04.10.58

Page 1

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An .Example for All:

Every pastor and parish in the Diocese can tRke heed of the tremendous' example of St. Michael's parish in Swansea. Rev. Joseph A. Cournoyer has clearly dem­ enstrated that Catholics are not only willing, but are eager to support the diocesan Catholic press. Father, Cournoyex: has completely quelled the too~easi1y and oft-repeated remark "it can't be done." Regular subscribers will recall' two weeks ago we published a sizeable item atop Page One saying Father Cournoyer would not be satisfied with merely meeting the parish quota this ye~r as he initiated an organized campaign for com­ Vlete parish coverage-that is, a .weekly copy

'~/ork . Produces Results .1

of The Anchor delivered to every parish home. Father Cournoyer's two .assistants-Rev. Maurcie E. Parent and Rev. Clement E. Dufour .-were equally determined to accomplish the complete paris}} coverage goal. The Ocean Grove parish secured oniy one­ third of its assigned weekly parish quota 'of regular mail subscribers last year. Father Cour,. noyer was not proud of that record. But the record of St. Michael's parish now stands as a beacon for every other parish in the Diocese as The Anchor today begins its second year of publication. St. Michael's parish has increased its yearly

The ANCHOR

1958 Charities Appeal Opens On May 4

; .'

(

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 10, 19'58 PRICE lOc

Second CIa•• Mail Privilelre. Authorized at .'all River. Ma••.

$4.00 per Year

Eulogizes Father Lewin. For Priestly Devotion "No one loved his Mastel' more nor tried harder to be like Him than did Father Lewin. Surely he would have eonsidered it a great privilege to have his death identified

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gation that filled St. oMary's Church, Hebronville, to over­ . flowing Monday morning for Rev. George A. Lewi.n, former pastor of the church. "For 32 years of a life span of 58 years," the eulogist continued, "Father Lewin has dedicated himself to the work of the priest­ hood. It was his great pride and his cupful of joy to be known as a priest. . . . . "If we search for some par­ ticular influence in his boyhood days to direct his footsteps to-

CatholDc Schools

Enroll Nearly

Five Million PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ More than 4,700,000 young­ sters will be enrolled in the Church's elementary and lteCondary schbols as the start of the next school year in Septem­ ber. The estimated totals for grade and high school enrollments· in­ dicate that both levels of educa­ tion are moving rapidly tOward iOQ per cent increases in the' numbers of s.tudents since the end of World War II. Educators Meet It was also estimated that in the Fall of 1958 about 322,000 students will be enrolled in the nation's more than 225 Catholic eolleges and universities. These figures are froll).· a statement released at the 55th annual convention of the Na;. tional Catholic Educational As­ Sociation being conducted here this week. Turn to Page Thirteen

Diocese Planning Organization Of Youth Council Priest directors from all parishes of the Diocese will meet at 1,:30 P.M. next Monday at C.Y.O. Hall in Fall River to make preliminary plans for the formation of a Diocesan Catholic Youth Council,

An Anchor of the So'Ul. Su.re and Firm-ST. PAUL

Vol. 2, No.1 5

mail subscription list by 400 per cent over'last .year. It rates first in the Diocese, percentage­ wise, in exceeding its quota. St. Michael's parish has over-subscribed the parish quota by more than 50 per cent for this coming year. The answer is relatively simple. Work produces results. An aroused pastor directed his sights upon a target and was determined to achieve his goal. He engaged the assistance of a corps of zealous parishioners to follow-up Sunday pulpit announcements about subscrip­ tions to The Anchor. The priests and parish­ ioners are' now justly proud of the most·' successful subscription eampaign thus far coa­ ducted for The Anchor.

1.

'.'~~~~'"

.,' must look to his mother, When ,.L·:.:.•.•;:i::',,·,d fOUl' out of eight, children gave "THANK, YOU, SISTER": themselves to the work. of the . St..:Mary's Home, New Bed­ church, three nuns and a priest,' f d . f th D' a saintly mother's. prayers and . ort.'t 1S , one 0 .e. lOces~nd t good example and wise leader- ms 1 u IOnS recelvmg a 1 ship must have left. its lllsting ,from the annual Catholic Turn to Page Ten Charities Appeal.

Rev. Leo T. Sullivan, Dio­ cesan director of the Cath­ olic Youth Organization, an­ . nounced today. The Council Plan, as it is known, has its foundation in the parish organization, whose offi­ cers help select' regional and Diocesan officers. Its purpose is to stimulate and, promote youth programs and to coordi­ nate youth activities throughout the Diocese. Federation of Groups The preliminary meeting of' directors will be followed, at a date to be announced, by a meet­ ing of youth representatives from all parishes to elect officers an'd draw up a constitution. A Diocesan Catholic Youth Council is a federation of the approved Catholic youth groups within the confines of a Diocese. It is a unifying device, primary purpose of which is to place youth's forces under' the spon­ sorship of the Bishop. Membership Through Affiliates It is not a separate, distinct

Fall River Academies Award .Scholarships Awards of ' full tuition and partial scholarships to Mount St. Mary Academy and Sacred Hearts Academy, both in Fall River, were announced today. Winners were named on . the basis of results of competitive examinations held recently at the. schools.

