic'es ," Simple but Difficult tunity to re-emphasize· 'his reliO:; -rhe' teeming industrial cen"; among. his 'fellow sOldiers,. he liioUs faith' ~hd·'·t.o 'renew the erS of St. Hedwig Parish as he ofteri:participated in church ser 'tranSferred to' a labOr 'bat:" ter:s that sever workers from _ was taliori. ,,, . . sPiritual' . CoIivictioilS he has vices in New Bedford., native communities," Mr. Mitch- . Eventually was niovett :to '. f~,",nd "wIthin :hisfaith.·' ell said, "the· lack of mora,l con . As:siSt\ng. :Father Kozikowski s 'ReifJPolish Army unifand victionand conscience in some ~ete the.Vit'y Rev. Am'ed StO a:ner.'m~ny hard$hips, madeh~ "'fOUR DOLLAR BUYS leaders of labor and .manage p'Y,l-a, O.F.M,Conv.; of Elmhu~st, . ment, the outrage suffered by way to Rome. After 'some time in Rome,'he ..L. I., and the: Rev, Peter ~UCki, the institutions of family and was received into the Church marriage-all these are CQmmon newspaper items at American and made' his studies for th~ THAN EVER BEFORE priesthood at the Pontifical Gre breakfasttables." gorian University. See us for the BEST DEAL in a
He asserted, that "the confu . Now, 'Father Maskalik works Ford Car or Truck,
sion of goals, the dilution of pur with Marian Father, Ceslaw pose and loss of unity that these Sipovich, at Marian House, a things reflect result in a char l;e~ter founded for the .spiritual acteristic frenzy that ·grips the FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS care and .welfare of Byzantine' modern world." Rite ,~fug~s. Many Russian 'It is the duty of, a Christian, 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. the Labor Secretary declared, to Orthodox attend the services in the, Byzantine Rite chapel, but "heal this breach by doing that . Womer's Apparel most simple but most difficult of there is a fairly large colony of Byelorussians whom the priests all acts-by living in the world"~ 262 Union St. New Bedford consider their first responsibil ity. subjects, m:ludmg pamtmg,
sculpture, lIterature, needle craft and other ,products of the
acts and sciences, for whi~h
p~ans. have been formu,lated by
L Umon St. Jean Baptlste d'A merique. "Also expected to be
included is part of a valuable
collection of St. Joan of Arc a
national patron of France.'
The exhibit, to be highlighted
by many valuable items from
private libraries and art collec tions, will be staged in the exhi bition room of the new Hotel
Statler in Hartford, Conn" in
conjunction with the 19th quad rennial national convention of
the Franco-American fraternal
society in that city, from May
I to 3 inclusive.
The new St. John Baptist will
be contributed by Mrs. Norman
D. Nault of Worcester well known New England pai~ter and
lCulptor, who is presently at
work on the project. St. John
Baptist is patron of L'Union and
of all French-speaking Catholics
of both the United States and
Canada. .
Labor Secretary Urges Living In, World
'!'-.
in
'
.
~erlanga,
depos~ted
museum~
Armr Chaplain H'as '~Major Part .' in :Tri-Faith Program
~
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MORE FORD in 1958
····rJWe'_·..
·MOTOR SALES COMPANY
Six Americans In Pontifical Academy
ROME (NC) - ' American membership in the Pontifical A.cademy of Sciences has been reduced to six by the recent Cleath of Herbert S. Langfeld, i)rofessor of psychology at Princeton University. Membership in the papal acad emy, which honors scientists of world renown, totals 55 from 21 nations. Members in the U~ited States include: , Edward A. Doisy,professor of biochemistry at the Univecsiq of St. L~uis; Theodore de Kar man director of the Gug«enheim Aeronautical Laboratory of the Calif~rnia Institute of Technol ogy; .Franco Ra~tti, physics pro fessor at Johns Hopkins ·Univer ~ity; George Speri Sperti, direc tor of the Divi Thomae Institute at the University of Cincinnati; ~d. Hugb Stott Taylor, dean of Princeton University'.. ~aduate llChool.··
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,Of'Girlhood Days i~'M.id~Wes_t,
',' By Mary Tinley, Daly , ", , ,,:,~ ", " ' "Unwarmed 'by ,any sunset light, : The' gray' day darkened 'into' night, 'A nigh't made hoary with ~he ,~arm. ", .'And ,whirl~da'-nce of the blindh1'g storm." , ~ SO it was snowing,- but ' ' There were 'mut~al "how':to " " ' ',' I' '. do-its," with: demonstrations of 8Il0W never, I!:\sts ong. In ,rocking the car back and forth our climate. Here tomght to get it off the ice: Somebody and gone tomor~ow. had a chain and pulled us out;
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A universe of sky and snow. The old familiar sights of " ours Took marvellous shapes; strange do'mes and towers. ; ." Littl~Ch~istmas Card
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LATIN, WINNER: Elaine Daniels of Sacreq HearUi' Acade~y, Fairhaven, holds 'copy, of <Latin textbook and, let ter informing her she is, a prize v,:inner :in a Latin essay eontest. " '-.
'"Bishop Fined by Court ,Declares 'knew..." He, ,W,.·II, Alw',a'ys Oppose Ev.·1 Youngsters A&'aiD
ways", , Of winter joys bisboybood
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TORONTO (NC)-A, Protest:. ant ~inister reported here that Prote~iarit denominations in th~ heavily Catholic Province 01. Quebec "enjoy normal rights and privileges without fear .. threat." The statement was made by 'the, Rev. Mr. John W. Patter , 'son United Church minister iro~ Lachine, Quebec, in a re: ,port to the ,United Church's , Board of Evangelism and Social Service here;' , The Rev. Mr. Patterson, des scribing relations between Cath;. olics and Protestants in Quebec, :said: "When English-speaking ,Protestants or others live side by 'side with .French Roman Catholic neighbors, there' is gen erally a very wholesome, and friendly relationship. , "In times of sickness, distre81 ' ,or sorrow, creedal and racial dis tinctions are forgotten and' it is quite common'to see ,French and, English helping each" other, through ,life's more' difficult experiences."
" Folsom Named ' "I do not make this Statement Award Winner
The youngsters had a winter ," PRATO Italy-Bishop Pietro earnival of coasting, playing foxFiordelli '~f Prato, given a sus," the way of' an argument or LOUISVILLE (NC)-'-Bellar and-geese, ,making 'mow men, pended fine of 40,000 lire (abOut challenge, but with feelings 'of' , mi~e' College here has named building forts "and having snow- $65) by a Florence court, de~ great 'love, with that great love ball battles, ,skiing,', making elared here that "I f!>rgive com- I have for all my sons of whom 'Frank M. Folsom, former J)re~ "snow angels" and the like. ,We pletelY,all those people who. •• 'I must' give an account' not to' "ident of the Radio Corporation :Next morning, trees, shrubs, were all' JJ:lore-or-less " o u n g - ' 'h b . b t th D'" '1 d ' J umanemgs u ~ e Ivme 'of America, for the 1958 fourth familiar' houses were vel e 1D ster's dur'I'ng' the hl'a'tus, from have done me wrong," ' . ' d d The Bishop, was tried in abJudge." 'annual Bellarmine Medal, it hal beauty. Even the ugly ol.woo
daiiy ' duties i,n which we had ' t. on th e Itmtia by the Florence court for The Bishop said, that ,he would "been announced by Msgr, Alfr~d pile in the backyar d ' t 00", ,thought we were indispensable. F; Horrigan, president of th,e . t mas car d , aspect 0 f a'Ch TIS Some ,of the tricks we thought, allegedly defaming a couple who never call "atheist, ' and' inhuman HHm ~, the Hea d ' 0 f th e H ouse had been, forgotten from -long-, bad married outside the Church., Marxism" or 'the '!inimorality of Louisville archdiQCesar) colle,ge. 'laid after ' ' , 'The award i~ made annually shove1" mg th e snow past 'Midwest g,irlhood came back "His co-defenda.nt, Father Danilo youths· and adults" g'ood. ' th e f ron t s t' eps, "P,re tt.. ' fr om to a person'who on the national J pronto:' p,utting newsp'apers a,i Aiazzi, was acquitted. ' d eep. G uess I can 't d' During the trial Publi,c Prosen' ae 8rea/clas' t or international scene exempli rIve that A-I I'nsulation around the cheSt I, fies the virtues of charity, just 150 miles. Better rna k e '. pane under J'acke,ts,' wearing two paii-i ' rotor Manlio Mazzanti J:1ad asked , The' Salve Regina College t · " ftserva IOn. 'of hose and a pal'r of socks m'side the court to acquit Bishop Fior- Alumnae Association will hold ice, and temperance in dealing '" ' delli because he had committed with difficult and controversial "Sorry, sir, came news fr om mittens, pinning a wool'sOck to its Annual ,Communio!,! break , problems. The medal will be pre the airport. "No planes flying a cap' as a'mouth:"covering--even " no crime" " ' ' tIce. '" . Bishon Fiordelli expressed ,his fast next, Sunday morning fol sented to Mr, Folsom at a publ~c un t I'l f ur th er no making Moin's favorite dessert: ' F' lowing the 10 o'clock Mass to be 'dinner in the, spring, .it was I' lroad h 11 to th ,'forgiveness in a sermon at an' A ' p, one ca ' e ra "snow I'ce cream" flavored with , t am ' - no maple syr!Jp-.:..better than that evening Mass in the cathedral Celebrated in the college, chapel stated. It is named for the ,col mtion: Tramsuncer "by Rev~ Irving ,Georges, O,P. ,lege's patron, St. Robert Bel promises, '~One may, get out bY80ld by any drug store, over the bere. Will Do Duty 'Breakfast will be served in the Bight, but it's dOUbtfkUl.'t'h 't b ' eount~r. . , The Bishop, however"went on main dining, room with Eather lannine, 16th century cardimil and Doctor of the Church. "But I've got to ta e , a ,USI-, Perhaps, decades from now, to say: Georges as guest speaker. Mr. Folsom, ,born in 1894 1ft IleSS trip," those at our house may rememIt is. "my' duty tQ express in "Sorry, s i r . " , ' 'ber 'fondly' "The Big Snow of 'Sprague, 'Wash" was made a ''',just shows Who's 'Boss,"' the '58."" all humility" that if "anyone Papal Chamberlain of ~he Cape Head of the House resigned him could think that as a result of Omitted in the list of Cana , and Sword by His Holiness Pope .elf to the inevitable. ' .... i ' the recent regretable event your Conferences to be held in ,the Pius XII and holds other eccle So did Ginny":"'but. much more UI ' Bishop will remain silent, that Diocese in the next few mo'nths siastical honors, Recently, he was jOyfully. 'The, ra~io h~d an person is mistaken," was the number 'four conference . appointed permanent represen nounced, the, glad tidings of '''No 'The second broadcast in the '''I was consecrated, a ,Bishop," tative of the State of Vatican ,'scheduled by Sant~ 'Christo School", 80, she ,ph~ned a few new Lenten series' presented by be continued, '~and, Ip'ledged , Council of Catholic Women ~n 'City to the ,International Atomie , friends and Set out for a day of' the Catholic Theater Guild of, myself to teach the Gospel of May 25 at 7:30 P,M, in the church Energy Agency~ He has a Icing eoasting down the big hill back 'New Bedford will be 'at 7 o'clock Christ to my ~pie~ l' was ad . basement on Canal'St, :fall Riv 'record of service to Gatholic or of our house" ', next Sunday' nig~t, over Station " monished' by the cortsecrating er, This will compleUi the whole , ganizations and holds ,honora~y "Shut in from all, the world WNBH. " '" ' Bishop not 'to call light shadow' degreer from six universities, , series of Cana Con1erences spon , without" .' In the second broadcast Father nor to call shadow light, Not to : sor~d by the Family Life Bu inclUding Notre, Dame and San We sat the clean-winged Murray has'three-strikingly iri~ call good evil nor evil good. , reau of the diocese. ' F:rancisc::o universities: hearth about, teresting ,visitors seeking im:' \With'God's help and until I die Content to let, the north-wind portant religious infonnation." ,I will respect these principles. roar , The first tWo callers' are mid;' ,I will never betray the Holy In baffled rage at pane and dle:"aged women, one a Catholic, -' ,Gospel for human advantage. door." the other a Non-Catholic~ BOth It had been a day of complete, women' are eager to kriow,the Real Estate Loans llominess-all of us together .for, reasons behind Lenten' fasting , Rev. John F. Hogan, 'director' , the first time in an utterly iso and fastirigiJi' general. Father of St. Mary's Home, New Bed- ' 'Savings Bank ,Life Insurance lated world. Sitting around the Murray's answers to their ques' , ford, conductedHoly'Hour in the " .Chriitmas and..... Vacation Clubs ' ,fireplace'in 'the' evening, ya~'Jl- tions'wili 'be' most 'interesting . e)lapel of the home for members . "', . .. Ing and "desultorily talking, we and infonnative to. aU' IistehersJ : 'of the' Infant Of Prague Guild' "Savings Ac~ounts' felt l~ke ~hitti.er's own fa":!ily Father Murray's' third 'visitor follOWing their business'iDeeting, ',I descnbe.d m hiS poem~-except is a 'yo~ng girl wJ:1o' says, she d(les at' which Mrs. WilliahJ. Berthold ·presided. ", ' that.radl~, TV and te~ephone had not care to ,paI:ticipate in any 'NEW' BEDFORD kept up m touch, WIth the way 'thing unless she fully, under the sto~m was going, and ,i~s .in standk the meaning t>ehind what' terruptIon of normal actIvIty, she is doing. ' • OFFSET Business was 'static and so was Inhis'stimulating conversation LITHOGRAPHY traffic. ' . with this young inquisitor, Father: "Next morn' we' wakened wIth' Murra'y explains the observances • 'COLOR the shou~. \'. of Holy Week, their· 'recent re Of merry vOIces hIgh and vision, the cause behind these PRINTING clear; practices, and the extent and sig ,And sa,,: the teamsten nificance', of the participation of • BOOKS anc;l
drawmg near the laity PERIODiCALS
To break the drifted _';,;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; highways out." (( ,Dig-out Begins • WEDDING Well, they weren't teamsters-, He that spareth
, INVITATIONS though their drivers prohably the rod
' belong to the Teamsters Union. hateth his son;
BACON 'L1NGUICA FRANKS , They dug out the 'street ~ and but ~e, that
.:J WILLIAM and 2nd STS. piled snow to the top of park«:d lovethhim
SHOULDERS LlNGUICA HAMS' NEW BEDFORD, MASS cars.' Then the individual dig correcteth him
outs. 'Provo 13:24
Neighbors were doing the LEAN and, same thing and we called back SATISFYING and forth, exchanging experi JEWELED CROSS ences. Though some of the COMPANY
Union p'rinters NO. A'YTlt'OIC~""IIA.ss..
neighbors had' moved in re Favorite 1III.4H~'ACrU.,1S 01 . .
~ently and we'd never met be..·" c~uaFIXES AHD ARTIClES ... DEVQnON .•or~ ,we 'alI be~~efriend&.', ,
"',n
Alum"
Santo Christo Cana
B df d G' ·Id new: e o,r Broadcast Sunday
:~,Check These Banking Services
Guild Meets'
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INSTITUTION for SAVINGS
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MacGregor Brand' Pork Prod.' Hickory Smoked ,
Reynolds-DeWalt
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M'inister 'lia'il$ 'Freedo~ Religion
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"Pretty, isn't it?'" we com we used the chain to get. some out the kitchen body else ,out-a chain reaction' window as we -and a' borrowing and l~nding prepared' din of . small wooden "tracks;!' , 'Der, the' light 'Everyone who went by on foot. from the house joined in' the conversation. We making a scin met more people th~n we would , tilhiting aura in ordinarily meet in 'a month of 'the backyard. . the usual routine, , '"p ret' t,y!" It was a body-chilling bUt ,Cinny p r e s s e d b e a r t - w a r m i n g session. ' ber,face against Wew~re almost ready to roll, , the glass' in 'the but the going"was, still danger"; b a'ck, ' d 0 0 r. ous, so' there was one, mote day ,"Why; it's fairy- ':"""""""" ofstay";at-home - the, ui'laccus-: 'lend! ,I jus t, tomed holiday decreed', by )w)pe it keeps""""" Nature" , 011 and gets prettier and' prettier. "Yet, haply, iii eoine' lull GIf ,And say," Oinny combined the "life, , ,,'
practical with the aest~etic, "If ' SOJ!1e tnIce' of God ",hich '
it keeps on we ~on't have to go , b r e a k s ,its, strif~: ' :, '
,to school.", ' , The 'worldling's' ~yes ilbaD , Not' much eh~nce, but wegather dew,. , ber hope., Dreaming in throngful eity
~'tHEAt\lCHOI
',Th~.,.March,13,; 19.58"
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Scotch' Ham
roday'~,·.fashions
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,C'o'at'" Pit'ture for Spri~g, ,Is .Versatile·· ;', and , L()~":lY,:":<·, . i
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. ." By Ellen Kelley . ,', " ' ":'~ , 1 I'd lil~e t<i g1v'e Y~)1i concise but adequa~e'pictureright
right now, of ~pring coa~. Asyouprqbably have nqticed,
the new coats have that relaxed chemise look .. ~per to'Yard
the hemline. That,' indeed; is how the chemise trend sh<?ws
'up in' coats'.' "For' instance, and individual. All-in:'all the the 'button-down;'coathas' 'a new cotton knits, particularly in 'chemise dress look . .' and go-together separates,. . are has a' low 'belt that shows something to brag about.
a
the chemise influence. The New Silhooette belted-front coat, for instance, Before you even think about has a loose chemise back (you the purchase of your new Spring can wear this type coat, bel~ wardrobe .. do have your figure all-around, too!) . analyzed, by an expert .corsetiere The new coats look as pretty .. abide by her decision as to the from the back as they do from type of f01;lndatioJ;l .g~rment and the front. The barrel silhouette bra your fIgure reqwres .. and falls so gracefully in back •• ". thus establish the right founda th~ g~nU~ dra~,~o~~ fr()p\ a tion.. the right silhouette , . Qack y.oke , . "and is a. gen.u:" for y<:,ur new ensemblell.,. :I'he fne flatterer., Incidentally, i'v.e new silhouette, by the way, d.e bought or:le qf ~ese, barrel-back ~nd~ upon ~ontro~. Th~ slim ,coats, in polished black zibelip~. lme IS. the t.hmg t~IS ,~prIng .. It has an elegant air is desig'ned because the ne~ dress~ taper,.. to .. sliro.. the' f~\ue;'~~. at ~he ~ward the' bern." The.: new,
,m?mfl\lt, is tb:e leading favor* g~dles. taper the ·Vfay ~e, c,he-. of my coat wardrobe. ,mIse does. A corselet ·is, Just . '... , . , ." about' perfect 'for molding a .Another Spr~ng coat faVOrIte lithe line. A long-line girdle is is the coat With the envelope . . ··t . 'th t'l k a natural, for perfect silhouette.' b k' ac . . , I acquIres a 00 rontrol. The, new bras give a from soft shoulder folds .. has hi h natural gently-rounded Ii back-drape cQllar .. a touch of r g " . ~inge on the back belt. me. . . k B I' . Speaking of the one-pIece _ Ma ~- e leve ·~el\ er ' . garment, the all:'in-pne, gives a Th~ bnght coat IS a Sprmg perfect silhouette. It foliowsthe' favont~ ., flaunts the gay: cO,lors same line as the new easy dress of Sprmg. It ~ppears m red ,. the waistline is eased .. and t~nes .. everythmg from a !?oft the control is just where needed PylI1~Y.ll· rose ~Ot ? deehP az?lea brled . '.'" 'at' "the hips'. In profile,this .,Oil, see I 10 C ,ar~lI1~, ue 'newly 'designed' garment flattens.
,.an d . il a tte' rs .y 0'u .. ,. causes you'
.' . bl'from . "tones, ' , too, '.'.. everythtpg sky ol~e '... to electrIC ue.. 'actually,to'look in'ches slimmer
to SprmgtIme navy. . : . and :the general effect'is young
, You'll exclaim,too .. !over the and supple.
new pale beige coats .in lacey :,)' , ' "
Color Gives Lift
,wool. A newcomer, schedul~ for outs,tanding· popularity,.is "p.<tpt,y; girdles have d.eligh~l
·the white ·coat .. you'll note it c9,lor f.l~WS : . are available, Iq.
in just about every· fabric. from both short and long styles. , and
80ft cashmere .. to white leather. there's a ;natching bra for every
Incidentally, a wonderful coat color, every shadi~g. Yellow is
in. make-believe . leather ,(easy- a f~esh new fashIOn color for
to-clean plastic) makes its dra.. Sprmg. Peach tones ~re new and
matic appearance. It has the look oh-so-pretty. 'There s a charm
and hand of leather •. costs but ing new 'red too .. so. gay ,for a
a. fraction of leather • . has mat~h~d set. Blue IS sU~h ~
leather's elegant air • • and is fem.mme color for under-thIng~.
.cleaned in a ,jiffy ~ (simply S~, tr~at yourself to color .. It
sponge, it off, with ,a damp clo~hr WlU'~I~,e your wardrobe a genuactually saves' yOI,l cleanSIng ine hft.· , .' .bills! , - " , "'While' planning your ·new.In ~onc1usion, tweed. coats are 'season watdrobe, don't negleCt high on the ,fashion hori~on. your' complexion:: No doubt, You'll ~ them in a num~r.of wintry winds, overheated h0":les "tweedy mixtures. ',' in fJnely or· apartments, . . have had a loomed, ,tweeds '.' .. in loo$ely ,.telling efI!,!ct ,~n Y.'~uJ:' ski!) '.' . 'loomed tweeds . . sonie in solid d~ined it of natural oils,.. ,color!! '.' .• oU~'e'r~ if) shepherd ~Ha,pPed,it. o~ "roug~ened.it:' p~ '~n:d OhQunds~Qoth c1leck's. :S~ Y~U ~nye,st" in a. good, rich, nign t can' readi.lysee, 'th~f the' coat c'i:eam splast.t it .over, .face 'J)icture for S'pring, f958 'is indee.d }r'd)le~k on ha.nd, arms,~nd :-;-yersatile anp 19v,ely.. \ '-"" ,r~bows.. ' '. .. ':,'.": Sportswear in ;Line " Wipe,.it off .. leave a bit j>n . Spring sportswear hews to the Qvernight. Remove in morning ehemise line, to.o. For instance, " .. pat face with gQOd ?stringent, .n over-blouse and matching •. then a good ,foundation cream skirt make. a chemise dress. ,., then once-ove~~lightly ~ith Many of the new over-blouses' a bit of rouge and lipstick .. if have fringe trim. A sailor-collar you like, darken eyes and, eye top and pleat skirt make a middy brows .. splash on a good hand dress. The barrel-back overlotion - and p!esto .. you'll be i blouse has the blouson look. complimente,d'o~'a. pea~~?s ..and (Prints are simplywoIlderfuI in,!. ereamco.ml?~e~,lon' • ".~".~velY : these chemise-type go-togeth-, hands! :'~,> ,,::, ':.....:./ . ':" i ers)!The ~hii't and "full skirt"~ ~/d (,,;1:;,.' m~ke a charm~rlg shirt-~re~., • . p~(, . U',.! ,;";(:"''-:
and the, slim sbirt:.ciress com.s',: ~ > bines .a chic bloU$o~, oJ:,che~ise, . ass~~~,' ··~l::J.~.\, ! top With a shea.th skirt. . j.,j :>'r~,,There's fashion news tQo JIl 1 .uit-look 'separates.' For" in- I· The c'atlioii~'" TheaW:;'Guild stance, a low-belt jacket teams 9f New Bedford under' the aus beautifully with a matching pices of St. Patrick's Guild of
pleat skirt. A drawstring jacket Falmouth, will present on Sun with slim skirt gives a blouson day. March 23, the PasSion Play look , . and' there is !)othing, "Pilate and the Cross." The smarter 'right now,' than the admission fee to the perform ba,rrel-back suit. anee, which will be produced '~One go-together costume I ad.. in the Lawrence High School mired yesterday featured a slim; Memorial Auditorium in Fal: trim jacket and skirt of willow mouth, will be $1.00. green .. and a lovely flowered It_ will oe the first .presenta Bilk shirt to go with them. The ·tion on Cape Cod and parish.. three-piece enSeD1ble really sa~g loners, fromilll parishes of the • ", song of individual Spring ,Cape area are invited to atter:ld;. ,faShion. ' . : ','Cotton knits are popular in ~
WhO,I,s Whe, 'Lists Em,r,anu'el Senior
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F,':'" T' t
rom .aun on . .' Miss Martha 'A. Egan, daugh
ter 'of' Mr. ana' Mrs. Joseph A. Egan, 288 Tremont Street; Taun ton, is one of 11 seniors'. 'at Emmanuel College elected by thek;:classmates to represent the college in the, 1958 edition of
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AIME PELLETIER'
a'portswear for the new seaSon. ' They're stullning in chemise and . '"'' 1 tiiouson dresses . . in dresse~ ELECTRICAL " that-look-like suits, and in bona fide suits, as well, A rib knit CONTRACTORS coat is wonderful in a striking ltealdentlal _ Commeroial :eolor .. and there are new and Ind1l8trial charming prints too, in these nrsatile cotton knits. 6~3 Broadway, Fall R.iver: Lacy Paisley pattel1Ul til eotOS 3-1691 kNt kqits' are· very c:liffer,ent ... .~~~'~'~"~',.;"~'~~-~'~'~~~ "~.;
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Who!s' WhO Among' Students 'in
American ColIeges and Univer sities. ' " , 'Tll~' award' is 'based bri"~~a demic standing, and extra" c'ufJ'i eullir'aCtivities"whidi benefittl:le school' in 'l! particular way: I ,MiSs :Egim'is editol1':'iil':'ch'ief of. Ept~ logue,'th:e' c'ol1~iie yeatbook;~~s 'Cla'ss vic~~pr~Siid'ent iTI 'her' ~opi1 omore year, and: has' s~rveif, Cili 'ill,e'ijiilMr '·~~ek'''.'illld,;buildinG 'fUrid c6mmit't~i'es. '. ."" '; ; A 'Hi54 CulnLaude' gr~~4:#~ 51:: 'Mary's' 'High School; MiSs Egan" was ."secretary' of' "her ii~idl, I' ., school. class ill 'her ju~ior,yel:\r and served as' Dusiness manager of Corona, St. 'Mary's yearbook. She has aiso appeared in'variou's productions 'staged by Monignor Coyle' High . School,' 'Tauqton Knights of Coluilibus and tlie CYO. In 1953 she served'as vice ,~r;~~,~nt of j, Ta~n~~n c~a~"ter,
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SORRY! No Herriaac . or Lobster Stew - .' IiUT :rou're sure &0 Fa'" i~ Love with
".,:. ,·"New Envoy' ":;. ;1':V~T~C.A~CITY,· (~C):7.' ~
.Holiness Pope }>ius. XII hllS.~
~iV;&t" 'the 'credentiil1s'" of '. the ,'heW 'P6rtugU~~ Ambas'sad'9r, ~ the Holy ~; .Dr. Vl\SCO Pereira de Cunha.
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Recomrnentl,~·"~'Marita'inl$
ReflectiollS. on Americ'o L
By Rt. Rev. Msgr; J.ohn S. KenI,ledy Most Europeans who write of America speak slight
i~gly, if not contemptuou'sly, of this country, its civilization,
its people. Not so Jacques Maritain. He has been acquainted
with the United States for about a quarter of !l century and
has lived here a good many est object of her acid ,attention
years. Now;. in Reflections is western Spain. In Silk Hats
on America ,,(Scribner's. and No Breakfast (Random
$3.50), he offers a set· of House. $3.50), she is writing of
brief essays 'to bear witness to a journey which took her from
thiscountty and to its people;" Algeciras, near Gibraltar, all the
The boo k way· up to the northernmost part grew out of of Spain's Atlantic coast. talks which he The cryptic title is related to gave at Chicago the theme of the book, namely a year and a that money "is forthcoming in half ago. Their Spain. to dazzle the outer world tone is familiar with a show and can never be and conversafound for bread_and boots." tional., NeverShe made her trip on a small the Ie s s they .budget and in the h,ottest part of represent carethe year, insisted on· going to ful observation out-of-the-way places and. stay arid ~ extensive ing in hotels or inns which al DIAMOND JUBILEE OF ~AETARE MEDAL: S~venty-five years of American consideration. .most never see Ii"' fOl'eigner, and ...·.now,.spews.out·her,fury.at:being; Catholic leadership is represent~<1\ by, this .cross-section of,outstanding ll:ty people .~;M. Maritain . .. . '. . ' D l 'Catholic . lIl11intains that. eer.tain sb~re07" generally. unco~for~abl~.. : .. \ who have received' the' University of' Notre arne's Laetare ·Meda sInce It was estab tYp.ed·criticisin~ of,AIDerica:ate . . ~he.h~s rn u.ch to ~~y"yfi t~~' Jished.. in:·1883.. Nbted"Laetare . Meqal.winnersinClude' from left,top'row, Gen. Alfred u.b~ar.ranted~·:rhus,'wh~r~lls it - p,oy-erty.m:Spaln.. Y:e~ ther~ Istnh,d M. Gr.uenther; former NATO 'ComrruiIider, and President' of 'the AmerIcan Red Cross;, ill Commonly said that Americans eVIdence .of .compasSIOn for e-.. . . . N Y k' d. "d ·t· 1 d'd t . Ed d D 1 cras~ly nia-tedalist, he finds ·poor.. people· she ..encountered. ..A.lf~ed E ..Smlth, ~overnor,of e", Qr, an presl en la can I a e, war oug as ·them ,ithe most hum"ane and the She loat~ed them,..andpoursthe·, ,WhIte, CIVef JustIce, U. S. ~upreme Court; Clare Boothe Luce; former U. S. ambassado:r least materialist among modern .. capacious cauldJ;"on, o~, her .vo- to Italy ; and Alberl,F; Zahm, pioneer aeronautical scientist. Bottom .row, from left," peoples whic~ha.ve reached· the' '. cab.ulary ofdi~gu~t up~n th~~.· '. 'Carlton J~ H. Hayes;'historian and~form~r)U. S. ambassador to Spain; actress Irene Dunne'; in~ustr,ialis~ . sti:!ge." : He cit~~:. '. The d€ h urCn g~s.'g'..'pvAel~ ·.·th th.c.:., John Gilmary Shea, historian and flrstwlDIier of the Laetare· Medal, 1883; AFL-CIO evidence in favor of his view.' . -expec t e scour m .' . ' , ,.' ~ . 'J h M C' . k' '19'8 ...... t 0, f' th . L ~~.:.:.. ' ..... ". ',. " .. ' , " ,.,.. : • pejorative : 'tricks" which' the; presld~nt ,George Meany;' and tenor· 0 n' c ormlc . ' . 5'reclplen e aewu•., . .cornman . . ·d·····'·, .' .. 'd' • Me d a1 WI·lll..... . d'on L aetare S un day, Marc h 16' . NC .... ".1'..Element .' ",of Greatness. '.. : _. .., ",,', author. s are exel'Clse lit: name ' Ph 0 t o~
.·~gain, ·A.n1eric;ans a~e ..scored., in' this job,incltiding her amaz":' . . " ", ' . . . , . , . :" .'" , . . . ;
~ roo,~le~s, but'M·.:M~rItal1). ~says~' ing' 'capa'cit~ lif'r" 'reaaingtlje.: -THE ANCtiOR. that thIS country ]S entIrely, secret intentiops of people sheil. ' ..,. " ,Jhurs.,March 13,1,958 ..... . .. ' I " '" !. . . .' tu.p1ed towa:.:d ;~h~ fu.turj!, n~t see'ingJor they,eryfirst time. ,. ,.. . ,JMILWA:~~EE (NC)-Ja~es, ·He said he·has had a "vague tl?~ard tpePl:\st, ,.. a,nd ~e,c.o.~.1I;1~1' It 'is a ,pity that Miss 'Tracy': Johnson's 'pew job .on~y. paYIl; notion" about doing something . ~~s an eleme,nt ~f AJ'!lepf;a ~., is 'such an extremist: There is~ expenses and $23 a month-but, for the missions of New Guinea Mr~atness. ..- . . . . " ., much. about Spain, ahdabout c:ntiD,ued froJil,p~e'o~e . he. deems it a' promotion~., for man~ years: ,At, on~ t~me, ,~~e an.~l~:les ~e ·p~enom~.non.. every' element in Spain; whicll . '.The 21-y~ar-old shop worker . he. explamed, hIS plans were to ~. ,An;terIcanki~dness a?~ f~l-:! ..calls for" cool, precise cHtiCism>' "Historian John Gilmary Shea af a 'large mapufacturing com-' go' as a priest~ 'but h~ d~ided IowshlP, somet~llng surpnslng to: But· a paroxysm of"rage is far was the, 'first 'Laetare 'medalist pany here has left his 'old- job' that' was not' hIS vocatIon. • European. He. comments·.on from being such' critiCism. Cen-" and Clare Boothe Luce,'former' in'.order to Duild churches and. 'About a Year-'ago, he e:ll ~~eri~an resili~nce and verSa- .soJ'ious cleve'rness does not" fill' U." S. ambassador' to Italy,' re-' gIve "Pidgin English" lessons. pIa.ined, he '~got. tho e idea" cd tit ..st year. I I Y.' concern. f or.,. f ree"d om ..'. a t ~ the bill eith,er. 'Miss Tra'cy 'has . eeived the awardla . as 8. lay missionary in New . gomg as a Iay mISSIOnary. A1 ._ te,n t Ion t ~ .mora I and "spIn t ua I ',a sharp eye and can write. very' Others who have been. honored th .
Guinea:....... tel' some .c?rre~POndence :WI" values, t1urst f~r ~nowled~e; ~nd well, But these gifts are .nega- "include Alfred E. Smith, DemoMr. Johnson left Milwaukee church. offICIals In New Gumea, . !~erhatPs ulnwt.. Ittmg) aspIrabon tived by biliousness: and a pas.- .. ~~1i.,C·~:~~~ff~e~0~~~e:~~~~~::. to work with his brother, Faili- he"wdehclded to mthake the d·move. ~ con ~mp a 10~. " \ sion for m'aking points by whater Bernard Johnson, a' Divine ,erever, ey." nee . me, ,I"; one espe~lallY pro, ocabve ever means. . . actress Irene 'Dunne, author Word missionary, in the jungle that s. ~here. III be,. he saId ill ~cbo,~' . h~ . dISCUsses what he Bernadette A.i:'ain . Agnes .Repplier, :I'homas E. ~ur- village' of Madang' under the descrIbmg hIS ne~ Job., He ex calls reminIscences of the Gos' . . ray, George Meany, operatic supervision of New G inea pects most of hIS work, ,how . pel" in American life.' For ex;Margaret Trouncer, iNho wrote tenor John McCormack and his- 'B' h A A N S u , . ever, will be supervising native ample, he' discerns something a' splendid bo~k about S1. Mar- torian and diplomat Carlton J. 1S . o!'., : . ' oser,. .V.D. construction crews and working' . ~nich he styles American com- g?ret Mary. enti!le~ The NU~!. H. Hayes. . HIS d~cI~I,?-!1 met. w~th t~e ~P:-.. with· residents in learning' "Phl- passion and desire to help the gn:es us ,one 'qUlte ·as g~d 111-.: 'The"Laetare .Medal' ha's been' proval .of h.ls famIlY', ,but .Wlth gin English;" a dialect made' up , unfortunate: This he traces' to ,Samt Bernadette:. The ChIld and; descI.'ibed as an American coun" , s?me. dl!?behef from hIS frum~s of words from 'different lang ~e 'fact that immigranU;perse':': . tJ:1e Nun (Sheed and, Ward!: terpart 'of the "Golden Rose," a' who. th0u~ht he sh~uld·. stay uages. eu'ted or at least subjected to' $3,75). . '. , ! papal h'onor 'antedatin~nhellth' horne 'and earn some money. James is the fourth child of" sUffering elsewhere' have stead-' . It is not· so . exhaustive as i . century. Like the ancient Vat:i'.;. , "'But I figured that this life' Mr. ,and Mrs; Arthur Johnson' ily poured into this'country and' ..Monsignor . Trochu's Sair t Bei,,:: can \ award; it is" a symbol of is' supposed to be a prep'!ration . to, enter into', Church service. h~ve established ,and kept ~live' nadett:. Soubirous, but. all the;· loyalty to Catholic' ·ideals. _ for. th~ . . m:x~, and thi~ is .the. ", Besides Father Bernard, two of. a:. spirit of solicitude for the essentIal elements a~e Included;.: . ,'The, 1958 recipient will 'De w~y'I d hke to prepare," he the Johnsons' daughters entered abused and sorrowing. ' anc;I the p,resentation is skill!uI !chosen by a' committee of Notre: saId shortly before his depar:- religious life. They are SisteJ!S . . .' - :. . and incisive. It reads as. easily. Dame. officials, headed by Holy ture.·. of, Mercy. . LIVIl~g Reality . as a novel bilt one wonders now i . f ' , . Cross Father Theodore M. Hes- ' M '. M an·t· aln. IS. ar from. con.- '., an. d agaiIi about bits of.,conver- . th t II f t burg, university president. Fol-· t . d en I~g a a 1S per ec 10": m; sation-are they authentic or in- lowing ,tradition the winner 'wiil" AmerIca .. I:Ie. sees us as SU. bJect vented., In any case, they do no 6be announced on· March '16,; .... some III u.sl.on.s (f.01' exampI e,· violence to the s.ubJ'ec1. which is Laetare Sunday, the· t an overop ImlstIc vIew of man The most distinctive feature'
Do You Work in a Factory, and nature). He frames' some of the work 'is the sense of'inti- fourth Sunday of Lent and an
. , occasion of joy in the liturgy . t ' ~~rage, Machine Shop or s t nc ur.es on educatIon, ~articu- macy with ·St. Bernadette which of the ·Church. Gasoline Station? larly hIgh school ~ucatlOn. He it creates. We first meet her as deplores a super~clal concept of her family is moving .into We pick up and deliver, clean ~eligion Day love and marrIage, and silly Lourdes after the 'father's fail and repair overalls. Also. we have PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More overconfidence in sex instruc- ure as a m'iller in the. ~ountry a complete line of Coveralls. Pants than 6,000'. servicemen from tion. , .'. .' nearby.. Each member of the and Shirts f6r sale. ." ... , He finds. a l~ckof mtellectual": family is defined,' arid 'the' eldest military bases in four states are We reel.aim and wash any oily, , co.nceptuahzatlOn of some of the c'hild immediately' seizes one's expected to take ,.part in the best features ofA~erican life; attention. . :. second annual usa· - Armed .dirtY or greasy rags. Forces Religi~us Emphasis Day (for ex~mple,of ·wh,at he calls :. 'It is 'so throughout. the 'narra,... W~Y' Buy' When We' Supply the economic hu:ma~ism which tive of' the apparitions ~nd of her~ on April 20.' The men' will attend local .. ~oe~ beyond. capltahsm and: sothe. saint's later. life. :l\{rs. cli:!lIsm and IS the most telling' TrounceI' has 'an instinct for' the I church serv'ices in the morning, then be guests of honor at Com-. answer to ~ommunis~). : revealing detail~ she gOes'to the In Amenca, for hIm, democ- . core" of. 'whatever' she has in munion brea~fasts.