.

Paula Martin, 122 Winthrop place with Colleen McGuill, Lord Junior High School, mem­ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ber of St. William's Parish. Street, daughter' of Mr. and Mary Tnne Huszcza, daughter Mrs. Paul H. Martin, merited McGuill, 284 Snell Street. Both first place in the competitive girls are awarded full four-year of, Mr.' and . Mrs. Anthony tuition scholarships. Carla is in Huszcza, 32 Grafton Street, New­ scholarship examination held re­ cently at Mount St. Mary Acad-' grade eight at St. Stariisiaus port, R. I., St. Augustin School emy. One hundred twelve girls School and is a member of St. and Parish, Newport. Phyllis Pytel, daughter of Mr., StaniSlaus parish. Colleen is in of grade eight took this exam­ ination. Miss Martin is the re­ grade eight at' SS. Peter and and Mrs. Andrew Pytel, 100 cigient of a full four-year tuition Paul School, and is a member of Corigress Street, Holy Cross School and Parish. scholarship. A member of St. SS. Peter and Paul Parish. Four-year partial scholarships . Cynthia A. franco, daughter William's Parish, Paula is in grade eight at Henry Lord were won by the following grade of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony C. .Franco, 782 Plymouth Avenue, Junior High. eight pupils: Carla .Rudyk, daughter of Mr. . ' Kathryn Carvalho, daughter SS. Peter' and Paul School 'and and Mrs. Carl Rudyk, 610 Brad­ of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Car~' Parish.. Turn to Page Eighteen ford Avenue, tied for second valho, 70 Lane Street, 'Henry

festival April 20 For Vincentians

or competitive organization de­

signed to destroy or absorb

existing organizations, Father

Sullivan explained" but rather

Ii federation of all approved

Catholic youth groups within a

Diocese regardless of labels or

particular objectives. ,

The Diocesan Youth Council

makes no provision for'indivi­

dual membership. The only way

in which membership can be

obtained is through membership

in an affiliated organization.

Extraparochial Catholic youth

gr'oups may secure representa­

.tion by the appointment of two delegates to the Executive Com­ mittee of the Diocesan Youth Council.

Diocesan Appeal

Kickoff Session

Next Monday

The general meeting of the 1958 Catholic. Charities Appeal will be held at 3 ne?ct Monday in the Catholic Mem­ orial Home auditorium, High­ land Avenue, Fall River. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James E. Ger­ rard, Vicar-General of the Dio­ cese, Will pt:eside. . Two speakers will be featured as the formal part of the meet­ ing. Rev. William D. Thompson, pastor of Saint Mary's Parish, . Norton will speak for the clergy. James E. Bullock, Sr., 19.58 Diocesan Lay-Chairman will be the spokesman 'for the laity. Both have had wide experience in fund raising efforts and share a broad background of charitable and civic activities. . Continued on Page Nineteen

Pope Speaks as

World's Pastor

Easter mOItning in Rome dawned 'with skies threaten- .. ing rain, but Roma:ns gave their customary aSSlrranCe: "The sun will shine; it .always 'does for the Pope." And it did. . An estimated 200,000 Romans and pilgrims from many count­ ries filled St.Peter's Square for Mass which was celebrated on the front steps of the Basilica. This second Mass followed the first Mass said inside the great Church. Exactly . at. noon the Holy Father appeared. on the center balcony over the main door of Turn to Page Thirteen

Bishop Extends

Easter Wishes

Sunday, April 20th, the second Sunday after Easter, is one of . His Excellency, the Most Rev­ the four Annual Festivals of the erend Bishop, asks the blessings Society of St. Vincent de Paul. of the Risen Christ on all According to the Rules of the during this Easter Season. Society all members, both ac­ The Bishop is grateful for the tive and honorllry, are required RETURNS TO AFRICAN MISSION: Sister Helen William, S.U.S.C., Mansfield na-. many good Wishes and' prayers to receive Holy Communion on extended to him through his .thiS day or during the Octa-&e tiveand former. operating 'room nurse. a~ Union Hospital, Fall ~h~~r, ~rranges return pas-. present .illness. The Bishop it. .. on any day' within eight days ' 'sage to h~r missio~ 'dispensar.y at I)schang in the Ftench Camerons" ~fter-" visit to· the now recuperating: from vuill infection. '.' Holy 'Union Motherhouse ·inFall River. jnceding Ute Festival.

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Commends Courageous Resistance' Of Peo,ple' Be~ind Iron Curtain

-THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., April 10, 1 ~~8

Red Papers Heap' Insults -on POpe' .­ ,VATICAN CITY (NC)-=-L'Os­ servatore'Romano, Vatican City' daily charges socialist and com.;;

munist ,newspapers' in' Italy

seize on certain exemptions ·from ltalian·'taxes, which are allowed. to ,Italian nationals who repre-' .ent foreign nations at the Holy See, as, a pretext for insulting Pope Pius' XII. · In, an ,editorial, !'Pretexts for Offense," L'0sservato,re' points out that most· criticism' of-the leftist press' is aim'ed at Prince Giulio Pace~li, nephew of' \l,1e Pope and A,mbassador of Costa, Rica to the Holy See. . 'Two other Italian ,citizens also have diplomatic stat.us' at 'the Vatican and are, therefore,ex­ empted from "paying property taxes. They are Count Stanislao Pe:cci, y;ho represents ttte Knighis'of Malta at the papal, court, and Filippo Serlupi 'cres­ cenzi, Minister of'San Marino. ' ,' ,'purpoSe Clear '"It is e.nough to ,note that ~ere are "three diplomatS who are heads of missions and w,he. have Italian citizenship," the newspaper pointed out," arid are therefore exempted; but the hatred o{the socialists 'and com-' iiiunlstS directs itself above all atone"of the' three becau~ 'he bcilr~ the, ,';narite' of th~ r~igniM Pontiff. 'Th~ir aims are always more or ,le.ss, openly to offend •• • ~tie' HolY Father, Phis XII, in his' per'soil and in his high offices." , '" ' "The editorial' recalls that Lateran Treaty and the 'Vatican'::: . Italy'Concord'at provide that "envoys' of foreign governments to'the Holy See continue to' en':' ' joy·' * * all irrimunities belong':: ing to' diplomatic agents under international law."

NEW YORK (NC) - , The ..courageous resistance of peoples "."behind the Iron Curtain whQse Eas'ter joy is repressed by "total­ Itarian tyranny" was lauded in a' ~dio message sent to th~m !?y His '. Eminence, Edward Cardinal' MooIley, Archbishop ·of Detroit: 'Cordinal 'Mooney's message

, was one of several from leading .

'-Catholic and Protestant clergy­

:: men that were beamed' behind

¢ ,the' Iron Curtain by Radio Free

,E'ilrope. .

Other Catholic prelate~ Easter inessages that. were, broadcast behind 'the 'Iron Curtain 'by RFE included those of 'His Eminence' James Francis Cardinal McIn­ tyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles; and Archbishops Richard J. Cushing of -B?ston, Jose~h E.

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tion. : ' " 'Benedictine Father Damasus gaining time and dec()iving sbin~ Winzen; Prior, of Mount Saviour into lending themsetves to i~ Monastery, "Elmira, and' author ultimately nefarious' purposes: of,·,: commentliries' . on . Sacred Totalitliria'nislTl iis' es'sentilHly in': Scripture, will speak 'on' "The, compatible' with' full' religioUS Liturgical Year in Fruition.'" freedom. ' ~ 'Father Benedict & Ehma~ It,may ~e ,s,ome small :Comfort pastor -of St. Mary 6f' the Lake fpr, you, ,pl,lr, brothers in th~ Faith, to k'now that the majority pened, ~e, did ,not fail to give ,Church, Watkins Glen, N. Y., solemn warning to Ule Jeaders and' author, will spt'!ak on "The' of Christians in'the West realize of nations so that nothing might Background' and Basis of the • 'that, while' it is Easter for us, Liturgical Year." " , it be overlooked which could check is still Passiontide, for you. men who 'were standing on the Their three talks; according There is' one thing that we can edge of an abyss. On that now to conference officials, are dedo for you in the name of public far past day, We proclaimed that signed to elaborate various asmorality. That is to oppose any' nothing 'was' lost by peace, peets of the Liturgical Year. international settlement that' whereas 'everything could be" even implicitly approves the lost by war. Unfortunately, Our continued holding 0,£ entire na­ voice, the voice of' an afflicted ti~ns in ruthless captivity by a, St~dy father, was not heeded." . foreign governm~nt or, by a loca\ ROME (NC) - The principal communist .minority which has The,. mallY" peopie attending seized po~er by force~ , ' the audience were co'mmemor-;-' m'rans to. imders~~nd an~ par­ ticipate in the Church,'s lit,urgy atii1g it (~ay for thos"emissing i~ ,,Moreover, 'iDspired' by; yota

World War 'II and prisoners of i,s.a t1l:QI:o~gh, knowledg~. of ,the devoted and courageous resist.,., history of the liturgy. HisEI'(l­ that vial". 'The day's observance ance, we pray, for 'you without in~rice Giacomo Cardina~. Ler­ had' begun with 'a Mass'ai' the, Ceasing.. Mintlful of,Christ's owd tomi> of" the unknown' 'Soldier caro, Archbishop of" Bologna 'Victory over death and despot­ sMd'here.' . " , ." in RohJ.e. ,,,. " . ism-'-which 'Easter' recalls-we :' ,Ignorance of the,l'(leanipg of 'pray that what· St. PailI' wrote the Mass; he said, .. often leads Advis~s to' the Corinthians may be ful­ in4ifference.People ;','often filled iri you: "In' all things we ,wonder what' the meaning, of suffer 'tribulation but we' are not ,MILAN (NC) - 'Historians Holy ,Mass is," he said, "and, too , ;distressed. ''Ye' 'suffer persecu­ and',philosophers of history must 9ften, they detach, themsel~es but we are nol 'forsaken'; we 'are always keep in mind the religi:. , from the, sacraments because of cast down but we, do not perish." ous facts of, history and thus indifference which' is, engend~, May the Risen Christ bring you form a Christian concept of hisered by ignorance." comfort and consolation! ,tory, Giuseppe' Cardinal Sid, "But if .the sp'irit of thc liturgy Archbishop of Genoa, said here.