racy is a living reali,t~, operating' hand; "andshe proP6rti~ns~nd
more fully and effICIently than accents her account just right.
and the Communist' party, the , 2" Howard Ave., New Bedford .The sto~y never fails to stir , anywhere else. And he sees. h~re revolution in Russia and its aft-· ~~~~~~~~P~h~on~e~WY~~9~-~6~4~2~4 __0~r~W~Y~.9~-~6~4~2~5~~~~~~~~ a. ~~anc.e. for a new ChnstIan one; but it is .all the more im .ermath, Stalin's. career, and .: t ., ,c~~}hzatIon. . , . . . '. pres~ive ·.when handle,d by such .Communist organization, propa
I ~m far .from ,s~~m~ th~t an expert as the present writer. ganda,. and . activity .in this
today s ,Ame~lcan c1vlhzatIon .]S Don't think'. 'that b~cause you country, " • n:w ChrIstendom, e~en. m hiIVe. read another' book. on St. Then follows a pithy treat outlm.e. . . I. ~o. sa~ that today's' Bernadette and Lourdes, you 'can ment of such matters as the AmerIcan .clvlhz~tIOn maYb~- pass up this one. You will be corne .a .soll partIcularly propl- missing something fine if you identity of American Commu nists, ·why people become Com tious ,for the development of a do ' . '" munists and" why some' quit, . ne,¥. Christendom." . . The Red Story. what life as a member of the , People who have read M.
party is like (eye-opening, this)
FOR ANY; PURPOSE Maritain's other books, much. With all tne resources and rec more formal and learned than ords of the FBI at his di~posal, and the whole gamut of Commu this, will want tp know his J. Edgar Hoo"ver, director' of that nist enterprise in the U.S,A. The AT ANY OF'OUR THREE BANKS reader is told w.!).at, concretely,
views, of America al1d to enjoy . agency, is one of the' best in listening as he discourses infor-' formed Americans on. the sub,.' he can do to counter this, mas="
South Bank Nor~~~ank mally 'and with' flashes wii ject of Communism. Irr his new' sive, relentless, ahd unscrupu
2 Rodney .... 6 h and .huinor.. Those who have book, Masters of Deceit (Hplt.. lous force ()f subversion.
Blvd. ~ 'read nothing of his, could profit- $5), he 'sets out to relate "the' - This. temperate, factual book is, in its unprete,ntious way,
ably begin here. st~ry '0:( Communism in .Amer OF NEW BEDFORD ica" and to indicate "how to highly informative. It knowlAcid for Spain fight. it." . i. edgeably comes ~ grips ~ith ." ,_. MAI.N BANK - .PURCHASE AND WILLIAM STREETS. Honor· Tracy is a~.Q~g the most The' first· pad of the work' is something of .prime iinpor~n'ce ,J , . JI~luJr.Fede."(J.IDefH*t b,8U~ CorporotioK .. . choleric and stinging-:tongueCl.of.. historical'" ~summariZil'!g- the be.,.,·. but ·rather.-little und..rRtood by '. :', . i . ;:,. . co, ·:·~oi:itelJ:ip.Qra~y.· w,dterii.,,::'The,lat..',".. ' l~imingS:';:'Of, '~~OJ:,iunun*:;tl:leoty':: .the. ordinary. citizen.·; .; _". ',' ':':;', .:. . .:. . .
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New Bedford Parish Observes Anniversary of Patron Saint Members of St. Casimir's Par nsh, New Bedford, commemo rated the 500th anniversary of the birth of St. Casimir, Polish and Lithuanian patron saint of the parish, with a vesper service followed by a program and sup per in the parish hall Sunday. Rev. Joseph F. Sutula, pastor, was celebrant at vespers. Rev. Casimir Kwiatkowski, assistant and chaplain of St. Casimir Circle, was master of ceremonies for the program, which included a reading by Mary Josefek and community singing of "Each Day," composed by St. Casimir and dedicated to the Blessed Mother. Following recitation of a prayer to the saint by Christine
Bishops' Rei ief Helped Nation ~eep Fre~dom
Dzioba, Robert Nowak read the story of the saint's life and pre sented a gift to Father Kwiat kowski in behalf of the cate chism class. A group ,of children kneeling around' Ii statue of the Blessed Virgin, renewed vows made by the Polish nation in 1956 at the shrine of Our Lady of Czes tochowa during the observance of the 300th anniversary of selecting the Blessed Virgin, as patroness and queen of Poland. Urges Increased Devotion A carousel dance and the Trojak were presented by a group of parish Brownies, under the direction of Miss Patricia
Kuczewski and Miss Frances
Kogut. Miss Janet Mendrala was accompanist. Father' Kwiatkowski, who showed and explained colored
slides of Poland, urged parish
ioners to have increased devo tion to St. 'Casimir and young people to imitate his piety and ;' PJJrity. " The program was" concluded' , ..with the singing of "Boze Cos Polske" by the audience.' Miss ISabelle Gonet was supper chair man.
. NEW YORK (NC)..,.-Presjdent Ngo Dinh Diem of Vietnam ~ted in a letter sent here' that aid given by the U. S. Bishops' relief agency has contributed to his nation's freedom. The President's letter was re leased here at the headquarters of Catholic Relief Services N~tional Cathollc 'WelfareCon ference" world-wide relief, and rehabilitation agency' of the U.S. Bishops. It (laid high trib ute to the U.S., Bishops'Relief Fund collection to be taken up Laetare Sunday, March 16, 'in some 16,300 parishes, cd the' United States. Aids Freedom ,,"I~, is not an exa~geration t9 state that this ,campaign,'~ Prel/i de,nt Diem said" "might once again in the future, as it has in ' the past, keep life and strength 'in .weary hearts and bodies throughout the world, and even play a part in maintaining the freedom of nations where that freedom is in jeopardy." The Vietnamese leader stated ' that past efforts of CRS-NCWC in .the field of private aid "are remarkable examples of ihe works' of 'Christian charity that· shine before the eyes of men in ' 46.countries of the world.'" ';In my own Vietnam,' the President contiIiued" "the work that is done in your name and'" with your resources by Catholic,' Relief Services .'. . had helped hundreds of thousands of' my countrymen to find their way back to lives of good citizenship in their community and nation." Counted Heavily President Diem said that in the years of communist oppres sion in Vietnam "Catholic Re lief Services was foremost among the private organizations on which we counted heavily in the resolution of problems that come within their scope." "You have not contributed to our welfare in the normal sense of the word," the President concluded. "You have contrib uted to our freedom and to the' realization of the ideals to which ol;lr nation is dedicated."
Franco' Seeks M~)Fe Catholic Action MADRID (NC) - Generalis simo Francisco Franco, Spain's Chief of State, has appealed for an increase of Catholic Action activity in the Spanish ar~ed forces. Expressing his satisfaction over the work of the Central Council of the Military Aposto· late of Spanish Catholic Action, the Spanish leader asked the council to continue its work, with the zeal and constancy which the ideological crisis of the' world demands, a world which is threatened with extinc tion· by atheistic eommunism." Since almost Ute entire male , population of Spain goes through a period of military training, the Generalissimo said, Ute armed forces present an opportunity for giving the country a good re ligious formation. This lonna tion, he continued, 'ean be brought about . . the wOI'k «Ii Caq)c)lie ~c~, , . ,
~
'lllil .1-':'_ ._
AFRICA~S
,
MOST MODERN: Maria Assumpta Cathedral, shown in this architect'. model.; is to be one 'of Africa's most modernistic Cathedrals. It} its design, in the form of a Greek cro~s having four equal arms, none of 3,000 worshippers will be more than 100 feet from the altar. Work Of Holy Ghost Father Christopher Ring,'the newCathe-' ,dral will be the episcopal seat of Bishop' J. J. Whelan, C.S.Sp.,· ofOWerri, Nigeria. NC Photo. '. ' . , ' ., ' . ," . ' .
'J~:r:~:~~~3, 1958 11
'Catholic Educators' Meet AprilS,
the su~jcct of. church and state relations. One of his most re cent addresses, was delivered be-, '! fore a distinguished congr~ga tion of ChUrch and civic officiala , . , .. . : . at the' Red Mass in St. Matthew'. WASHINGTON' (NC) - This Cathedral in Washington, D.C;' year's National Family Life Con-' 8;;11. ' , in January. vention, according to the Family ", •. I ' , WARSAW (NC)-'-A new pub- . Life Bureau of Ute National Father Joseph T. Tinnelly, Msgt. Hochwalt a Iso aftCatholic Welfare Conference, lishing organization, the Catho-' C.M., will discuss the theme of nounced 'that the speaker at the lic Publishing Center, has been th~ 55th annual ,convention of closing session Friday, April 11, can be described as a "middle man's"cimvention. . founded here by a group of well C,a~holic .educators: "The Right will be Prof. Robert E. Rodes,' To be' held in BUffaio, July known, Catholic. leaders. to Educate-The Role of Par- Jr. assistant professor of law ,The founders are participants ents, Church, State." . at the law school of Notre Dame 15' to 17,' the convention will bring together, leaders' ,of all in . the movement centered a This ~as -announced by Msgr.· University. family groups in the nation.' It· rQund ','Znak",a club of Catho Frederick G. Hochwalt, secre- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - has been designed to appeal to' lic:members ~f the Polish Parli-, tarY general of the NCEA organ ament, and "Tygodnik Powszech doctors, lawyers, priests, educa ization which represents teach DONAT BOISVERT ny," leading ,Catholic weekly ers and administrators of Cath tors, social workers, nurses and published in Cracow, marriage counselors, as well as olic schools and colleges. - The INSURANCE AGENCY The center :has not yet re married couples, who are leaders eonvention attracts about 12,000 ceived a permit to pu\>Jish any in the field. annually. All Kinds Of Insurance "Every effort will be made to thing, but a permit has been Father Tinnelly, a Vincentian,' 96 WILLIAM STREET provide a convention for the promised. has been a frequent speaker on The center plans to print a NEW,BEDFORD. MASS. worker in the battle to defend, ,--,support, and promote Cpristian mong its first J?ubJications a Ro , DIAL WY 8-5153 family living," said Msgr.' Irving man missal edited by Father Jan Zieja, a popular preacher.' Personal Service A. DeBlanc, director of the Fam ROSARY ily Life' :aureau~ There is an acute, Ilhortage ,of missals in P<>limd. It also pians. ",' - 'God and Family , . ,C~SES ,-his year~sfamily life ; con.,' to. publish sch~larly papers ~nd venti<>n, h~ said, wtJl be aimed at'· literary work~ of Cat~oJic au Genuine Leather
the "middleman"-the part-time thors. worker hi the fieid who 'is not a From $1.25 up
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~e~Eirtlieless actively in familY BEIRUT (NC) -Maronite hfe, w o r k . , " Patriarch Paul Pierre Meouchi Genera( the~e of the c~nven- : 586 PLEASANT STREET BURNER SALES
of Antioch sent a delegation to tion" "God and the Family," at Opposite Damascus to congratulate Pre's & SERVICE tempts to unfold the nature of .NEW BEDFORD marriage and the impact upon ident' Gamal Abdel Nasser fol lowing the establishment of the' it, from within and without, of 21 Wilbur St., Taunton United ,Arl,lb Republic of Egypt soCial' and psychological prob and Syria. lems. VAndyke 2-0582 It will undertake,to show how ...-.-..u_I-..-"""-'O_U_I'_O_ the sacrament of Matrimony pro vides the power not only-to solve YOU CAN'T BEAT : , problems, but how the sacrament ;A • perfects marriage and raises it to a divine state, the Monsignor added. Eleven separate workshops • NO HAIRY PATCHES will be held, for mOI1! 'Utanl0 • NO FRI,CTION BURNS "For Your Protection
,~o~rl!l" during the convention.
Nationa I, Family ,Session J"ly' l5,'
WASHINGTON (NC) - The dean of the law school at St. Joh~'s University,' Brooklyn has been named keynote speaker for the 'a~nual cOnvention of. the National Catholic Educational As~ sociation in Philadelphia, April
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.~THE ANQfQ~
•• '.
': ~:d VI'SeS""'"'~luOW .'. ;..r;fii~;:£It. L··IVe;',JRS>UFj,L..;· . '. Thurs.,March 13,'1958 to ~~'---......,...-_-..J c-.o·'"
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• -' .' .:' By" Rev. L. Thom~(>SJ.·, ., . i l :.. " : , \ . , - .c :AsSistant,jProfessor of So~ol~~
" , .. ~o ",'; :," ··'''st.'i:.'otils University ""\. ' .
a'wjao~; ~t 46:-\~'~~h':'children nine to 17~ My:·husban.<l_,.
'. arid I .were.,so cIQse-;fr:ie~q~ and compa~ions in evetythihg....
:Neverdid·I dream of w.hat:happens when left a.o.ne. It's liJu~ .
learning to' walk and live' again after fQllowi{lgla qifferent ' . pattern for 25 years; Others to su~h va;ied situati6~u" w~ '. have felt th~ same; how d~d have the ~ill to do sO; . tl1ey start ag~in? Wh~t. dip Where 00 you stari?"Fir~t;'-: they do for their lonelin~ss,? your' immediate' family circle Wh,en death dissolVE:!! a h~p-py /must be reorganized: Y~Ur: fani-' mar.riage, the resulting. sorrow ily must have a head:! and 'that is truly unique now means you. If sPecial prob~ .
in intensity and. lems of finance, lind· . forth, .'
l1ah,lrl'l. ThrQugh arise. seek competent ,advice- marriage, hus-' and be willing· to· leam. '. Don't
~and .alld ·wife say, "theSe things 'aI:~·',)eY9nd~..
<t>~come "tw.o in. me," or,. i'it's,:~ Jat~': 'to::~~t3\'.