is to be understood, the .Cardinal

, The" Carumal said that the continued, one, must also know

Christian concept of history rests its: history. "Liturgy is not only

on ,the idea, of the kingdom: of a rit~, it is. 'the expression of a

thought common to all." ,

God being man's final end. Christian studies' in history,' he'

"Cardinal Lercaro· urged ,the explained; "work out a synthesis liturgical e4ucatiop of:.youth· as 0'£ good and evil" and solve that one means. of overcoming "the synthesis' in the Redemptiori." ignorance of the essenti~l mean'­ /'>. Christian concept. of history l;ng of the liturgy.. . . is important, he pointed out, "be­ cau.s'e' men wa'n~, to' 'know, above ,all; where thcy are going. It is SEE THE ~,' ' . 'Ele'ct.ri,~~" .. , ..S'E. for this reason, that they read 'about the' past 'and consider it a . ­ valid indication of the di~tions '~ which .the road to Good will take po '-«,ITCHE NS.-/' in the future."

Hoiy 'Fat~~r' .. U,~ges World, 'Rulers To Return: Prisoners. to 'Homes

fuTICAN 'CiTY' Holiness 'Pope Pius xlI has ap:­ p~aled to rulers, polding Worid II prisoners to return' the men to'their homes' and families and to consider this question as : VATICAN CITY (NC),.- The "above all political i~plicatiqns Japanese legati~n to the Holy and aims." , See has been raised to the rank , Speaking in French 'during.'the of an embassy. There are now 33 sccond part of his address to an embassies and· 15 legations ac­ ,audience' of' 30,000 peopie _ in credited to the Holy See. ·St. Peter's basilica, the Pope told' his hcarers, who h,ad come from Austria; -Belgium, 'France,.. I~ly" ~IDA Y Friday in Easter Germany and' the Nethe'rl'ands,

'" Wee,k:Double.: White. ,Mass that respo'nsible parties'.'should :: Proper;' Gloria; Seque~~ei' consider the retur-n of p'hsoner~ " Creed; Preface" as "it is in reality-":'a, question of ~ATURDAY Saturday in' humanity a'nd moral responsibil':' :," Ellstcr Week. Double. White.:' ity before Goil."~" , ' ,Mass Prope~'; Gloria; i Se.:", "Return to all prisoriiirs Ufeii; '. quence; ,Cr~ed; Preface. families, their comforts 'and their SUNDAY::"":" Low 'Sunday and ffeedom,"he ple'aded."" • , Octave Day of Easter. Double "Earlier in his talk, which he ,of I' Class.' ,White, Mass began in Italian, thePcip~sa'id: ':- Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface "in the past,We, hav:e'repeat..;' , of Easter. edly dealt with'this's~d subjeCt MONDAY-St.. Justin, Martyr. of war, passing on its licitness; 'Double. Red, Mass Proper;, investigating its causes,' stress­ 'Gloria; Second, Collect Ss. ing its consequences and suggest­ t ',Tihurtius and Co~panions; 'ing remedies;" · Third Collect for Peace; PreWarning Ignored . :, face of Easter. . ,The Pontiff told his hearers: TUESDAY-,-Mass of Previous "Here We again return, if only 'Sunday. Simple. White.' Mass for a few Il),oments, to,innumer;. ',Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Secable battlefields where, in the , ' of\d Collect for Peace; Preface ,.clasb o~ wills, ,betwee!l. leaders, : of Easter. " ' . youthful strong ',and' generous· WEDNESDAY'- Mass of Pre-' , live.llfq,ught and~~ri:l~e~troyed · vious ,Suriday. Simple. White: • ~ ..Since We, th.,m fore-saw, what : M'3ss Proper; Gloria; . ",no' afteJ;ward un~<?rt~,'.JiateW:,: hap., "Cr~d; Secohd' Collect. for ' . . ' , · Peace; Preface 'of Easter; ,o'f,D~c~ncy 'THURSDAY-Mass of Previous The' followingfilm:s are' to be. ,~'Sunday. Simple: White. Mass added to'the'1istS in'their respec­ , ,,' Proper; ,Gloria; "Second Collect' t~ve, classifications'::'" --. :' . I St.' Anicetus,' Pope and Mar- " . Unobjectionable for, ,.Gene'ral , tyr; Third Coll~t for Pe,ace; Patronage--Proud Rebel; Run , Preface of Easter. "Silent; Run Deep. . Unobjectionable 'for . Adults and Adolescents--Lisa, Viking FORTY HOURS " Women and the Sea Serpent. DEVOTION·" Unolljecti9nable for. Adults ~ .

April l~St. Paul, Taunton Cool and the Crazy, Fraulein; , St. John the Baptist, Fall Ten North Frederick.' " River' ObjectiQnable: in' Part' tor All April 20-0ur. Lady of the ,+Dragstrip' :Ri_o(' Girls' on the

· Holy ,Rosary, "Ne:w: Bed;,.; ,::UooSe, I Was a'.Teenage. Frank"

Ritter of St: Louis and Joseph F. Rummel of New'Orleans. The messages of the Catholic prelates were requested by' RFE. ' , ' The annual Easter message of 'His HolinesS Pope Pius XII wall

also broadcast byRFE to east..:

ern Europe.

. 'CardinalMo"ney, said 'in '1,1" message that free people can aid

thQse under Red 'oppression by

praying and by opposing ";IN

international' settlement that

even iJiJ.pliciUy' approves the continued holding of" entire' na':: tions in ruthless captivity. ' ' The C~rdm'al message foilo~i As I extend Eastcr greetings to the people of my own diocestl who, in the full, enjoyment of religious liberty" celebrate the triumph of Christ's Rcsurrection, my heart goes out to the millions .o,~lturglcci ,~e,,' of, fellow Catholi~s in Eastern Europe and Asia 'whose ,demon­ tration of Easter joyis hampered ,CINCINNATI,NC) ~ Three ot . or utterly repressed under 'the the nation's best known authoryoke of tQtalitarian tyranny. ities 0Il lHvine ~or,ship will I am thinking not only of those speak, ,during the 19th, annual who are struggling against either North" American , Liturgical the deceitful or 1>penly brutal Week, to be heid here starting' persecution of imperialistic com­ Aug. 18. '-" munism but also of, those who ,Bededictine Father, Godfrey bear the brunt of the no less bitter antagonism of, so-called Diekmann, editor, of Worship, national communism. ' 'liturgical review published by the ,monks of'Sf. John's-Abbey; , . Communism in"any form is the ,Collegeville, Minn.,': will speak-bitter' "foe .. 'of' "teligion--even on "The Liturgical Year in' Ae;,.;' when, for ihe time being,' i~

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Favors Federal' Law to Direct Jobless Aid

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., April 10, 1958

3

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Bishops Observe

I;)anger S~gnals

WASHINGTON (NC) The secretary of-the Nation­ al" Conference of Catholic Charities has told a Congres­

LA PAZ (NC)-Alarmed by ,increasing divorce, materialism, in education and' agricultural chaos, the hierarchy of Bolivia .ional committee that "the lack , has issued a joint pastoral mak­ of any Fed'eral standards" is the ing a triple appeal to the gov­ cause of "most" Qf the difficul- . ernment, priests and laymen to ties that have arisen in regard solve these "serious problems.". to unemployment compensation. The pastoral asserts the pres- , "From the very beginnin~," ent-day materialistic and pagan Msgr. John O'Grady told' the world is "totally unconcerned House Ways and Means Com": with the ,after life, the soul, mittee, "we have had continuous , WIN SCHOLARSH.IPS: Awarded full tuition or partial scholarships ~ to Sacred God and thinl;{s eternal.'~ competition between the states in' regard to duration and' the Academy are, left tQ righ·t, Margaret Silvestre, full; Mary McCarthy; ,partial; Ann M. Tur­ The nation's' 18 archbishops ner full; Joan Monahan, partial. " .' amount of benefits." and bishops urge "everyone" to, Msgr. O'Grady.said that, al­ lend. their effective and selfless though the Federal government cooperation" in combatting the has tri;d in th~ past fi~e years "alarming unhinging of family "to prevail upon the states to life, the wicked materialistic ~ecomes VATICAN CITY (NC)- The introduce some standards" in Grand Knights and other offi-' liberalism in education, and the , CHICAGO (NC) Exiled Sacred Congregation of Rites their unemployment compensa- cers of councils in the Fall River disturbing anarchism evident in Auxiliary Bishop . Vincent J. has taken ~nder study the lives tionprograms, "very little prog- Diocese are wo,rking zealously agriculture." , Brizgys of Kaunas, Lithu~nia, is ' of a Benedictine Brother and a ress has been made." for the success of the PatriotS' "Priests; ,'both 'diocesan and 12-year ,old Spanish 'girl in the now a l)'nited States citizen. Warns Against Dole Day Dinner of the Massachusetts regular, must abandon anti­ processes for their ' possible He ooserved there is "great State Council, Knights of Co-' The prelate, woo came to the quated methods of a pure rit­ . danger" in this "coI)fused situa-' lumbus: United States in 1951, had, been eventual beatification. ualistic bureaucracy; they m!Jst 'Being consi~red were the tion" and warned that "we may consecrated, only a month when study, practice ,and teach in all be closer to the dole concept The affair this year, to Which , heroieity' of' the virtues ,of the ladies will be invited, will be ·the Russians mov~~ into Lithu­ of 'its reality the social doctrine today than we have ever been:" .held at the Hilton-Statler Ball.., ania in May 1940. When' Hitler's Servant of 'God Meinrad Eug-, of the Chur'eh in order to regain "What we do ·now in unemo. room.': Robert F. Kennedy, nazi ,troops swept' into' the ster, and the writings of the the people. • Servant of' God Josefina Vil­ co'uRtry a year later,', Bishop ployment compensation is liable Counsel for' Senate Sub:'Com­