~ne flesh." T,bis now!" Likewise; you"JhusC'hi::"'"
channel your social life, You NEW O. S .V. EDITOR:
S.p e c.i a 1 inti ,inacy,'basedon ., are no longer a. couple:' Many" h Rei
'mutual cOlJ;lple-", 'former outlets will be closed;" Jfather Josep . rowey mentarity and' You must discover and mainhas been "n~med new editor love, necessar-' tain adequate substitutes.' " ·,·,··.of,' Our ",Sunday Visitor, iii ten'ds · o · v e r " : . , . , ,Wbat ,about,,}oneliness,?,1 Well, . . nationaL .. :Catholic Weekly. time to fuse Monica, 1 don't think .you can newspaper, by, Bishop Leo A. 'and 'fashion attack this directly; Although it· Pllrsley;: of Fort Wayne" them together through'; ·every· sounds trite to say so, the degree ~resl'de'n. t', .O:S.V.' Boa.r.d . of facet of their being. :: of loneliness you will ~xperience . ' 'Burden ofReaiIjusti~g" ;will, depen.d largel~. on .' t~e Trustees. He·succeeds Arch Death:does more than'stop'this amount of time you are alone~ . bishop John F.:'NoH;·f~rmer process; it leave's ·the: survivor's not physically alOne, but 'alOne Bishop of Fort 'Wayn'e, and 'life mamed a'rid'disjoinfeti:' T~ with your memories, unoccupied founder-editor 'of ,0. S. V., the' pain o'f ';1055': is' addeti·· the .with,. w.ider.. interests, c' ·.uncon., . burden of reorganizingaridt~-, Cerl)e.d 1'vith .,other~,.'un~!lyplv;eflWh6 died in: 1956. Ordained :adjusting tlie' wliolecomplex ~hi absorbing activities. This}s h~'" he,; 'has: .bee~ '.web . of personal relatinn-ships.ricit· mere 'escape, it is siin'ply the assigned,' to parish: wo.rk, ,You state it well, Monica;'··"it's energetic refusal to 'liv'e'in' the was: named Assistant Chan ,like learning .to' walk" and"live past. . II d·t ' ' f 'th again." " , ' .· . . '.:.F~nil:lly;,,,you~re npt, ,wholly c.e or_ail, ,reasurer o , e Before discussing' what to' db, alone. Monica, you know ,th~t,?ioc~~,e).~st June., NO P,lWt9 :let's. get some perspective'! by . our ~U11?an~ live~, tho~gh ~epa looking. a t the overall picture. r:iteci. from you. Under the fir:;t · Approximateiy;' one 7 fourth. of all shock of l.oss, it. is ~ifficult'~o An)erican marriages are,.in a 'grasp this fact. We finq it ,le~ ~idowed· state at ,:gi~en p~i~ulsimply not to think. .b~t " ': ,time. This means that about one ·gradually'. faith restores, tl\e out of every six persons of mar balance.wfth Martha can riageable age (14 years 'old and say,. "I ~now that he shall rise WASHINGTON (NC) -An o~er) is widowed. .' . , ·agaln."··' Armed Forces Day Prayer' has .been composed here for recita , Owing, to the current-, death , , tion at military installations in rate among men, their greater this country' and ... abroad con age at marril;lge, 'and the higher Armed Forces Chaplains Board, remarriage rate of widowers a .Armed Forces Day, May 17. little over two-thirds ofhi)Jl:;es ' :broken by death are fatherless. . The ,prayer was written by the which is made up of the' chiefs :, VariollS Reac:tiODs ',: BROOKLYN (NC)-A remin :.: 1I0 ,w. do peopl~ react to, be" der thaf-"the Christian does not of'chaplains ·of the three' services ;reavement? The principal' ways' operate in a vacuum, but is 'and· their' deputieS. Msgr. (Maj. i~: (1) escape .by recourse to deeply involved in the material <Gen.) ;PatriCk J. Ryan' is 'Chief ,drugs, drink, change of residence;'. and temporal 'order" was voicea of Army··Chaplains· and :Msgr. ,social distractions, and suicide; here by a prieSt experiericed in ·(Brig.. Gen.) T~rence P;Finne 'gan is Deputy Chief of Air Force .!~2) deliberate. ~l.lmo.val. ()~"all ·'mission·,work.'·· ; 'Chaplains. . [reminders both material' and :mental of the departed '(me"' • Jesuit, Fath.er Edward L. Mur' , The p~ayer' foll~ws: t, . , ':phy, a' member of the 'New York \;(3) consolation in religious. be- . ,. , ."0 G9d, o.ur Father in heaven, ' t ua t"" of JesuIt MISSIOns, 'll'e'fs or b y perpe ,, mg 'th'e "headquarters t d h h ' : memory. of the deceased; (4)' ,s resse t at t e Christian must :we redediCate ourselves 'to Thee overindulgence:in griefo'r':rejec.;;··.be ,iQtere~~ed .in..perfect,ing: ';t~e ,and to our nation on this Armed t· natural. He expressed tbese :Forces Day. "We'praise': Thee f6r' c. lOn of society and ,liying'by one.jdeas at .a meeting' ,of nation'al the innumerable blessings,' bo(h :j;elf; .(5) taking 'over thll:'work and'international social workers ,spiritual and material, Thou h~s of the deceasedcir;,d, catrhrig 'on . :bestowed .. ,upon our Armed ;in the same spirit; (6) reattach;." ,at the Grail Instit~te for Over ·Forces. Keep us always .con ',ment of affections to another seas Service here. . Person or "cause.".: . . The. gathering' was convened scious of our high'. calling and As you can see, ·Monica,·· some': t9 plan ·,.a 'semii).ar on the new 'mindful of our most 'sacred re sociological approach to tlie sponsibilities as the guardians ·of these ways represent mere of our priceless liberty. Endow ~". e,scapes or dodge,S. Others are: missionary apostolate, known as '''community development." The us richly with every' grace of .based on self-pity and personal eight-day seminar, July 12 to 2.0 soul that we may be faithful to ·d e f ea t . ,.; '11 b h 1 .rh~e :in the performance of our "'- Although't . be' d 'f'f' . '1"': ". I may I ICU tWI ·. e C e11d at Grau.. '.. , . :to define precisely what su :. ,.,mumt~ .q ege, .Lovel~nd, Ohi~. duties as soldiers,. sailors, air' 'ful rec'overy 'fr'o'm be .cfesst'~ \ , Dr. Ernest W.tte, dIrector of nteih'lrld'marimis,' ' . . . ' . " : . . reavemen th C . 'I Soc' . , i'!\1aywe e:ver bold''sa~red' th~ ;.w-ol;ll~ bEl" it m,u~, ~learly ine. ounci.on lal o~k E,du.. ?olve' (l)' gradu' l' l' . . f cabon, New, York, also spoke at lnemory of our heroic dead.. In 't..e t~nsions and ~ ~:s:~ung 0, the cO,nferenc,e. H~< ,defin~ 'spire u~ .with 'their,spirit.. Be ". ' " ,S a Ions .re-; "community developmerit"·'ils '~a '. our. refuge. 'and ,o~ strength, sO .sultmg from loss; (2) adequate " '. r~patterning, of love arid'affec": '. ,pr~ss ,by ,WQlch peoP~~_IJl', ~ !tliat 'in all batUes·ollife,'7we may ,tion~l needs; (3) 'ability' to face a~a. wor\ tOg~tbtae~, 'Wlto~:' 0':lt-· '~, valia~~, in, ~rVietl ,to'. T~ee ,obligations and ~ ' t 'b 81 e exper' aSSlS nee, rals~ and to our' great':United States " mee pro the 1 . 1 .. d of Ainetick. Amen." , . ", : m~ra , SOCIa , econo~l1c an :lems related to social life with . 'eourage and energy.: ' educ~tlOnal level of the com. :, munlty.". . Use Reserve ~o~!~,. 0 ' ,. ~c,iologis.ts rep~rt that com -V:ou . ask how this can· be . munity .development techniques ,achIeved. The an~er is simpl~, are .especially ,prevalent in ,th0';lgh not .easy. ,You mu'~t-learn 'newly. developmg 'areas in Mid.. APPRAISER
. ',to hve agaIn as an independent dIe Africa and southern .Asia. REALESTATE
,person. ., For the past 25 years you 'have' Tran'slation in Hindu been living a shared, dependent, PATNA (NC)-A subsidy by iNsu:ANcE' > .•.. " "', .mutually supporting, couple ex- the Holy See has 'made it pos WY3-S762 •
,:istence.. Now you must ,learn to, sible to sell for 25 'cen't~ the first !,~6.,Corn.ell ,SL
:walk alon~::":"'just as you did 'be': '; complete Cath~iic trllh~lation of Ne,~ B.e~fo~·d
for~ In~rrla~e. ,'" ,-: ;', ;. ,.the New Testainent' i~to Hindi. '~" "= Of course your world' has . ,. ~,r,
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By !MOst:'m~v!';Fulton J. Sheen~ (DiD. ',;''1 : " :t', ;; .: ".' :1 •. ~ . ):'i~ ',·:J.r,,;,~::: . '~i' I';"" ;', .~;p "\""'''s..~,n:J;~~~ !C¥,d,.~ahSt~it~lJ of c;;h"i~a~!» ~.as,"~~J1 ~~,W-~tI, h~t,~he ~:.Jlo~y . ~a,~J1er '!LIl: the, P:r~pref~ct of .t~.:e ,q~n~~~,c;~tr9n,pU~el'l~~p!,~ i"'$'lJ.U,O~, ()f ,tbe F,;litb,.For,~t~e,Orst t,i!"e' ~~ ,~is~r:i.an,,~in~r.caf~ ,tbe, !to,man ,9uri~'~lIassisq"eVi,etar, ofJ:;hrist i,n qn~ of. hi!,!, m.ost
.: ~p.prtan~ }JUrde~s, t~llt .~f,.J~ringin~, ,f\li~h, h~~~hig, arid ~l;I~~atio,~,
.,~.;1,5~p;~OO,OOO pag~ns,~h(),~iIl k~ow,not:~~e,~am.e of PhJ:iSt ,_
.His' Blessed Mother. . ".,' ..
We, thank: God not' just because Cardinal Stritch is an American, for when it comes' to the. Missions. there are no national~ties.'.We are all one in Christ. Rather we are glad .because the ,American Archbishops and Bisllops, priests and. laity 'who have loved ~Cardinal Stritch so ,much, will.now iove even, .r;nore .the cause which he serves, namely the' Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the ~ Faith. ; "P',. ,;
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:.. N6t th!~' le'li:st o:four i·easonsfor. fu~~'ki;g6~d:'is:,because.o~ p:oor 1~b9ts'for 'the 'missions ha.~e not beeJ;l,ti>o effec;tive.. Ou~ writing, our 'te\evi~;iori; our' begging, our dedication lacked iJ:ISPiration., The 'b~st 'w~: ~~>tlld. dp as' .the~atio·nal :oir~c~or of ,the. SOc~e.ty ,for the PropagatIOn of the FaIth was to gather only, 30c per year per Catholi.c for'the pobr-of the 'woI-ld-,the price of a package of cigarettes, Now ~he Society for the Prop~gation of the Faith' will have a pious and learned )e:;tder t<> m~k~ us ,mOr'~; wor.thy .of ,the high ;bo~or of serving th'e. Ho~y .'F~ther tru.-pu~~ t?e. ~9Tiety,~qr the~ropl;l~t\OIl,of .the Faith. .,'"
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... ~aith no~~ pr,esic),ed .over ~y, the beloved new' Proprefect 'Cardinal
,:Striteh. ,?:,!o work :bas ,more, crosses;~no work ,has more JOYS; May'
;~hll ,Div~ne,l)iiss,onaryand the' Holy Spirit be ever'at'his side. ,';,
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:':GODLOvE YOU to' A,D',' for $'3:50"'On .a.·recerit'.t~h{1 deCided not to purchase 'the usual·travelersiiisurahce and to give; the price of such insurance'to ·the Missions. This co'mes 'with grateful thartks to; Our'liard' 'for a' safe 'return." . .'. to' 'J.R,B. 'for '$40. ''''For \more blessings than I deserve 1 would like the iVlissiori's: to have"my first monthly raise. It seems so very. little 'in return for'alr' His wonde'rlill. blessings-I only hope that. somehow, somewhere; sometime' my ·.little ,Contribution will make Him very happy." ••. to ·M:C. for $2. "Savings on a few Lenten lunches:'" . .., . .:. ' .. .. '.~ray f9rthe m~i~ns ofih~ world, th~.135,OOO UnsaI!lried.work,. en in'ihe'pOOr misSion fields of the world. and for all those who work in the. interests' o~ spreading the Faith. Pray that the Divin~ !V1issionary and the Holy Spirit be ever at their side ... you can do this ~henydu 'pray t~ cWORLDMISSION, .ROSARY which will be 'serit t()you 'UP01\'your reque~t' sent to~s along with' yi>ur sacrifice offei-inif oi;'$2 'toheli>' tinliii~ia'Uy and materially: those whom you woUld peip spitituaily ~. .' : .: . : " , '..; t
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ohi' th~ column, p'in 'your saer:ifi~e.to ft' and. ~ail it t~,~e Most R~v, FiIiton'J. ~tieen: Nat.tonal. Director 'of; Th~ Spcie~Yforihe Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue"New Y,or.k ,~, ,N.Y..,or . your DIOCES.NN· DIRECTOR .' REV,,; RAYMOND "T. ,CON:;llQlNE, 368 North Main Street, 'Fall. River" ,Mass.·.. ; '.,. '.. '. \ . ' , • '. !,
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We rejoice alSo,' bec;i1iS~ ';the "Cardinal . ..otlce'said: '''fotever'y two' cents thatl"ha've" "'~1 , one'cent ,betongs"to the'poor."·'We who h:i:v~ (: J ,.sat ,with :His Eminence on the· ;Board ~hicb' .,aids' ,'hOine tcrilissions;' know'· tliat his' great ,.' heart which;b'eats so tenderly'for tb'emwill now be arilime for the! poor 'of the w·orlcL'. :'.1. ,',:;; ,;., , ".:i .:'1 ';' ":
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Spotlighting ,OUr, Scho~ls.
ST. MARY'S BlOB. TAUNTON The eoupon drive II in tun lWing in the high school for the benefit of the Holy Union Sis ters building fund. 'Captains in, charge are Claire Tonry, Jacquel ine Bouchard, Maureen Kiley, Phyllis Kosinski, Diane Brez inski and Mary Ellen Parker. A survey compiled by Ann Tallant '59 to establish the per centage of the girls' who sub cribe to the Anchor has been completed. The Juniors led with 73 per cent and were followed by the Seniors with 68 per cent. The freshman class had 55 per cent and the sophomores had 38 per cent. The average for the four classes was 58 per cent. This survey was compiled in observ ance of Catholic Book Month. Claire Ducharme, an honor student, has won a scholars~ip to Stonehill College for her achievement in the eollege's competitive examination' taken in December by 300 students. Evelyn Rice '55, has~en , elected to the Saxon Honor So ciety at Stonehill College be cause of her scholastic achieve- , ment and her personal contribu tion' to student 'life on the campus. On the eve of Good Govern ment Day in Boston, the senior class will today preview a day in action at the State House for the underclassmen. Patricia Gog gin" the Class' representative to Boston as Budget Commissioner, will serve as commentator for the special program. The student body will follow the progress of a bill· from the HopJ;5er to the Governor's office. An act abolishing capital pun ishment in some ~ases and an act providing a penalty for fail ure to vote at state elections will be discussed by members of the Senate in a special committee. When all the pro's" and "con's" have been delivered, the other classes will have the op portunity to vote on the issue of raising the driver's age to 18 and two other proposals for fur thering methods of higher edu cation-especially in science. JESUS-MARY ACADEMY FALL RIVER Senior Georgette. Campbell was awarded second place in an Oratorical Contest sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce. The student members of the CCD organization are busily en gaged in preparing 32, public schools for Confirmation sched uled for March 31 at ~otre Dame Parish. senior Catherine' Goulet ltd junior Claire Delisle participated in the <Annual High School Con test on the UN, conducted by the American' Association for the United Nations. Certificates of award will be presented at a school assembly the. latter part of March. Seniors Diane Caron and Jac ,queline Caron took' part in a debate against mem!:>ers of the Prevost Debating. Club last Tues day, JMA 'debating the affirma tive, of Resolved: Direct U. S', Foreign Aid should be changed to Technical Assistance. SACRED HEART ACADEMY FAIRHAVEN Elaine Daniels, junior, has had her hobby report in Latin ac cepted by Auxilium Latinum, national classroom Latin maga zine of the Association for Pro motion of Latin. Elaine's ,report will be published in the April May issue of Auxilium Latinum. Gene Callaghan, senior, will act as Rep\"esentative on Student Government Day tomorrow. She has already visited the State House for preliminary briefing., This year the official program will be televised live from the State House from 9:30 A.M. 12:1~ P.M. and 1:30 P.M. to 4:30 P.M. A special program will be televised from the WGBH-TV Studio, 12:15 P.MA2:45 P.M. Station WNAC-TV, Channel '7, Boston, will present a live telecast of the program' from 10:00 A.M. to 10:30 A.M. on t~e same day: This is the time des ignated for the joint 'convention ef Houlle and senate. .. , '
DOL; ~AMlLY, :NEW BEDFORD Holy Family's participants lit the Narry Debating: League this, week are Ronald Pacheco, IIenior and George ~homas, junior re presenting the Varsi~y. The JV debaters were Mary Jane Rim mer and Katherine Kelleher both sophomores. The debaters met St. Raphael Academy Club, Pawtucket, Rhode IslaJ)d. Both Holy Family's teams were win ners. Ronald Pacheco will represent
Holy Family tomorrow in Stu
dent Government Day. Pacheco's
office for the day will be' that
of a Representative.
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,Schedule Cana Talks For Tau~ton Couples ,The firs.t ill a series of Cana Conferences for married couples wili be held at St. Mary's Schoo,l Hall, :Taunton, on Wednesday, March 19, at 8 P.M., sponsored by' the Queen's Daughters under .the ,direction of the Family Life Bureau of the diocese. , This conference will deal with the husband-wife relationship in regard to marriage as a Sacra , ment, a :vocation and a particular way of sanctity for husband and wife. It is hoped that many married couples in the Taunton area will attend this first con ference to be given on a city wide basis. , Rev. Joseph L. Powers, St. Joseph's Church; Rev. Francia 'Connors, Sacred Heart Church, and Rev. James Lyons of Im maculate'Conception Church wiU 'eond4ct ,the conference.
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SACRED HEART ACADEMY
FALL RIVER
Held at Durfee High, the Sa cred HeartS Academy-Durfee , High debate" proved a triumph to Sacred Hearts. Nancy LaFleur , ---~ -~-~'-------_"" and Mary Lou Simcoe repre I~~"'~ aented' S.H.A. , You don' pray right" Father , ditio~al St. Patrick's assembly',
Enlightening the Lenten Sea
Suggested by-':Mrs. Francis D. Mone. No. Easto~ March 17.
IOn with his feast day, St. Pat
Dominican dei:laters won a
rick is the main topic, Qf con Forensic Tournaments, at the DOMINICAN ACADEMY ,unanimous decision over Rogers versation this week oat the acad eonclusion of ,the debate season. FALL RIVER , emy. As preparations for the gala Foreign Aid will be the topic 6f , Rochelle -Olivier, senior, has High in Newport, on the 'league topic, foreign aid. Georgette Ra- ... 'St. Patrick's Day parade pro-, these, tournaments 'and .varsity ,.-been notified that she is one of mos and Shirley Hinds upheld ceed under the, impetus of Mrs. ,debaters will participate. the stude~ts who are to receive the affirmative for Rogers against Leary, the art class,and the stu- . Brother Patrick, 'F.I.C, pro a letter of commendation from Dominican's negative team of dent council, the halls ring with vincial of the Brothers of Christ the lovely orchestration of the . ian Instruction, visited Prevost the Natio~al Merit' Scholarship Elaine Maltais and Jeannine Barrette. Irish tunes. March 17 is the date . High this week on his annual Corporation because of outstand set for the annual orchestra con . inspection tour of schools and Judge Arthur Sullivan and 'ing achievement ~n the October ,Thomas Edwards, Director of cert which will stress 'the Irish organizations of the order. ' theme.
Brother Edmund, F.I.C., 'lib~ 1957 test, having, "demonstrated Finance in Newport, were The seniors' tribute to good rian at the high school has,re' highly superior ability and out judges. Carol Servillo acted as government as apart of the cently; purchased 37 new and in standing promise to benefit from chairman. Timers were Evelyn American History and Social teresting pU~lications for the college training". '
,DY,e and Claire Reilly. Studies program of the Acad library. The books treat on many
Wilfred Ouellette coach,es the Rochelle, daughter of Mr. and emy will, be held today. Under subjects and '!Vere made possible Mrs. Henry Olivier of 239 Whip Newport debaters. Daniel F. the 'general chairmanship of under the .vigorous work of 'pIe Street, has been offered a Grace is coach for Dominican. Gale Martin, the following com Brother Edmund and by the The academy varsity basket four-year scholarship to Stone mittee heads have organized the members of the Prevost High ball players scored a 41-30 vie hill College, on the basis of a affair: entertainment, Betty De- Book Club. He plans to purchase competitive test given at' the tory over Colt Memorial ,High at Fusco, Sheila, Cronan arid Pa many more books for the en . eollege in December. DA. The Bristol Junior Varsity ti-ieia Golden; decorations, joyment and edification of the The orchestra will present a also bowed to Dominican, 25-23. Lynne Collins; posters and iden" student body. He is also the program of, Irish airs at' the tra , The return games will be played 'tifications, Jean Ng and Patricia typing instructor at Prevost.