"Our faithful, awakening from to become permanent," Msgr. aseca. . Brizgys vigorously protested O'Grady declared. "I am fully mittees;.will be presented the . Brother Meinrad was born at their dream of a eomfortabie and against, their inhuman treatment convinced that if we adopt a "Lamp of· Freedom, A,ward," a' of his people. Gatz'iburg, in ,the Diocese of St. middle-class Catholicism" must ' , ;,' unite in love of 'Christ to strive dole system today it is liable to " repHca of the one wl)ich hung Gallen, Switzerland, on' August become '3 permanent part of our' . in: ,the' Old North Church, as' a ' .., In'1944 the Germans took 'him ,23, 1848. As a youtp. he ,w~rked toward the reconstruction 'of .. into "protective custody" l\nd f;ie:­ , in 'a, textile factory and later better wor,ld,full of social just­ .~stein.",,· ' sigrial for the start ot the Paul ~ M s g r. O'Grady suggested .'Rev~re ride:' ," , . 'ported him to a Carmelite mon­ as a shop clerk; At 26 he joined ice and fraternal charity.'~ that unemployment compensa-, The award is given to a per:.. ,astery .in Regensb\.1rg,Germany~ ihe Benedictine' of ,Einsiedeln' tion standards set up by the' son' who e'xemplifies' the .patri-' T!ie Bishop ~as liberated' when where' he was assigneii to the American troops got to Regens:­ ,Federal government should pro- dtic and religious de:VQtionof the NIAGARA FALLS (NC) , abbey's tailor' shop. He "died on ' ' vide for reasonable benefits of founding fathers of our country. , burg,in 1945. ' June 5, i925, after having N)agara University has topped at least' one-half the worker1s ,J. Edgar Hoover, FBI head, was the minimum goal of $1,000,000 worked at that task for 30 years, wages during· the qualifying the recipient a year ago. giving an example of patience, set in its building fund drive. Vincentian Father Vincent T. perio$i." Arch'bishop Richard J. Cush~ humility' and piety. Diocesan Campaig~ Swords, university president. Need Local Action ing will deliver the principal processes were begun 'in Einsie­ PITTSBURGH (NC) ....:... Cath­ announces $1,020,861 had been "They should have duration address and. present the plaque. deln in -1939 and the cause for olic students' at Pittsburgh up to 39 weeks," he said, adding: . Rt. Rev. Christopher P. beatification was introduced in pledged toward the construction colleges have joined in a letter-' '1946. "It is all-important also that Griffin, State Chaplain, will give of a new science building. writing campaign against distri­ there should be some stan- the invocation. State Deputy ,Josefina Vilaseca was born at bution of indecent material dards governing disqualifica- James H. Norton will preside. Horta de Avino, Diocese of Vich, through the U. S. mails. tions. Otherwise the states are State Secretary Thomas G. Fee­ Spain, on March 9, 1940. On De­ Joining the "Letter To Your cember 4, 1952, she died rather liable to become so rigid in their nan is General Chairman. disqualifications as to neutralize Congressman" drive began re­ than yield to ,an attack on her all the other standards included cently by the Pittsburgh Dioc­ chastity. She is spoken of as "a in the legislation."

esan Council of Catholic Women second Maria Goretti" and is Msgr. O'Grady commented,

were the Newman Clubs of the venerated in some areas as a however, that unemploym'ent University of Pittsburgh;, of, marty",. VATICAN CITY (NC) His compensation is not "a method Carnegie Tech and its night Holiness Pope Pius XII's gift of a of meeting long-term unemploy­ school; the National Federation major relic of St. 'Pius X, to the ment." Instead, he said, the of Catholic College Students NEW YORK .(NC) -'- Catholic new church at Lourdes is' the' chapters at Duquesne University best method is "a constructive hospitals ~nd related health latest chapter in a long, history and Mt. ~erey College. and flexible public works prO­ Thomas F. Monaghan Jr.

agencies in the New York arch­ of favors that' popes have shown gram." . Purpose of the letter-writing diocese served 160,615 patients Treasurer

He urged states and commun-' to the venerated Marian shrine; :campaign ,is to persuade Con­ last year: The value of free cax:e ities to speed up projects that It was the custom of St. Pius gressmen to support legislation' and allowa'nces in all hospitals have ,already been planned and X'to stop in front of the Lourdes providing for tighter restric.:. and medical facilities totaled 142 SECOND STREET for which funds are available. 'grotto in the Vatican Gardens tions on the distribution of in-' $5,240,000., New,,·' cons'truction "No matter what is done in for a moment of prayer every decent material. during 1957 was valued at FALL RIVER· Washington in stimulating work afternoon during his w'alks. On $4,760,000, while planned or opportunities," he said, "very the occasion of the 50th anni­ underway are hospital building little will happen until we get versary of the dogma of the OSborne 5-785~ VATICAN CITY. (NC):- The projects which will cost an esti­ real organization in the states Immaculate C'onception, he ded­ mated $19,541,500. Sanctus and Benedictus may be and local communities." icated an encyclical to Our Lady of Lourdes, whom he had chosen sung together before the Conce­ as the patroness of his pontificate. cration during Hi~h Mass, the Sacred, Congregation of Rites In.1912 St. Pius X created the has announced. Diocese of -Lourdes, uniting it In answer to questions sub­ SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The with that of Tarbes. mitted by several liturgists, the idea that the Jews of Old Test­ The relic of St. Pius X was' Congregation said there is full ament times saw God as a stern God of just.ice but not love is sent to Lourdes at the request freedom to sing the two portions wrong, according to a priest who of Cardinal Tisserant, who is of the same prayer together or WJ.lAT President of the International to follow the custom of singing is a recognized 'student of He­ NATION BY ITS' Lourdes Centennial Committee. braic cultl\re. the Sanctus before the Conse­ OWN REQUEST The relic is in a glass con­ Father JQhn M. Oesterreicher, cration and the Benedictus af­ BECAME PART tainer enclosed in a, sculptured director of the Institute' of Ju­ terwards. silver casket. The reliquary is OF THE daeo-Christian Studies at Seton UNITED Hall University, Newark, N. J., decorated with a scene of the apparition of Our Lady of St. said: STATES" "For the biblical mind, justice Bernadette, and with the coats and love are in no way opposites; of arms of Pope Pius XII and one leads to the other. The God St. Pius x. of justice and the God of love is one and the same God." ~ather Oesterreicher, a con~ vert from Judaism, spoke on the biblical concept of 'social justice CHARLES F. VARGAS here at Incarnate Word College 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE Hawaii, on July 6, 1898 in the course of a lecture trip NEW BEDFORD, MASS. to a number of southern Cath­ olic colleges and universities. NEW BEDFO~D

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AI Smith :Sto',y ,Ancdyzes Happy Warriorls '. Career. By RL Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy In Al Smith and· His 'America (Atlantic-Little,' Brown. $3.50~ Oscar Handlin has wri~ten'an excellent study of a, subject of significance. today; even though Al Smith went into eclipse some 30 years ago. The book is not. so much biography as an analysis the go~ernOrship-that m~n of of Smith's growth as a diverse backgrounds and differ­ Pllblic executive and the ent beliefs could' nevertheless meaning of thi:! camnaign ·understand one another and against him: wQen he ran for the· work together .toward common presidency. It marshals fac.ts and objectives.' Opportunity . beck~ makes a criti­ oned to all; it was !J'1thinkable cal' evaluation that anyone should be held back of them, all the because of the peculiarit) of his while keeping origins or the distinctiveness of in . view the ' his beliefs:" distinctive per­ 'Such was the theory. That sonality of a the practice was something 'else, again, .the campaign of 1928$ick­ .nonpareil. The New eningJy showed. ;. <> , York ,East Side, The last 15 years of: Smith's, CATHOLIC UNIVERSI'l'Y' BERNADETTE: In mid-J,une.members of the Speech and tenem~nt, im­ life Mr. Handlin calls a period of riram~ Department of. the Catholic Univers ity will begin a lO-week tour of Latin ,America migrant back­ failure and waste. He gives rea-: in the produCtion "The Song of Bern!1dette,"writteJi' by Franz Werlel and adapted by g'r 0 u n d i s '4' sons for this judgment. ;He looks Jean and W'aiter Kerr. Here American college, girls tran'sfo.rm themselves into French sketched in, as ' sharply and wi'thout bias at the'" women a century ago. NC Photo. ", are' S mit h ' s relationship 'wilh Roosevelt, .:'