. this afternoon on the Colt gym. Dias; typing, Catherine Costa Although I Prevost recently
and Jacqueline Bussiere. The went through ,one of its most theme' of the program is "Theo-' disastrous seasons in Narry dore Roosevelt and Responsible Basketball history, the student Citizenship." Sister Francis Al attendance,atgames was the best FAll RIVER oysius is the faculty advisor. that was ever recorded, even Bya consultative vote the when the school had champion ST., PATRICK'S DAY PARADE' HEADQUARTERS Journalism class chose for their ship teams. ' Brother Ignatius annual issue of school news: the ,wishes to thal)k all who attended following sophomores: Evelyn and supported the team. Levesque, editor; and page edit ors Patricia Drislan, Gladys Corned Beet and Cc:abboge Dinner
O'Connell, Susan Roy, and Anne Marie Shea. '
-
HOTEL' MELLEN
SUNDAY, MARCH J6
PREVOST HIGH,
FALL'RIVER
Armand R. Aubut, of 182 Suf~ folk ,Street, Fall River has beell' awarded a fotir-:year partial scholarship from ,Stonehill' Col.,. lege. Armand is, however, turn ing down the offer because he has plans to attend Bradford Durfee College of ,Technology. He wili take up mechanical en gineering. He has been a high honor student for his four year high school course, and was the first of his class last term. He is a co-editor for the Prevost 'Yearbook, and is a reporter (special) ·for the school paper. The. seniors of Msgr. Prevost High School have formed a bow:" ling, league. 'There, are 36mem bers in, all. Organizers of ,the, league are Paul A. Gosselin sen ior class president, and Gerald R. Lavoie. Meetings are" held each weekend. ' Brother Ignatius, ,F.I.C.; ath.,. letic director of Prevost High. has organized an intramural sports league. There will be eight basketball teams, and six volleyball teams. Softball has not been officially organized into the league yet. The schedule should span the course of the remaining school year. Five Narry League debates have been scheduled for the month of March., Prevost met Rogers High last Friday at home; yesterday with Coyle at home; today with De LaSalle in New port; next Wednesday with At tleboro and on Tuesday, March 25 with Holy Family at, home. Junior Varsity debates are scheduled for the Coyle and Holy Family debates. Freshman debaters will participate in these. Brother Ignatius is moderator of Prevost debate activities. Brother Ignatius plans to en-' . ;• . 'Prevost debaters in varioU5'
• CATERER •
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...•••........••.•...•....
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WHITE'S Family Restaurant fU.·6 at the Narrows in
~orth
Westport
,CELEBRATING ST~' PATRI~K/S DAY SUNDAY, MARCH 16,
11
A.M. to 8 P.M.
in our beautiful Garderi Room
Real Old Fashioned
Corned Beef and Cabbage
DINNER
Served Family Style
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MAkE YOUR RESERVATIONS EARLY " PHONE OS 5-7185 P.S. Don't Forget to Come to Fall River to See the Largest
and Most Beautiful St. Patrick's Day Parade In Yeras.
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M6NTR~AL (l'{C)'-A ceraniic and. gold mosaic illustrating 11 ',:; ,Thus far in my discu~siondf the criticisms made by chief episodes in -the life of. St. . ' . J"h J C h I ' Joseph and covering a ·sur.face of M~gr. John Tracy' Ellis a~~: Father' 0 ~ '. . avanaug '." '1,500 square feet 'will be installed have concentrated on exposing t,hemeanmglessne.ss of. t~e , in 'the famous basilica of St. evidence· they offered to~_upport,.the c~~rge of Amerlc~ JoSeph's Oratory here during Catholic intellectual medlo-, ist, Thought, Rlmascence, Art 19q8.· Quarterly, The Jurist, Review of Several other large interior crity. Now I am ready to face Politjcs, Spiritual Life, Theology decoration projects will be car- , ' · t , and so ried Digest, Thin k era D Iges . out in the shrine ciuring the thl'S questl·on·. year. The Oratory--originally a on. . "What do you think? Are tiny'~ wooden chape.l in honor ()f . I ' g m' Art and Music Catholic A mencans aggm St. Joseph-was founded in 1904 What religious group in Amer the intel1ec t uaI by Holy Cross Brother Andre. l'ca l'S doing anything compara t? " life, or no . Eight 37-foot columns at the b~? ' I do no tk now. rear of the building?s apse will k Even Msgr. Tracy and Father J don't th m be covered with golden mosaic. Cavanaugh, I am confident, anybody k nows. . h would confess that they cannot The ambulatory, behind the col Nob 0 d y as umns, will'be covered with 3,200 keep up with the flood of worth the t a ken square feet of red marble. while books and articles pouring trouble to d e fi n e . . , . , . Installation of fittings in the what we are ,:q~~ from our presses. . basilica's chapel of the Holy . Neither, I suspect, can they ITALIANS WELCOME NEW BISHOP: It's tradition talking a b ou t' . Sacrament .'will be completed. Wh'at is the intellectual life? keep abrea'st of the progress in The stations of the Cross and 18 in Ascoli Satriano, Italy, that a new Bishop enters the city art, literature, music. I. know . . t llectual? ' for the firs't time iIi triumphant procession astriqe a white W h a t IS an In e . permanent confessionals will be What is meant by such loosely I can't. , installed. \ mule. Here Bishop Mario de Lieto, keeps that tradition, only bandied. words as "scholarship," The discussion leads us inevi this time he rides a white horse, led by two municipal police "leadership," "accomplishment" .tably to it consideration of true and "pre~tige?" values. The "best" is often not in dress uniform. Damask table cloths and bed covers hang Prestige in whose eyes? AJ: the best-publicized. And the HOLLYWOOD (NC) - "Two from the windows and balconies to add colorful trappings eomplishment in what sense, and 'best-publicized is what gets into Thieves," the story of, the two to welcome th~ new Bishop. NC Photo. eccording to what standards? Who's Who. - men crucified, :with Christ, will Surely Catholics are in the We must avoid adopting' the be the Marian Theater presenta forefront in America in the field world's judgments as necessarily tion on March 23. The program ef . the.o~ogy, queen of the correct. . . will be broadcast from 10 to Kiences. We must not set our ,sights on 10:30 P.M. over the Mutual net , Sufeiy we hav~ prodUced the the world's acclaim. If it comes, work. Marian Theater is pro writes the Patriarch Joseli~ VU, "my people cont:~lue 10" _e. besithinkers, or at .least many all 'right;:but ltmust not~ oUr duced by Holy Cross Father Pat iWlt .. many centuries ago tho Psalr::::ist described the Iill'row of ef the'best, in philosophy.. .., I motivation. ~. rick Peyton, founder of the . . ~ t. the cbildren of Gcd who lived in the um. Suteiy. Catholics have been i ";ould not be afraid to ~rt Family Rosary Crusade.. ~'3>. ' ~/ country." Ani wh7 should there .\lill U8 moreiproductive and influential that Catholic Americans' .have .. .c.. ~ weeping snd sonow ·&ods,. In Bagclad (cap. than';ahy other American 'group 'made a contribution to Amer... .~. ~. ·ltal of Ir,:.q)? For (be aamereason whicb ,';. in th'e vital field of social justice. ican thought, scholarship', and I til . 0 accowits for so mnch of the Church's prob , / ,Excel ill Literatur.e .. achievement at least equal'to ~. t~r.ollghqu' themissionarJ' Iud; of Nobody excels us in sch~~~ that: of any. other group,' :··:w.Ito ;+,' . the Nea.r Eas1-a constantly growing Cath ahip.: in"the right principles, o~ could prove 'me mistaken!::~Md ~ ,.' + 'olio po;. atl",n 'llod rap:, I,.; shri---\iq welfare .. work, hOsPitalizatio~, . by 'w,hat means? (- . , . Church, ·funds. It.1- II Iia~py, delic',t, since ma r r4\ge. guidance and the lil~e. Nun Found Leprosy Cu!"J';, It. means more. aDd more sou~s aro. beiDa" Nobody is even competing We must guard against;~y~rdrawn. to )h: " 1-BUT-it is iU a with~u:sjn producing a compar., .' emphasis on material science;'too TlxHory P",'''rr's Mj,.:,... A.." DEFICIT! The Poor Chr: tianll Caa' LEO B. BERUBE, Mgr.
able -literature of family life.' "'7'important though it is. . ~. .' . d::.tl earn :,sU,. :desi 3 to L 'JjJ J . a ( ureh' Our spiritual writers are. with " I do no~ want to take unsports .951 Slade St..: Tel. OS 5-7836
iii 'thls land of the Bible. It is their hope to raise thill House ot God out p~r. . . \' . manlike advantage of Fa,ther 10 tho honor' of SL. Josc:Jh. Foster-Father of'( 'Ir;st (Feast of l :. We'have given the world Cavanaugh's unfortunate rhetor Joseph.. jWarch 19). .The cost of t'lis Chu:'ch is f5000-~ill you IlPle.~did.new studies of the cen ical . question," "Where ate? the belpfor tho honor of .8t. Joseph, the weUareot 'your own lIoW. tral', figure of history, .Jesus Catholic' Einsteins,Oppenhe,i-. or the 'soul of II dear departed o n e ? ' , Christ.' " \: niers, Salks?" ·But it has,ilhis IN LIFE-KEEP YOUR WILL IN, GO')-AFTER DEATH_ We have made giant strides in trative value. '. KEEP GOD IN YOUR WILL. REMEMBER THE MISSIONS litetary biographies of those, Albert Einstein was born .lind Plumbing -Heating IN YOUR WILL... great h,"'um.an .!:>eings, the.;sai~,ts,. educated in 'Etlrope.,W,.e. might . . . . .' who~ liVes 'motivations ~s ~rea$Qn~)?ly' '~Where..is ;" : '; . 'Ov.er 35 Ye~rs "SUFFER THE Ll'rTLE CHILDREN TO COME UNTO ME/' Com. imm~ns~ly :- ·"rrieailing£ul.~'for . ·the·Ametican'JewishG.<KA::lh¢g manded the Lord and we are happy to report that a grea& many of .,"; of S~tisfied .Service everybody. terton?" our Irenerous Catholics take this wish of the 'Lord . We are publishing .dozen,s o~, .. ,Robert Oppenheimer, .i>orn in " ':806' NO.' MAIN STREET Yery serlously.IJut even though we have 'mllllY magazines, devoted to varioUs' ': Ameii~a, was educated 'chiefly 'F~I'I 'Rive~ .,' OS 5-7497 ...h~ helpu, there st!lI remaiusa large nur'ber phases of the life of the intellect. in England and Germany. , Let me name some:'Critic, AmerJortas' Salk developed the ~';"'~"~'~'''~~'':'':.~;:~~~,~~~~~.ot bojs' aDd cirls who need, a new suit or ~r( J ica, Catholic World,<;:o~,rp()n:'7. p.ol~o va.ccine, andp?lio, is enor II '., ----',' weal, Jubilee, Worship;' Bene:.. - : mously' publicized;' ,but.'·"llD ob-. tll er: .aro·. united to Our.Lord for thelirst ,t1me'in '. dictine Review, Ecclesiastical~~.Catholic nun developed a fte Sacrain.ent·, of His Love? Yc.'r LeJlten "'sarri- . , I Review, Educational Review, ;I~rosy cure,' and oU':'hand I '. 6~~ ·o~eliiig" .. willp~rchasfJ a First Communi,,!> . '. Historical Review, Library cannot remember her name, be '. Ot~6t .<$10) antt.· e~able TOU to a'pproal'h the Altar with aD innocen& World, So<;ial Order, The Thomshe was little pUbli~ized. child. ' .. . . <, . • By
JQseph
A: ':Greig
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Cleveland. ,Universe Bulletin
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Marian Theat..e
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Students Honor St. Patrick.
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Spotlighting .011lr·:.$~hools :)0.
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MOUNT ST. MARY'S. FALL RIVER
pIan' to t,:;ke it should register at once at the academy. , Today, the. annual orchestra The Academy Forensic Club concert will be held at Mt.St. defeated Attleboro High ·on last:' . Mary Academy at 8' p.m. in the Friday, with the unanimous de- academy' auditorium. A special eision for the Mount. Ann Mis, performance was given yester class of 1960" and Margaret Grif- '. 'day 'at four p.m. for the religious fin, class of 1960, debated for the of the diocese. Sister M. Verona, Academy. pefending A.ttleboro· . t d ' . d d R.S.M". A.M., is the direc or an High were Robert Glrour an moderator of the orchestra, 'as lean Handren. ,. The coach for .the Attleboro debaters is Way sisted by Arthur Paquette, B. land Burgess. Judges of the de bate· were:' The Rev. William O'Connell, Atty. William Entin, and John' McAvoy. Atty. WilHam B. Sullivan is the coo.ch for girls of the Mount. Sister Mary Flora, R.S.M~ AX,. is the For ensic Club Moderator.
'M~~e Academy basket~all team defeated the funior varSity and
the varsity teams of Saint Mary'. Academy, Bay View, Riverside, R, I., last Sunday. The referee w'as'Mrs. Alice Sullivan of Prov idel)ce. Mt. Varsity ~re was . 53; Bay View; 35; Mount J-V Sister Mary Dionysia. R.S.M., score, 31; Bay View, 22. Diane A.B., head of the Commercial Perry, class of 1961 ,of the Mount Department at the Aca~cni.y, at w-as'thehigh scorer. with 16 tended the 11th annualril~eting .. points for varsity. Carole Adam, of 'the Northeast Unit of:· the clasS :ot 1960 of the M~unt, was Catholic BusineSS Education As-the' 'high scorer for the' Mount sociation held; la~t Saturda": i* with 13 points for the J-V. Rose Hawthorne Central Cath- . StudentS of the Aeademy will olic High Sch6ol, CoocOrd;:,Mass. participate in the St. Patrick~s The theme of the high school Day Parade, to be held· next sectional meeting was. ''Deve.1op-", Sunday. . In, this. parade;"sPon ing Behavior.Patterns Throu'gb ' soredby" the Clover Club, the Modern Methods." Mount.girls will march,and lead Next S~tur.dilY the entrance:..' in -a' spe~ally :ad?rned: '~oat for scholarship examinations' for ' ~e~caslon. ThIs arji~tlc work .•' girls who plan ,to enter, the 15, bemg prepar~d .bY ~e. stu Mount in 'September 1958' will dents und.er the cqalrmanshlp of '. . , ,.' ~', Mary' Markland, '5S.. Ann Carr, be held, at 9 a.I11.. in the llC!ldemy. ' .'59,. and Ann Mis, '60: Sister Gir~s who have not :registered Mary Irene,' R.S.M., A.M.,. is the ~ this examination and .who· faculty advisor.
I .'.'H.OW' . ···10
TEll I'F':·:Y.·'0"U' S'HOUlD '"
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PRIEST
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Have you ever wondered
Do I
bave a voea&IOD! ••• CaD I be a pries'! • • • Would I be a'cood pries&!, U . you have. you will lind
Tms 'LE~ SHALL LIVE FORE'VEIt "'.f. ~our sacrifloeshelp .. ".eclu,cate a';boy for the pries.thood 'or a girl 10 serve Christ 'In the, pOOr of the ·mlsslon.s. . S.1MI and mRAHIM are waiting to be~in ·th:ir stl:diesfor tho ~g~~ ·priesthood In St.,Paul's Seminary (Lebanon). But each must continue to wait until he. haa found a 'be'nefactor w' :) w: 1 .-i:·o $100 a year for the necessary expenses (total $600). SISTER ANDREWS and SISTER ALBERTA
"-!5i!!!e!!=
are most' anxious' to jo;nthe CODgregatioD Again, eacb must wait for a benefactor who will pay $150 a . year (total $300) for the Novitiate training; 1 u can Pay the total amount In any ,or-nvenlent while your "adopted child" is preparing In prayer and stUdy, to serve Christ in this special way. You ean "gO it alone," OR make It a project tor the Brid&"e Clu~ or the Bowllog Team! E!!!!!illiiiiii;-.} of the Ii-Iy' F--:nily II 'cUa.)
w~y
.
great belp In a 'brief booklet writ·
ten especially for. young men like
yourself, facing a decIsion that can change your entire lite. This booklet tells about ·the Holy Cross F'athers who serve Christ "across the .worl.d" as, parish priests, for eign missioners, priest-teachers. ·and home mIssIoners. Its plain, direct language will belp you take the best road to serving Christ. Simply 1111 out and mall the cou· pon below. The seconda it takes may change your ute.
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'Holy (ross Fathers .~aston, Man•. Please lIeDdme .,free IllrOrmatioa about ~e Holy Crou FatherL ,
North
Name: ~~;..;.~
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GIFt' CARD SUGGESTION
Your Lenten sacrifices ean bring creat JO.1 10 tho mLvslonaries. These herole souls do not ask for them~lves. . Theil' onb concern fa . . for the House of Gott. rih,. not 'Civo lID artielo 10 belp , fumisb their simple chapels? You caD do thll In lOur Dame ••• In tbe Dame ofa IJPBclal ,friend ••• iD memol7 of a dear departed one. Cur beautiful GIFT CARD wiD tell ef thll kindness do~o for the intention ot another•. 1':'''-11'111 Bend a GIFT CARD auywher~ for TOU anti en eloae PR~SSED rLOWERS ,rr ';"HE POLY .I,AND whleh have been .bleSSed on t<l. rlJly £epuleber. M. . beD •••••.. $5 r~OIIstrallee ..... $41) . ·ltar Etoile .... $1. Craeiflx .••••••. 25 I'ietunt , ..•••.. 15 tatue ..••••••• 30 AI~ •• ~.,~,.; '15 Cmdle8 ' Z. :halice 40
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'~'l1tar'fastmissiOIlSJ3I
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City
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_
WINTRB WORLD FOR'CHRIsT•.
F~ANaS' CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President '.
.
. Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat" Sec', Send all comm.nicatloM to!
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIAnON New York 17,.N.. Y.,
480 Le~ington Ave. ,at 46th St.
'.'
Military Council
THE ANCHOR-
WASHINGTON (NC) - The National 'Council 'of Catholic Men has named a field repre sentative for the newly organ ized Military' Council of Catho lic Men in Europe. Philip Finn, program director of the NCCM's national' staff here since 1954, will establish the headquarters of the new or ganization in Frankfurt, Ger many, Martin H. Work, execu tive director, announced.
Thurs.,March 13,1958
15
Purpose of the military coun cil according to Mr. Work, "u to afford' men in the armed forces an opportunity to further participation in the work of the lay apostolate through federated action, to enable these men to participate in the existing pro grams and use tlie services of the NCCM, and consequently to assist the chaplains in carrying out their dut,ies."
APRIL SHOWERS MEANS MORE ELECTRONICS: Two young teens, David Her bert of King City, Calif., and at the mike, Terry Kennedy, of Mt. View, Calif., are now broadcasting over amateur radio station KN6CNN, at St. Francis grammar school, Wat sonville. Both are licensed "bam" operators who with more than a dozen boys 11 to 14, not only built the "ham" station, but work daily with vacuum tube voltmeters, capacitor testers, and other complex equipment. Salesian Brother Ray Steichen of the school says the group has built more than 30 radios and nearly a dozen TV sets. Sinceelectronics training is extra-curricular, the group prays for rain, which cancels certain classes meaning more time for tubes. NC, Photo.
Plan Installation Of CU Rector
Father Shovelton to Direct· Third
Christian Doctrine Seminar
WASHINGTON (NC) - Msgr. Rev. Albert J. ,Shovelton of Peter Hawes and ,Robert Cook; William J. McDonald will be , St. James Church, New Bedford Holy Name, Peter Kellish, Paul installed as rector of the Cath will direct the'third seminar on ' Kellish, Theresll Medeiros and olic University of America here religious education at 8 o'clock Anne Samson. . on April 16. '• next Tuesday night in St. James ,This series of four seminars Invitations are being seflt to Church Hall. Miss Mary Mori ' held during the'month of March
members of learned societies, arty of Ho~y Name Parish will is sponsored by the New Bed
Pontifical universities and other demonstrate, teaching a class of ford District of the Fall River
institutions of higher education Junior High School students Diocesan Council of Catholi~
throughout the world, as well from Our Lady of the Assump Women.
as to educational organizations. tion Parish, on the subject of Members of. St. Hyacinth
, Council of Catholic Women will
All bishops of the country, ,'Redemption'. " The fifth grade youngsters who be registrars. The public is in supervisors of Religious orders, vited to attend. '
representatives of the diplomatic participated in the second semi corps, and members of Congress nar held last Monday were the From St. Ja~es and the ex'ecutive and judicial following: branches of the government are Parish, Sharon Medeiros, Susan ' Anderson, Janice Raphael and being invited. Marilyn Worden; from St. Mary, COLLEGEVILLE (NC) - A
The committee on arrange Paul Taylor, John Majka, Gary series of pastoral psychology
ments is headed by Father Jo workshops for clergymen of all
seph B. McAllister, assistant to Bellavance" Donald Gamache, faiths will be conducted for the
the rector,' and includes mem' fifth consecutive year this sum
bers from the faculties and ad VATICAN CITY (NC)---'-Ire mer by the Institute for Mental,
ministrative staff of the Univers land's President Sean O'~elly Health of St. John's Univerl/ity ity. has been notified that he is the here. ' The general committee is com first recipient of the Golden Benedictine :Father Alexius posed of deans of all the schools Collar of the Order of Pius. , Portz; executive director of the and heads of all of the depart His Holiness Pope Pius XII re,. institute, announced that the ments of the university, all the cently instituted the new honor workshops will !be held this sum University monsignori, and stu as the highest class of the Order mer :(rom July, 28 to August 15. dents. ' of Pius, which was instituted The' sessions f~om August '10 ,to The executive committee, by Pope IX in 1847. The new 15 will be open only to' church headed by Father McAllister., rank was created for "rulers of men who hold administrative includes Msgr. James A. Magner peoples and other very high au positions, and; will concentrate and Msgr. John J. McClafferty, thorities." on the problems of the religious Fathers Louis Arand, S,S., Ray administrator. . ' mond Hain and Bernard T. Rat During the past four years 420 tigan and Drs. Catherine R. Rich NEW YORK (NC)-The Na,. priests, 73 Protestant ministers and Roy,J. Deferrari. tional Association of Manufact: and one rabbi have participated Msgr. McDonald was named urers has issued a brochure in the pastoral psychology work rector of the university last strongly urging contributions by shops, which are directed by December. He had served as business 'corporations to the sup psychiatrists ~nd psychologists acting rector since last June and port of privately financed col who are faculty members at St. succeeded Bishop Bryan J. Mc John's. Entegart, who was named Bishop leges and universities. of Brooklyn.
Schedule: Workshop
In Psycho,logy
Honored by Pontiff,
GARDEN-GREEN FRESH TENDER STALKS
ASPARAGUS GARDEN-GREEN-REDUCED 2c A POUND
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NEW CABBAGE
ROCHESTER (NC) - Some 10,000 copies 'of a "Guide for Parents" in regulating the social life of their teen-age children have been distributed in the two years since its publication. The pamphlet was composed by a volunteer co'mmittee of parents of teen-age girls attend ing Our Lady of Mercy High School here. It was compiled for the use of the parents of stu dents at Our Lady of Mercy, but' publicity it received has caused it to be requested by many other parents. The pamphlet is pubHshed by the parents' association of the school. , The "Guide" contains recom-' mendation's to help parents in directing their children in re gard to such things as: various types of parties and dances, curfew for youngsters; dating, drinking, the use of automobiles, and part-time work.
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Bv William H. Mooring Hollywood is ;pending $850,000 tQ creat~ the largest single audience TV has ever enjoyed. An estimated 65000,000 to 75,000,000 viewers will tune in the Motion Pi~ture Academy's 30th annual "Oscar" Parade, March 16. NBC-TV gets $400,000 Academy selections were ar for its "playing time" 'and rived at with any speciill respect there will be no commercials for the m.oral quality of the films because the whole show wiII to be honored. I am saying that
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~ByHenryMichael____ Destroyed by Atom Bomb
NAGASAKI (NC)-Scores of letters were received by Bishop Paul Yamaguchi of Nagasaki and by city officials when it was an nounced that a cliurch destroyed in the atom bombing of thia city wguld be rebuilt. The letter writers endorsed the 'plan for preservation of the Church of Mary Immaculate. Its ruins have become the most familiar memorial of the devas tation caused by the atom bomb dropped here on August 9, 1945. The church was situated in the Catholic district of UrakamL When the bomb was dropped, 8,000 of the district's 10,000 Cath olics perished. A part of a shattered wall of the church remains standing. It includes a portion of the arch that formerly enclosed" a side entrance, apd a statue of the Blessed'Mother gazing skywards. The wall has been photo graphed a,nd depicted in paint ing innumerable times. Under the leadership of Bishop Yamaguchi, the city'. . Catholic population has increased , from 2,000 to 6,000 in the past 12 years and the need for a church became imperative. It seems, therefore, that Nagasaki will lose its most striking bomb ing memorial.
be one gigantic commercial, this year, according to Holly seen, heard or read about, by wood's own evaluations, the'best a billion people around the films, dramatically and techni world. " c a l l y speaking, are almost aU They've even built a $200,000 morally good ones. They also pavilion behind the Pantages are attracting' the. biggest audi Theater· for TV and newsreel ences to 'the movie theaters. cameras and Film Dangerously Advertised 'several hundred .reporters to "The Narcotic Story", semi 'interview the documentary film, produced by winning stars. law officers, and authorized by The cos( comes the L, A. Police Dept. as a police .from a one . train'ing film only, has been fin .quarter of one agled into public release. It vio-, percent _ levy lates the Movie Code by showing' . on the g r o s s , j u s t how to use dope' an(i the domestic earn effects that result. In Los An ings of everybody making mon geles it is luridly advertised, a ey out of films this year. dope spring being brazenly dis ACROSS 48 Coast 8'J.. Is upright S9 Stores , You can see Hollywood is not played alongside, an endorse 40 Seared In rae 49 Omit 88 Killed" 1 Small coin exactly starving in spite of TV ment. by California attorney U Fool Ii Distend' . DOWN 110 An explosl. . U THEBE 18& 11 Shows vocal 1 Combines 51 River (Span.) c:ompetition, athough why the general Edmund G. "Pat" Brown. SHRINE TO mirth playing caras 62 Head of the HER IN ......._
Movie Academy would pay Narcotics expert Anslinger of . l' Paradise I Mental Cbureh U Freedom to deO..leut such a tremendous, psychologi-' the 'Treasury Dept., greatest 18 Ohllteratow 6S lcemu_ enter S Kind of voice 19 Skillful M ConOlet I til Reports
cal tribute to TV is a good ques American authority on the sub 10 OIoth 115' Objects of lin .4 Plea 46 Rellll"loua
.lion, Perhaps Holl~'wood is pre':' ject, has warned again and again , 6 Bring do.... pictures
67 A part of tb" III ~'ii\:~Sn~ . 'II Celerity ... body 8 Pre8se. paring for times when Toll-TV that.film!> showing how dope ,is Jl'AMOUS .._ Il8 J,atera.l ...... .9 Tbln board.
t Tardy ,becomes the nation's No.1 en .taken and with what effects, III Pennant . 69 Fasblons 63 Throw
8 Kind of wo04 .Ill Opening !ill' Jollity
60 Bides • 9 Golf mound 'liertainment. . have been found to increase, not M SHE HAD 81 BrlBtI.,. 17 Advanee
·10 Cbores "Don't expect another of these decrease, dope experiments es .......... CHILD 11 SHE IS A PA 68 Property
n Man's ZlI Partlele nickname TRONESS OF develope"
TV 'spectaculars' ", warns Acad pecially among youths. The ini ll' Period of time OS SmUes Ilgb&t,. 60 Authors
WOMEN IN emy president George Seaton. tial ads for this police filmmake' B8 Ways 81 Resort
M To tbe point . ' SO Spunlsh title 85 SHE WAS' 18 i?i'rii"imau ea Mule
"It's to be funny, not silly; im a direct pitch for juvenile inter 8ll Part of tbe THE .......... 0 .. 18 Narrow Ju eomlluuul
'pressive, not pompous". "We'll 'est. JOACHIM • . 1& Lost one bead M Advlsea earl,. 88 Hall Marr 88 Creature ,:Ill SlIlClreci <Comb. '85 Rnbs off make it interesting with oodles Only last week, in Albany, the BAGHDAD (NC) - Two for 86 Woman's _
ll& Forest 89 SlUy talk form) opening '8 Man's na_ 67 Comedy
of stars, old and new, and a New York State Legislature, mer Iraqui prime ministers and ~~o~ftt~a1· Pronoun M Rbymester 86 Having ..
COO d humored hintory of the heard from counsel James A. the country's present· Minister Flat .....k foot skeleton
'6 Metal 9 South '7lI Affection' 19 Night befo.. 89 A commo.
movies", says Jerry Wald, head Fitzpatrick and others, via a of Education were among the I Europeans' ,SO 8ervant food
" SHE WAS A producer of the show. committee report; that much WEALTHY U TlIEBEI8 A large audiences attending a It Boof overba.... 70 Honrly
at Edible -el 71 Bring fort~
Smacks the Sack 'film advertising is .misrepresen series of lectures given here by ft~~l~:,~~ 'AI Oa'''·:''bo IleN S4 Shiny 'Ji Mend al:'al.
to _rry K HEB , ".,O""t1ou , 740 Read closely
an American Jesuit ,scholar. However, in case you're inter ,tative, lurid and· designed to ap DAUGHTER U "~"'.f.l·;~ee wl~ 82 l':nerl:Y unl" ,G In plain de..
The lectures, sponsored by the ested, girls, Edith Head, Para peal to prurient interest. More til 811ce thinly 81 Bepeat ", paper Ground
M Native of au IJe'·'I.rmanee 86 " .ill"ent 80 Rent
faculty of AI-Hikma University, mount dress designer, herself anctt.more film promoters seek Asiatic 1a.4 ... I.asso 81 Olllee of J:r1oe were given by Father Richard g:r?e:'~ winner of a row of Oscars, ing ~ fast buck, are putting out &'I' Snpply S8 Sclenoe of Admlnlstraaloe 88 Planted .elOPo", (abbr.) of ..... .1. McCarthy, S.J., who spoke in promises "the world's greatest sordid, sex, crime and dope films Arabic on philosophy 'and wi9 fashon show". Then she .takes a (many. foreign made) without Solution on Page Elchieen dom, philosophy and religion, pack at "the sack". submitting them or the ads used arid the origins of Islamic philo9 "Each studio will supervise to peddle them, to the film in-, ophy. CIte dressing of its own stable dustry's Code administrations. Father McCarthy, a Yank .. stars", says Miss Head. Since reputable newspapers ap Secr~tary from Springfield, Mass., who "'Stable" you understand, is her pear unwilling or unable to're earned his Ph.D. at Oxford, is 'word, not mine! fuse such ,ads, the public must director of Arabic studies at For TV the Hollywood' glamor 'either demand legislative' con:" KADUTHURUTHY (NC) VATICAN CITY (NC)-Brit the AI-Hikma, which is con "iris must foreHo 'wearing troIs or stand by while our·,.... Near.y· 5,000 Catholics rallied ish Foreign Secretary selwyn 'ducted by American Jesuits. He ""either dead white or dead vaunted freedoms' of press and here to force 150 communists to Lloyd conferred with His Holi black". And "to ,be able to move screen, sell young America into get out of paddy fields owned by ness Pope Pius XII while in began his Arabic studies in 1938 while teaching at Baghdad Col . around" and (look human,per the worst forms of. sla~ery. the Muttuchira' Holy GhoSt Rome for a meeting of the West lege, and went on to further ,church., ' ern EuroPean Union. haps?) they'll be coaxed out of studies in Rome and at Oxford, During the night; the Reds en 'the new fad; "sacks" and "chem Mr. Lloyd, who last visited where he specialized in Moslem tered the fields, which had just' the Pope in January, 1957, was ise" gowns. been readied for sowing. They • accompanied to _the private au- . ·theology. . This may be good news" but chased away a handful of guarda · dience by Sir Marcus Cheke, TUTICO~IN (NC)- A reha better still is Miss Head's hint R. A. WILCOX CO.
that the Academy's Dress Com ,bilitation center for persollll and set up a red flagon the site. .. British Minister to the Holy See. , Five hours later Catholics in mittee will try to arrange that ,cured of Hansen's disease (lep It was revealed later that the OFFICE FURNITURE
the area heard of the communist. rosy) has been opened here at the stars are not coaxed too far Pontiff and the British Foreign r. Stock row I.",edlate Defin.., out of whatever they decide to Lourdnagar, which means City , move and began to converge in Secretary discussed. current • DESKS . • CHAIRS large' numbers on the paddy of Lourdes. ~ wear. Among 75,000,000 people problems of .tQe Western Euro-' fields. The communists fled and RUNG CABINETS The new institution is designed there are going to be a whole pea.n Union-the seven-nation sought the help of local police. flock of' family viewers. Neither 'to care for patients discharged • FIRE FILES • SAFES sUccessor to the 1948 BrUssels Telling the police that they from the near1:5y St. Joseph:. the Movie Academy nor NBC FOLDING TABLES .Treaty Organization which aims owned the field, the Reds re 'home for Hansen's' disease vic TV are likely to forget that. at promoting West European AND CHAIRS turned with a group of arm~ tims, which now has more than Legion-Approved Films" unity, and integration and mu policemen, but they left after '200 patients. . . Who is to get the "Oscars" tual security. seeing the size of the Catholic . Lourdnagar: is a smail colony may be interesting but what 22 BEDFORD ST. gathering. of former patients 'housed in 15 they get them for is far more After recovering the land, the small cottages. It was set up FALL RIVER 5·7838 important. This year morally FRIBOURG (NC) the Cath Catholics began sowing as orig to help such persons find normal good films nqt only are making olic University of Fribourg has a inally planned. When they fin the loudest jingle at the box employment. The colony has record' enrollment of 1,656 thia ished, 'the faithful marched in facilities for training the patients office; they have also' fared bet . procession through Kaduthuru year. in cottage industries, such as ter in the Academy nominations. ' 'thy and held 'a public meeting poultry keeping and gardening. Not a single condemned film~ where they protested against 'Bishop Thomas Fernando of foreign or American, gets a men the communist attempt to steal tion.Of the 35 feature movies Tuticorin blessed the rehabili church land. " from which the final winners tation center and the city coun cil chairman opened Lourdnagar will be voted by March 26, 20 ~lumbin9 are 'approved, by the National with a, speech limding Catholic missionaries - for helping to Legio!1 of Decency (11 for WASHINGTON (NC) - sen. 712 Acushnet Ave.
shoulder society'. responsibiiity "family"; 5 for adults and ado John F. Kennedy of Massacbu toward victims of Hansen'. lescents; 4' for adults). Five ~w Bedford
settswill speak at the 55th an disease. others are unclassified but ap nual commencement exercises of Bus. Ph. WY -~-3089
He said such a responsibility pear okay. Of the remaining 10 Trinity College here on June Z. should normally t>e handled by Res. Ph., WY 4-8770 i'B"-rated pictures, only' five the college has announced.. the city council, but that: the are in the running for the top oounc.il was financially unable to awards, the rest being nominated ,for sets, costumes, sound record-, care for the large number of-. ·'A~ victims in the city. lng, musical scores and that kind Inc.
'of thing. . " ' MOVERS
Unless Joanne Woodward.car-'· ries off "the best actress" Oscar LOS ANGELES eN-C) ~ R~ SERVING ,for "The Three Faces of Ev~", . quiem Mass was offered, in St. ,Fall River, New Bedford aU the major awards are prac':. Gregory'S church here for-Jean' Cape 'Cod Area and
tically certain to be divided. be de Ri!l1anoczy, former conductor Agent: tween 25 morally apptovecI pic of the Minneapolis; Salt Lake, tures. These scored 63 nomina Seattle and Tacoma symphonies. AERO MAYFLOWER tions, including most of the im The Viennese-born concert vio TRANSIT CO. INC. • u.s. TIRES • DELCO BAnERIES portant ones, as compared to 16 linist and concertmaster was a Nation-wide Moven ". PERFEc:r CIRCLE RINGS nominations for the ten "B" professor of violin ,at Immacu WYman 3·0904 , FAU RIVER - NEW BfDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT movies mentioned. late Heart College here at'.. the St4 Kempton St. New Bedro~ I 'am ,not "sa,ying this .Tear'. time of his death.
Jesuit Scholar Speaks in' Iraq
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·British Confers With Pope'
Rehabilitation Site
Blessed by Prelate
R. ·A. WILCOX CO.
Record Enrollment
LANGIS
Kennedy to",Speak
.D. McMULLEN
Mass f~r Conductor
- Heating
WM. T. MANNING (0.
WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE
INDUSTRIAL' SUPPLIES
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Early D~sc;overy
Lenten Retreats Slated
VIENNA (NC)-,An important archeological discovery made by workmen digging foundations for a factory as Szoeny, a Hun-
The Parish Parade J
SACRED HEART NO. ATTLEBORO
The annual retreats wtll be' conducted by Rev. Gerard Gagne, C.S.V. of the Viatorian House in Outremont (Montreal) as a retreat master. The schedule includes retreat beginning next Sunday for married women and girls 21 years of age and over; the following Sunday, March 23 for men and boys 21 years of age and over, and on SUllday, March 30, for eighth graders and teen-agers. During the first two retreats, Mass will be celebrated daily at 7 and 8 A.M., on Friday nights at 7:30 and at 9 A.M. on Saturday.
The schedule of masses for the
teen-agers retreat week are at
7 and 8:30 A. M. daily and on
WednesdaY night, April 2, at 7 P.M. Members of the Ladies of St. Anne and Children of ,Mary So dality will receive Communion in a ·body on Sunday, March 23 at the 7 o'clock Mass. The Holy Name and St. Vincent de Paul
Societies will receive in a body on Sunday, March 30 at the 7 o'clock Mass. Members of the Junior League and Junior Child ren of Mary Sodality will make their corporate. Communion at the 7 o'clock Mass, Wednesday night, April 2. The Ladies of St. Anne Sodal , ity and the Holy Name Society will enroll new members at the close of retreat exercises. Charter night was held by the Boy Scouts of Troop 33 in the
church hall with the pastor, Rev.
Joseph S. Larue, leading the opening prayer.
Badges were awarded ,to the following scouts: Tenderfoot, Ed ward Peicopio, Joseph Jette, Kevin Mayer, Gerard Deschaine, Harry Chagnon, Richard Bro deau and Donald Ouelette. Second Class: Ernest Goud reau, Raymond Seymour, Gerard Lagasse, Louis LeBlanc and Da vid Phipps; First Class: Paul Hindle. Merit Badges were Ipresented to Gerard Lagasse and Paul Hindle. Gerard Pinsoneault was sworn in as SCQut Master by Rev. Ed mond L. Dickinson. SACRED HEART NO. ATTLEBORO Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, director of the Children o~ Mary Sodality, spoke (>n the, ways of honoring Mary during this Cen tennial year of the Apparitions at Lourdes. Delores . Pinsonnault was· named to promote attendance at Mass and the reception of Holy Communion on the first Satur days in keeping with the spirit ual program for this centennial year. Joan Fontaine has charge of plans for a swimming party to be sponsored by the Sodality for members and their friends.
This event will be held soon after
Easter. Members' were reminded of the forthcoming retreat and urged to bring their friends with them at all exercises' and to receive Holy Communion in a body at the closing ceremonies on April 2. ST. DOMINIC'S SWANSEA. Rev. Edward Duffy of St. James Church, New Bedford will highlight the monthly meeting of the Women's Guild as guest speaker at 8 o'clock, next Mon day night in the rectory hall. President Miss Jane Borden will preside. ST. JOHN OF GOD,
SOMERSET
Some 150 members of the Holy Name Society attended a corpor ate Communion last Sunday morning at the 7 o'clock mass with the Rev. Augusto L. Fur tado delivering a sermon in honor of the feast of the patron saint.
Immediately following a break fast was served in the church basement with Thomas W. New berry, Assistant Superintendent of Mails, Fall River as guest speaker. Somerset Selectman Atty. Francis J. Carreiro 'also gave a brief talk. Guests in attendance were: Thomas Ryan, retired Superin tendent of the South Station Post Office, Fall River, Manuel Borges and Gilbert Fernandes of St.' Elizabeth's Parish, Fall River. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NO. EASTON ,
William J. Powers Associate Justice of Rhode Island Supreme Court was the fe:i'tured speaker at the annual Commun'ion break fast of the No. Eastern Council No. 238, Knights of Columbus, held last Sunday morning in Olivier Ames High School, No. Easton following the 8 o'clock mass, with more than 125 men in attendance. Guests included Rev. John Casey, Pastor of Immaculate Conception Church, .very Rev. James Sheehan, C.S.C., Presi dent at Stonehill College, Dis trict Deputy P. J. Kiley of Ran dolph and Joseph P. Harney of So. Easton. John S. Langone was the gen . eral chairman. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION FALL RIVER Mrs: George' Charbonneau, chairman of Catholic' Youth, an nounces a corporate Communion for junior and senior high school 'students next Sunday morning 'at the 8 o'c'Iock mass. Breakfast will tie served in the parish hall immediately following the Mass. Members of the Women's Guild will hold their corpo-rate Communion breakfast on Sun day, March 4, following the 8 o'clock Mass. Mrs. Thomas Fleming announces that tickets are now on sale.
,All tee If... 'WhenYou!ave, ~
17
of Constantine the Great, uncovered, the reports said.
WlUl
first National-!
Here's a Firsl Nat:on'! store mana. w: ~ knows ben", how the lady's item·by·i. m saving! gro',v into big. ~Icome dollars Whal's more. hi, Dersonal interest and friendly help/u'ne" llre other r••uons why
milady goes lirst 10 First NatIonal .
tlere's a logical gal :who knows that the only real savings are cash savings. She and her budget elso know where these savings are blggesl - where quality's finest- her Fors' National Store'
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THE ANCHORThurs.,March 13, 1958
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Extra Spe.cial'
Leading Small College Team
Deni~d NIT Basketball Bid
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (NC) -The College of Steubenville' basketball squad was, left on the-outside-looking-in at this year's National Invitation Tour nament, although the Barons won rating as the No. 1 small college team of the nation: Based on a pre-game under standing, a premature announce ment went out from here that the Steubenville squad, which numbers only seven players, had won its way into the tournament: The understanding had ,to do with the outcome of the game between the Barons and the St. Francis College Frankies' of Loretto, Pa., with the winner to get a tournament bid. The Barons' dealt the Frankies an impressive 65-45 setback, the first in 14 games suffered by the St. Francis squad on its home court. The win was the 22nd straight for the Steubenville squad, which finished its season with an impressive 24-1 record. Back to Steubenville came the victors, who are coached by Hank Kuzma, and awaited the NIT invitation. It didn't come. lDat.ead the word went out &hat
garian village near the Vienna Budapest highway, was reported here. A Christian cemetery dat ing from the first half of the fourth century, during the reign
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Steubenville could not be in vited because if is an ineligible t~~~2 Joan Carol school. The ineligibility, it was ex EACH EACH plained here, has nothing to do with the 12-year-old college's Delicious Apple Pie is an Ideal Dessert athletic ability, but because it is :~g ,not a member of the North Cen Made With Juicy Native Apples . tral Education Association. The tIUWIDDlINllllu.nH!II'ItIIIIIIII.llllllllllrllttIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIU1IIIIIflIIUlIltlUlIlllIllllllllUlltIlllllrllllllll"IIlI."II"n",nnIIHnmunRlullnn..........'IhIIII.....lIIl11l1IIIItIUIUIHumAIIIf11IIIIfQImIJllUnlnllnllnll...mlunn..-'1
college has not been accredited by the education association on ~ Meriden Silyerplate tomlNlat - A Oiyisiooo 01 th'e ground that it lacks adequate 5AVE 01. ON A COMPLETE The Internatie... Sily.r (0. library facilities. The college, UP TO ' / 0 51LVERPLATE SERVICE which is conducted by Third • Spoons and lorks have exIra deposit BASIC SET STILL O.N SALE Order Regular ~ Franciscan 01 silver al point :of grealell wear. priests, plans construction of a • NEW l.p,ece FQrged Knife with ~wa+=-~ library beginning next fall. Serraled Blade. ' The Steubenville college not $1.3c,~ only laoks a library, but also a . 'Wilh~.'~ $2.50 ! ~ gym in which the Barons could purchase' .. ' -::: hold regular practice. 'rhat UNIT No.3 Unit 2. - 4 Iced Drink Spoons didn't stop the' Barons from .. Soup or Des~erl'Spoons . StiR on Sale going on to win the No. 1 spot among the country's' small col Same Low Sell-Service Prices in All Stores ill ThIS'Victnlly - w. Res.rve the RIght 10 lirmt Qu4ntitiM lege teams in a United Press poll of basketball coaches as well as the impressive 24-1 record. It was pointed out here that teams of several colleges ·which .lacked national educational creditation have participated in NIT tournament. ill' recent
Unit No. 3 Now on Sale
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Foreign Aid Issue' ,Requires. Concentrated Consideration ,By
Cross Word Solution, /
Most Rev.·.Robert J. Dwyer, D.I). Bishop 01 Reno
.
As Lewis Carroll's Bellman said, "What I tell you three ,times is true." It is the psychological basis of all advertising~ ;Moslem derxishes have a trick of bringing on a trance by 'the simple repetition of the name of Allah; and the great 'American' ,public has con las and Abraham Lincoln agreed iditioned itself to'believe any~ to debate the political and social thing it is told so long as the issues which divided the North message is repeated often 'ern Democrat and the adherents
Romulo
enough, firmly enough, and with unction. 'Hardly anyone could be so recalcitrant nowadays as to keep bananas in the refrigera tor. ,This is the age or'the huckster, and·the man with nothing to sell ia regarded with just, suspicion. 'Mr. 'Walter Reuther sells his lunion 'orga~ization and Mr. Eric ':.Johnston sells foreign- aid, both. :with the same breathtaking vigor. :... the ptiryeyors of filtered , ;cigarettes. .' '! The salesman is' no longer the :pitiable drummer spending his 'days' persuading reluctant met' 'ebants'to buy:his wares and his :nights in: third class hotels.' He Is ttie·prince of indlistry. today, the p'.oli.tical potent'ate, thoe soc,ial , :··ll.on~,·. ··Ev.en. ,Mr. John 'Foster "'Dlilleshasaspired to the role of .• 'super-salesman for the "Amer " icali" Way of Life'." " . " .' Keligion in ',Open Market '. ~, . You. can ~uy religion from the . "hucksters too. The, Reverend Dr. Norman 'Vincent Peale, for one, ;ia'there t~ sell y:ou as much or as .little of it as you like, made to' !orde.r, cut,d'o,wn to req uir 4i!ments, ' , ,lit'ting you like a glove or a sack, '.according to taste. He has his leompetitors, for it is an open Lm~rket, ~nd the'only requlre'
Legion of Mary .. Irish Americans
-THE ANCHOR Thurs .•March 13, 1958
, , Continued: from Page One Vice-President, Joseph' Reilly; Secretary Clotilde Nason; an,d' Treasurer, Arthur. Macedo. , Legion of Mary Praesidia and their parishes are:' Fall RiverOur Lady ,'of Good Counsel; St. Joseph's; Refuge of Sinners,Es pirito Santo; Our Lady of the Rosary and Queen of the World, Sl. Anne's; Queen of All Saints, St, Matthew's; Our Lady of Good Health, St. Anne's Hospital; Im maculate Heart of Mary, Sacred Heart; Our Lady of -Lourdes, Notre Dame; and Our Lady of Fatima St. John of God" Somer-' set, ' , 'New Bedford-Queen of Apos tles and Our Lady of Purgatory, St. James; Our Lady of Mt. Car mel, Mt. Carmel. Taunton-Morning Star, Cause 'of Our Joy, and Our Lady of Nazareth, Our Lady of Lourdes; Comforter of the Afflicted, Our Lady of the Nativity, and Queen of Angels, St. Mary's. '
' Continued from Page One , Gen. Washington attended l'ur ther meetings of the'society and like all members signed the roll and wore his badge there; a requirement' qf membership. Though still in existence, with branches in, Washington, D. C., and other cities, the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick is not the oldest Irish organiza tion' in 'the United States. This honor goes to the Charitable Irish Society of Boston, founded ,there on' March 17, 173,7, and no~ 221 years ~oung. LIke. the FrIendly S.ons, It ~as or~amzed for the relIef of IrIsh emIgrants.
of the newly-founded Republi Catholic Census can party, The debate was con ST. LOUIS (NC)- A state ducted without· any fanfare of Continued from Page O,ne wide census 'of every Catholic advertising; it managed to avoid against the wanton spread of in Missouri will be made by the un'!ecessary repetition; it tried Soviet t'yranny in the world." Council of Catbolic Men in four to stick to ideas' and priri'ciples, However, it is not enough .that Missouri 8ees. . and, so far as we can read" the' the United States compete suc 'reports, very admirably suc cessfully' with Russia in. the ceeded. .. 'weapons, race, Gen. RomulO .'as Ask·EarlY Courses There . was '. singularly little serted. LONDON (NC). Catholic mudslinging; ,personalities were "What matters in the end," he parents in the London area have sedulously suppressed. It was declared, "is' not who wins' the told the government that be debate on an extraordinarily t-ace to the moon, but who can . cause of the early age at which high ,level of competence and put his own house in order best 'marriages are now taking place, seriousness. And it wa's foll~'wed ahd can bring to the. less fortu pre:-marriage courses should be WASHINGTON ' (NC) ~ The by thousands, literally,' who 'nate peoples first, the means for givep. in the last year of shcool. dropped everything a,t pand, to a better life of dignity and free- ' Outdoor Advertising Association of '. America, Inc., announced attend and participate. .. dom." . here it will sponsor biilboard Shirk' Responsibility Gen. 'Romulo appealed to his. . , listenersio "rid:themselv.es of Posters during March and April 'Window' Company', to· stress' the moral.responsibility .' Such a debate, even on issues, f ar more.lmpor ' . t an t f,or th e na/ the idea th'at America has a for' safe driving. . ;. . ' , .• : ",: ".' J , . ' h ardl y mission Stainless Steel· Track Window 'The association's' statement hon an d 'mankmd,could , to remake the, "world in· ' d t 0 d ay. Th e we' 11 the Ornamental .Iron . be conceive said its' nationwide projeCt was - image of Am.e,ricaf'. .Chain Link Fe~ces meaning efforts of ,the Chicago "In practical terms,", he con in support of a new campaign.by . press to reprint the debates on tinued, "this means ,that Amer the National" Safety Council to, 1533 'Acushnet Ave.:
their centennial dates have' icans ought not' to' require as :~' 'emphasize' moral reasons for New Bedford WY' 4-1332
aroused no morethim a flicker condition for' aiding other ·traffic safety. • Home Tel. ~y 9~6505,
of interest among the students of .peoples that the reCipient coun A 12 by 25 feet poster' carry Lincolniana. try ,should conform to certain ing the' massage; "You .are .' Withall the vast improvements. concei>tsand practices that may Morally Reponsible' for Safe of our technologi~al ag'e'j'we have be valid in' America' but are, Driving," will be put up,. the NO JOB TOO BIG \." . , I'rrelevant' to the . recI'pI'ent association said. It added that' not sustained '. a public' capacity NONE TOO $MALL " p e o p l e ' s institutions." ,local'members of, the association' to participate in reasoned argu , . ment. We have handed there. He added that Americans need will contribut~the space for, the po~ters, sponsibility, over ·to the huck-'W know more about and have sters. • greater respect for the ways of ment· for successful operation is life and the institutions of other '.'. o Foreign ai'd is an issue of car • la'rge enoilgh~apital'invest "ment to buy sufficient 'time. on ,dirial importance. Whether it is 'nations. M.~n Office and Plant . television. ,. retained or' rejected as; a'part of Among reasons'~hy this c~un-' , For, you ~ust have time to1re- our, policy is a decision' calling try' has not",won the affection of LOWELL, MASS.
peat your message. A single for our best thought and our other peoples despite its gen "Tel_hone Lowell
statement is worse than useless; , most concentrated consideration. erous financial aid and its con . BOYS WANTED fOr" the GL 8-6333 and GL 7-7500
truth comes not by ·understand-·. 'It is impossible not to be vis- trtbution to human freedom, he j)riesthood and Br:otherhood. ing but by' brainwashing. Ham- ited by a cold fear when we face listed:, Auxlliar, Plants Lack of' funds, NOimpedi mer away at it; preferably at 15- the prospect of silch' an issue 1) The occasional contriIdic' minute intervals, lfnd if you can . bei~g turned over to' the techtion' between Am~rican words m:ent. BOSTON lee your' way to spicing it with niques of supersalesmanship. aod American actions. Write to: Ii husky female voice,. so much At the most charitable esti2) The conflict between Amer OCEANPORT, N. J. P. O. Box 5742
the better. Sit ~ack and watch mate,' it bespeaks a naive confi-. ica's .sympathy with the aspira .PAWTUCKET, R. I. your 'sales boom to the' skies. dence in advertising: which is . tions of colonial nations, and her Baltimore 8; Md.
Soon your product will, be as hardly' sustained' by' experience. "understandable desire' to main ~pular as· the weather reports. .. At the 'most critical level, it be":. tain her alliances with the colo' · ,'. . trays a -calculated contempt for , ilial powers. _ ' ,.1., 1 l!'••••••••••••••••••••••••• , Debate. Without Advedising: the pubiic mind which' is war . , ., 3) The' fact that the United , , All th" S I tl . /. . ,- I .,. ':. IS.I P easan Y amusmg .' rant for 'the, death o,f democrca·y. . ' • ' commentary 'on the'power ~:States has',permitt'ed the Soviet r' / ' · . , " W h a t I tell you three times .::Union to taoke th.e· inttiative .iil of advertising in model'n',civili- .. 1s true." ' !, r; ~ " -7 ". ';,., ~tion. 'It is le~s amusing :-a~, a .,Offering', peace.:!propo~als, a n ~ ' t '. ~ .' . ," ':'., ", Land ".
Posters St·ress·· Safety Morality.
M•.'D. KENNEDY,
',SULLIVAN' BROS.
,PRINTERS
Trinitaria" , ' Fathers·
;. a'
:;:~~~~n :;~:~~o~~va~,~:est~:
'rather grim;fact is that there is measurably less .intellig!!nt in~"terest in matters of national and international concern today'than there was a century ago.. " i" During the .Spring months of 11156,' for example,' two ,Illinois ·:itoliticians named Stephen Doug-
,r;,or .
Ford'ham'
,:l~u: ~~a~~PI:a:in~ef~;~o~e.wo~:.~
NEW YO~K (NC) -':~~twoAf'r.·c·an Ch'u'rc"h .,: block site ill the planned $205 million Lincoln Square redevel ROME ;;.(NC)~Thet'e are :at opment project has been 'sold by -:Ie~st ·24 million Catholics ~11 this, city at public auction to ,·Africa, ;out of a total populatii:i9 Fordh'am University. Two court of more than 224 million, a:~7 suits' are' no~ 'p~nding' on bording to figures released her~ 'legality of the transaction. -;<, IDyFides~:missiori ·news,agericy.
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Sports Chatter
_.
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THE ANCHOR-
.·Thurs.,March 13,1958
eyO Basketba,ll' Play'offs' '. Mark Season's Windup' ,
I
,Magazine Pic~s ,AU American:. Cage Team'.
By Jack Kineavy Somerset Hil'b Scbool Co:ieb
.
Monsignor Coyle High 9f Taunton brought the' area ita only tournament championship this year. The Warriors defeated Malden, 55-45, Saturday night at Saugus to annex the Class A Bay 'State title. Jeff Wheeler with 14 'pointS was the leading Coyle marks boy's life, has always been em- " man, closely followed by Tom phasized. The future of every Bourne and Pete Gazzola player he considered his per who combined for 21 points. sonal responsibility; higher edu Enroute to the title Coyle dis posed of Braintree and Taunton. The victory co.......,..
over Taunton ~ Small College Tourney squared the In the recently concluded NC season's series AA Regional Small College between the in Tourney, staged at Brandeis Uni tra-city rivals versity, Waltham, the dominant at two games impact of the New. York-New apiece. Th e Jersey basketball breeding area Warriors placed was indeed manifest. Of the two men on the total of 51 players on the four Class A All squads at Brandeis no less than Star team, cen 43-0r 84 percent-hailed from ter Pete Gazzo-· the above area. The All-Tour la and forward Al Costa. Don nament team was 100 percent Silvia', Taunton's fine playmaker, N. Y. and N. J. Teams involved, also was selected. Dennis Red in addition to the· winner, St. ding, rangy North Attleboro . Michael's of Vermont,: were pivot, was given first team con Adelphi, Rensaleer Polytechnic sideration in Bay State's Class Institute, and host, Brandeis C All-Tourney team as was University. teammate Neil Harris: Tech To.urney cognoscenti. bat Both Ga:l:zola and, Redding ted .333 in the recently conclu were' named' on this paper's first dec;l competition in Boston Gar All-Diocesan 'football .team last den. . Th~ .Class 1;..' conseO$us; Fall. Another of that group, d~feriding champion L~w:rence Martin Gomes, was accorded Central, fell prey in the semi All-Bristol status on the New finals to eventual 'Utlist Somer:' Bedford Standard Times' team ville, while Oliver' Ames, con released last. weekend. 'Joining sidered Ii "shoo-in" for C honors, Martin on the latter aggregation was .upended bY stout-hearted was brother Paul whose accuraie North Andover. It was 'Ames' shooting, poise, and general all first loss in 23 ,games this year. round floor Play in the Garden The pundits couldn't miss won the plaudits' of Celtic, Jiin Class B inasmuch as finalists Loscutoff. Belmont and defending cham City Championships pion Natick were co-favored The basketball spotlight this from the outset.. Belmont's 68 week focuses upon the CYO 64 victory was balm indeed for playoffs in Taunton, New Bed-, Coach Mel Wenner's boys who had suffered the most once-sided ford, and Fall River. Competi tion for the New Bedford title reverse in Tech history at the got under way last week at the hands of Natick last year. Joseph P. KennedY,Jr. Youth Prediction Slightly Off Community Center with Our We mentioned last week that Lady of Assumption taking a 48-38 decision from Holy Name ~ambridge.. Latin was, i,n our in ,the opener of a three-game humble opinion, the most . likely tea'm to' s\l<;ceed.. Unfort4mitely, !eries. we were 'referring to Latin's . Action on the Fall Rivet scene hoop squad which· summarily pits the undefeated Santo Chris was ousted' by .Brockton. . ·The .to quintet against· once-beaten hockey team, h9wever, came St. Louis· for the city title' and through with flying colors" to the. right to. meet the Taunton apnex the state title by, virtue representative in the Diocesan of a 2-:~ vic~ory o~er Wa~PQlj;l", semi-finals. The winner will engage the New Bedford' titlist , If the two sextets employed in the championship finaL Last a ,.basically. similar pattern ,·of year the Diocesan crown. went play there' was .good reason.for it. lror,Coach jim' FitzgeraJ.d .,to St. Mary's of Fairha·ven. of Latin and Len ,Ceglarski ·,.of . Vying, for. Junior .CYO honors Walpole were teammates at Bos In Fall River will be St. An to~ College a few years back thony, second half winners with. 'when the. Eagles were on the .. 10-1 record, and St. Marys, 9-2, nation's pinnacle in the winter wh'o prevailed in the first round sport. But BC· coach John 'competition. The Junior games "Snooks" Kelley" must .have are being played preliminary to found it difficult to, assume a the senior contests, Monday, completely impartial role. John Wednesday, and Thursday, if hl;lils from .Cambridge. " necessary, of this week. Mt. Carmel an'd Our' Lad~ of Perpetual H'elp, each placed two . YOKOHAMA (NC) ~ Eight 'men on 'the Greater New Bed" Sisters ·of· the Japanese Congre :ford . CYO All-Star, team an gation of the Daughters' of the nounced last week. Butch' Me 'deiros and 'Roy Santos are the Sa.cred ,H;eart (Seiship Aishi Kai) ,Mt. Cartner :selectees; Lionel left here to open a convent in Bourassa and Stan WesQly, the ,Germany, the first foreign foun' .OLPH· representatives. Both dation of any Japanese religious boys figured prominently in ,community. OLPH's advance to the Diocesan
baseball finals last Summer. HONG KONG (NC) - The , Rounding out the' rest of the squad are Bart Barboza, St. Chinese communist radio in Pek ing has revealed that; after an John; Dave' Bancroft Holy Name; 'Roger PoUlier, St. Joseph (N.B.); . intensive two months of denun ciation at mass meetings and Frank Pina, Our Lady' of As 'sumption; Rolaild Aubut, St. other demonstrations against :,Hyacinth; Paul Manny" Sacred him, Bishop Dominic Tang, S.J., Heart, and' Bob Pimental, St. has been' brought to trial. Mary (F). The selections were made by .. -,', . . the league . . . coaches.. ., Simpson to Colby
'.To Open Convent,'.
Prosecute Bishop
"
John Simpson, coach at Som erset High School' for the past
six years, has accepted the post
of line coach at Colby 'College in Maine. Coach Simpson, All-New, England guard from Boston Uni versity, has won three Nar~a
gansett League Champioriships
and in 1954 his Somerset. High
team was Class. D eo-champion ,in the State. During his entire tenure,. the
proper place of athletics in •
NEW YORK (NC) - EIght (Rabbit'> Baylor, Washington, D. C., youth who I}as grown in to one of the. nation's top college basketball stars at the ~esuits' seattle University, was the.unan . imous choice on the 1958 Catho lic college All American basket ball team picked for the April issue of the Catholic Digest magazine. Ten top-ranking coaches picked a 10-man team and alsO' singled out 72 'players at Cath olic colleges for honorable men tion. The selections of the coaches were compiled for the maga'zine by Arthur Da~ey, sports column istfor the New York Times. . The other nine players picked for' the team were: Mike Farm er .and Gene Brown, San I Fran cisco U.: Topl Hawkins,; Notre 'Dame;,Jimmy Smith, COl~ege of Steubenville, Ohio; Jim Cunningham, Fordham; Alex Ellis, Niagara; Al Inniss, St. Francis of Brooklyn; Don Lane, Dayton, and Dennis Boone, Regis Col-"," lege, Denver.
cation was always the' objective he placed before the' .eyes of every athlete.
.
PREPARE FORLECTURE: J. Clinton Rimmer, right,' chairman of committee making arrangements for an i1ius trated lecture by Captain Anton J. Gahlinger, shows pic ture of the speaker to Attorney George M. Thomas, Faithful ·Navigator. Captain Gahlinger, a former Swiss Guard, will speak on "I Served the Pope." The talk will be presented under the auspices of the McMahon Assembly, 4th Degree, Expect Bus Decision Knights of Colu~Qus, at the Kennedy Youth Genter, New AU.GUSTA (NC) - Kennebec Bedford, 'on March 22.. , . Superior Court Judge\Harold C.
b" 'p"," ans Semlnars .' l""IIlIleWman> CI ." U'" ~j ':
-.;
. The' Newman Cillb otuie'~j{w l3edfotd' Instito.te c,>f 'rechilolQgy is 'sponso~~g a serles of 'seminars' on Christiim Marriage" tor its, members' 'an~ a"n' interested students and friendS.' The 'pro:" ,gr~ 'is under the direction of Rev. John F. Hogan, the Chap'lain of the Newman Club. This series of lectures, five in all, will cover several aspects o£. marriage including the sacramental nature of matrunony, marriage asa vocation, the meaning. of true love, the qualities and virtues to look for in a marriage partner and dating and courting. There wUl, be a question and, ~nswer periOd at the end of each. lec.ture.. . .. . ,'," . ,The' ~emlnars' are. held tn co~juncJio* wi:th PIe. 'ram~y' .LiJe ~!:irea}l. Clf thi .Dioc~sE;:.· .... The lectures are scheduled'to b~ .he.ld)n,.· the amphitheater:'~t ,'on the followmg u.te .' InstItute .. ! . ,,', {.I
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McMahon Assembly;' 'Fourth 'Degree Knights cif Columbus Of New Bedford, 'will s·ponsor· an illustrated ,lecture titled "I served the Pope" by Capt. Au ton J. Gahlinger at 8 P.M. Sat urday, March 22, in the Kennedy Memorial Center. Captain Gahlinger has given over 3,000 lectures on this sub ject in six different languages, in 20 countries in Europei North Ameri~a and, South America. ..At present he. is studying .Jap anese, in orc:ier to lecture, on qis ·tour of Japan.in ~he near flltu~. Chairman of· the event isJ. Clinton Rimmer; in chal.'ge, ,of tickets. is ,Fergus Bolton; secre ·tary is John Hemingway;' head usher is Everett Sowle; pub licity is t:artd1E!d by Wright ,.. . Walker and Antone Santos..
.SOUTH END·
:. '.:~~o~~:/~un:iI~.rtation of priv
Sundays at 7:30 P.M.;' March 16;" ; March 30, .April 13, April 20 and . April 27. The schedule speakers include Father Hogan, Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca of Immaculate 'Conception Church, Rev. James A. Clark of St. Mary's, Dr. Arthur F. Buckley and Rev. Bertrand R. Chabot of St. Anthony's. All the Students of the Insti tute are invited to attend. Re freshments will be served in the student lounge at the end"of each Seminar. In addition, Father Hogan. is plimning to conduct a series of l(;!ctures on Christian Doctrine. The lectures will mcludea ·.dis cussion of the ~crament$" .,the , TAUNTON, MASS•.. ," lVf~, the Vestments and their meaning, a~d several', . oth~r ., THE BANK ON t·· pQints. of Catholic Teaching.J~he ., '.. lAUNTON GREEN dates. and speakers will be 8'0 ,119unce<:!' ~n the near, fut'ure.....: 1" ..Member: of Federal, Deposi.< . , Insurance Corporation , l
, ,Lecture on Vatican
HATHAWAY'S' . LAUNDRY, Inc.'. .
Marden is expected to rule soon on the legality of Augusta's plari ' t o use public funds for tile
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Was~:w;ng,ton:,: N~w~p~~e.~'r~':;.lJr;ge~" U~'S~': Leaders' to.' Stop'l"vokh19 'Go~' ,
WASHINGTON (NC)-A secli'ghtlyinvoking Di~ine assist
mar newspaper in the nation's ance., But no one' will' question,
capital has called upon· U. S. the sincerity of, Mr. [Eisenhower
government leaders to stop' inor Mr.pulles. " "
Voking.God fn public utterances. . It is, 'entirely lijl:ely.that Mr.
Among other things that can Khruslichevis trying,to "needle"
be said against such an astonish- our lea~ers into dropping refer- :
· ing proposal are these: It would ence to 'God in their public pro- . '
be a turning of our back on Amnouncements.
erican tradition; and,it would be We hav~ considerable evidence
· an ignominious retreat in the that many of the "neutral"
· face of Soviet Russian strategy, people in the world 'look to us
,with which the newpaper seems for leadership, not so much tech
eniefly concerned. nical advances as in ..the cham "Isn't it time to end this offenpionship of spiritual values.
sive business of self-righteously Father Herman J. D'Sousa, S.J.,
,invoking the Deity as a crutch of India, presently in this coun
in American diplomacy?" asked try, said in recent days: "Take it
\ an editorial in ·The Washington from me, there are many of my
'Post and Times 'Herald. countrymen who are behind me
The paper, said "it isa stand., in thinking of this. co~ntfY, not,'
ard'formula for President Eisen':, so much' in terms of your luxury
hower's messages to associate:, ,but in terms of your'spirit· of
God with American purposes;' trust iIi God.' For 'us· in 'India,
.and that "there are very, few of Goft is ,every~hing." ,'.,., . Mr. Dulles' pronouncements but,' '. Father D'Sousa Said uncom · which proclaim' that God and mitted 'peoples of the Middle
· morality are on our side' against Eastaild,Asia' f~ncia~eI1tally be
the godless atheistic commu:' 'lieve. in ,God and' "want to make
Bists." "Would not the commu-" co~m09 cause'~ with' other na · mst objectives. and tactics be tions 'which express ·faith in God.
"just as dangerous to free men if Conceivably, Khrushchev could
belief in God were part of Marxgain a great deal by' jibing us
HONOR SOCIETY MEMBERS:' Three Taunton area students were among 10 Stone 1st doctrine?'1 into discarding our ,appeals for 'S~niors and Juniors inducted into the Saxon Society, College Honor Society. hill College ~. The paper cites a recent attack God's guidance. ' . . Shown, left to right, Harold Gay', 80 North St., ,Middleboro, Very Rev. James J. Shee by Nikita Khrushchev on states men who "while professing their -han, C.S.C., Presiqent of the, .College; Evelyn Rice, 6 Grant ,St~, Taunton, and James R• belief in God, often act directly Tormey, 151' Broadway, Taunton. . Continued from Page One' to the contrary.'.' The Red leader added that "no, one, using reli well as Catholics. He has seen' ANCHORgion as a screen, should kill almost 'everything about the Thurs.,March 13,1958 " , . · people an,d utilize belid in God Church in the United States . ,Ten: Sionehill College seniors president of Stonehill, presented to the detriment of other nearly double .in size, or num jects and so determined to suc- .and, -juniors won their school's 'each new mem'ber with a pin peoples." bers. ceed that they are almost unahighest accolade when they were symbolic of his me'mbership received into the Saxon'Society" while alumni' and present' stu'True Enough to Hurt' The Apostolic Delegate ob- , ware of their remarkable contributions." Stonehill's Honor Society. dent members looked on. Dr· The Washington Post and served the golden jubilee of The names were announced 'Francis' M. Rogers, former dean Times Herald argued that "there ,his ordination in 1955, and Archbishop Cicognani recalled at the' annual banquet of the of Harvard University Graduate is enough truth in this to hurt," Washington, D. C., witnessed , here that he started to serve the Saxon Society at Capeway School and present Iy pro'fessor and said: "But what a refreshan event· 'which ranks among Holy See under Pope S1. Pius Manor, Brockton, by Rev. James of romance I anguages a t the Ing change it would be if Amerthe most colorful in, its pag X, and has continued under Pope ,J. Doyle, C.s.C., dean Qf the university, gave an· informal iCan policy were strong enough 'eant-filleci history. The .four Benedict XV, Pope Pius XI and to stand on its own merits with- American Cardinals, Joined by the reigning Pope Pius XII. "I college and moderator of the talk.
society:c , New Saxon members from the
out leaning either on supplicatwo Princes of the Church from was privileged to speak several, ' ' J. Sheehan, C.S.C., ' . . Rev. James diocese are: E ve Iyn R'Ice, Jumor, tions to God or condemnations of ,abroad; 26 Archbishops, some times with each one of them,' ,.. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John godlessness to prove the point!" 140 bishops, heads of universi ,J. Rice, 6 Grant St., Taunton; The paper speaks of "selfties and religious communities, he s a i d . ' Before coming to the ,United translated into English, "Canon James R. Tormey, junior, son of righteously invoking the Deity." I di'plomafs 'accredited to the States in 1933, Archbishop CiLaw"; served with the Sacred Mrs. Mary E. Tormey, 151 eertainly no one questions the United States and a large, out cognani had already established Congregation of the Sacra'Broadway, Taunton. aincerity of 'President Eisenpouring of distinguished iaymen a brilliant record in Rome as a ments, the ~Sacr~d Consistorial bower and Secretary Dulles in joined His Excellency' in the scholar, teacher and administra-' Congregation, the Sacred' Con these devout appeals! celebration of his jubilee. tor. gregation of the Oriental Chinch "CHICAGO (NC)-The Jesuit : From 'George Washingto,n's. His' Eminence Edward. CardHe was professor of canon law- as Assesilore, and the' Pontific;il1" "Fathers' Loyola University has time, our Presidents have riot i~al Mooney, 'Archbishop of for 10. years' in the Po'ntifical 'Commission 'for ,the Codification been :allocated . eight acres for hesitated ,to' invoke Divine as",: Detroit, "said on that '1 occasion University of S1. Apollinare (now "of O'riental' 'Canon Law. He was' a new 'dental school in the ,l11i 8istance. The' parting advice, that "ArChbishop Cicognoni 'has the Lateran' University}; arid' at the ~s8ri1etime chaplain an(j' noisState Medical Center being of the ,Father of,His Country was , an unexcelled-I' might even published a highly regarded" advisor 'to'· university, studentS·, ·huilt here in a redevelopment that '.'religion and ~orality lead' say unparalleleci-knowledge of book on' this' subject which was in'Rome. r··project.' , to political prosperity." Abra- the' Church in the United ham Lincoln urged us to. act' States." .' . ~ with firmness in the right, "as' On the same oc~asion, His '8<Kl gives us to see the right," Eminence. Samuel Cardinal' which many \ see' as a perfect ,Stritch,Archl:1~shop of Chicago, tormula for our, diplomacy. said Archbishop Cicogna ni , . Other P r e s i d e n t s ' : thrqugh the 50· sacerdotal years, Calvin Coolidge sai.d, "the amidst all ,his'labors and' in all example 'of' Washington will - his offices "'has ' been' above Ilever be outgrown. He was a everything else the priest of great exponent of the moral G o d . " , .' torce of his time. He was and is "Today fr~ni our hearts '~e a great teacher. He molded into 'salute hiin and join 'with him BE SURE ·-Il'S HEATED, WITH tile institutions Of government ~n his Te Deum," His Eminence 3L the religious p'rinciples of the declared. "He is one of us and people." On another occasion the heart of the whole Catholic ' President Coolidge affirmed 'that body.in the' United States . says "our government' rests upon 'reto' him: Congratulations" Thanks! • • • I" •• ligion. It is' from that source Ad,.Multos ,AnpQ,sIn - ' l ' .' , " ~ .~. ~ that we derive our reverence 1 tor truth and 'justice" for equal.. Archbishop" Cicognani has Ity and liberty;and for the rights seen a 'remarkable,'growth in \ " ,ef mankind." ' the ,Church in the Unit~ci States ,Secretary of State Cordell ,du~i9g his stay in this' !countrf, Hull; .in' a worldwide broadcast A comparison of figures in' the IS 'THE' ONLY' ':: -, of U. S. war 'aims in July, 1942, 1934 O~ficial Catholic Directory), ,,' WATE.':'~HEATEll said that after the war all na(published just a few 11l0nths tiot:\s faced the task l'of building' after His Excellency'.arrived 'in· buman freedom and Christian the United States) and the 1957 morality on firmer and broader Directory shows thai: ~ toundations than ever before." 'The Catholic population 'in One observer noted of this talk t~e United States increased that "in few State p'apers of from 20,268,403 to 34~563;851; equal importance and signifithe, numbet: of parishes from cance has the need of Christian 12,537 to 1'6,345; the number of Allcraft Automatic GAS' water, .heaters are speciany de
morality and 'spiritual means of archdioceses from 15 to 26; and signed to supply plenty of hot water for washing machines ,and
life' in the adjustment of na31 new dioceses have beenes dishwashers in addition to the 101 other household tasks ...e
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been given greater emphasis." The Catholic Hierarchy in the tank life' and sparkling clean water without a trace of ru~t or
In one of the most historic ,United States has grown lID. talks in American annals, his . pressively in the' 'quarter-cen.:. other foreign particles caused 'by :the. deterio~ationof or~ina"y
first inaugural address on March tury Archbishop Cicognani has ~nkL !
4, 1933, when the nation faced' served,' as ,Apostolic Deleg~te. one of its greatest crises, Presi- There were 16 ArchDishops and dent' Franklin D. Roosevelt con- / 102 Bishops listed in the 1934 " .. I eluded with these words: "lit this Directory, while the 1957 edi dedication of a rtation we humtion lists. 35 Archbishops and' bly'ask the blessing of God. May 187' Bishops. , He protect each and ever.y one The Apostolic' Delegate him of us. May He guide me in the self has consecrated 56 Ameri ,#, days to' come." can Bishops. Since our motto is "In God ' Archbishop Cicognani, is con We '!J'rust," a natural questi~n is: vinced'\that the progress of, the Why not proclaim the fact? Church' here is due' mostly, to' Khrushchev, Needling the humble individual priests . Objection' might -,be raised to . a!:>sorbed in" their own, pro : :
.Abp: Cigognani,
20 ' ,
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'-Stonehill Ht»nor .Society Inducts 10
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