forbears. The history 'and funcprobes', Smith's' activities and . tioning of Tammany" Hall are utteran~es, and indicates that, outlined. This is Smith's setting' being out of the .'picture, he w~s C.' OUSt!. Inves,ti'gation .' conveyed. Against it is placed out of 'touch with elements of . the hardworking, loyal, shrewd, change on the American scene. CHICAGO (NC) Chicago The history of hats will 'be o'clock, Saturday afternoon, and likeable young man with a . This is an incisive and judiKnights of Columbus and', featured .at the regular. meeting .. April, 26 in the Lord Fox Res-' flair for' al.'late~r ·theatricals. cious book, dispassionate and:. Daughters of Isabella have pe­ 'of the Cath()lic Women's Club of,· taurant, 'Foxb~ro. ' Smith's start in politics was candid. ,It· is' required reading titioned Pope Pius XII to inves­ North Attleboro"'at 8 0'c1oek toArchbishop Richard J. Cush-' modest indeed. He became an for anyone who 'would .u'nder: tigate the cause for canonization, night. in ,the Hotel Hixon. The, ing will be the honored' ruest aIde to the ..neighborhood' Tam­ stand the tides of' our times:of. Blessed Augustine Gazotich,. Historical Soci.ety, wiWlend·hats ' "a~ the Club's May 8th meeting.' many boss. Proving himself Once' in Kerry Q.P., 14th century Bishop of of by-gone days, which' will be ' capable, he was picked to run, • C~unty' Kerry. in' the early Zagreb;, Croatia and Lucera, modeled by club members' and for the state legislature..In his' years of the century is the scene I~aly. , narrated by Mrs. Helen HarriS. many terms in the Assembly at of John O'Donoghue's delightful' The petition declares ~anon­ A parade ,of aprons will also be" ' 0 Albany he learned the trade of book' .of' reminisCences, In a' ization' of Blessep. Augustine on the program. ". pOlitics and became: ever more Quiet Land (Coward-McCann: wouid "strengthen,. the faith and Entertainmerit will be lur-' AND SALES CO., 'INC. prominent and 'influential. $3.50). hopes of the Croatian people nished by Mrs·. Alida Dion as' 47 1 North ,Second St. , In 1911, after the horrible fire . His family, were poor people, now groaning under the tyranny so\9isi 'accompanied at the pia~~ , which took the lives· of almost living ,on the land, rooted in it of communism." by Mrs. Rutli Skiffington. Mrs. . New' Bedford. Mass. Ida Murphy is th\. general cbair­ 150 employees of the Triangle and, hardly able to' conceIve of The See of Zagreb is now held WY 6-8578 man. Waist Company, he was named ,any o'ther way of life. This· son,' by His Eminence. Aloysius Card­ -EVERYTHING ELECTRICAlThe annual Spring bridge and to a commission "to investigate however; was !1ifferent. Working, inal Stepinac, who was impris­ the need for more effecti.ve fire, the land had no appeal for him; oned by the Yugoslav govern­ .lu,:,cheon is on schedule for 1 prevention, but with a mandate . it struck him as .pointless drudg­ ment in 1946 and has been broad enough to include the gen­ ery. And when he could, at 20, under house arrest. since 1952. . Blessed Augustine was con­ eral problem of labor relations he got away. . WORESTER (NC) - Eishop in the state." . But now he casts his mind to 'secrated Bishop of Zagreb in John J. Wright of Worcester has At the state' constitutional his boyhood and youth,and in 1303 by Blessed Benedict XI. He lieenpromoted to' the rank of ~nvention of 1915 he' emerged a mastery way evokes in words served there 14' years, until he officer in the French .LegiOfl of as an expert on the workings of the images, sounds, even smells­ was transferred to' the See of' Honor. He has held the rank of government. He became govern­ that then surrounded him, the - Lucera, in Italy. He died in 1323. "finest since 1877chevalier. or for the first time in 1918: In simple, unchanging, but some­ Bishop Wright was notified of Same day service this office, to which he wa's 're­ how never tedious routine of the the honor by Hervi Alpband, elected three times, he grew con­ humble household,the shared if desired! French ,Ambassador to the stantly. He mastered the prob­ life of the parish, and his first SYRACUSE (NC) - Mrs. H. United States. The decree of pro­ lems of the state and worked expeditions beyond his tranquil Paul Nelligan has donated her motion was signed by President intellip'entlJ-' for their solution.. valley. summer estate at nearby Caze­ R~ileCoty of France. The bishop _ He gave New York the best ad­ First there is life around the novia Lake to LeMoyne College 6 CAMPBELL ST. was honored for his interest in, ministration it had had in many cottage hearth, dominated by his· here, Jesuit 'Father Robert ·F. and. encouragement of French NEW BEDFORD decades. tart-tongued but kindly grand­ Grewen, college president, has culture. ' SO nith's Theory mother. Then there is the intr~ announced. . His first bid for a presidential duction to local folkways. There. He said the estate will be used ~ nomination, in 1924, wall, follows his going to school, with, as a summer recreation place . r. LET - US -' PLAN thwarted, chiefly by the power many adventures both in it' and for' the school's Jesl1it faculty~ of the Ku Klux Klan in' the on· the way to and from it. He' and later as a retr~at house foi. Democratic party. His second,;, discovers. the joys of dancing, faculty and stu<~~nts. Mrs. Nel-' , bid, in 1928,' was successful,: but the labor of peat-cutting in the . ligan is the widow of indus~ial':: the ensuing campaign was not6.,. bog, the' titillation of a scandal . ist H. Paul Nelligan. ' rious or the vicious, know-noth-' in town,the profound effect of ., ing, anti-Catholic prejudice and a mission, the wonder of travei-, G.REAT MONEY RAISER hatred which erupted all across, ling (on foot) to relatives living For GREAtER, WE HAVE the country. 40 miles away, on the coast. NEW BEDFORD "Smith's care'er," writes Mr. All is fresh and immediate in Handlin, "had been a demon­ the telling, marvelously funny THE mation of the validity 'of Amer­ and 'poignant, rich in acute de­ "'For Your Protection jcanism.. In his own mind, his scription, singular characters, iri­ First· Dep~it Buy from success had confirmed the prem­ c,idents colorful and sombre, the ise established by his life on the feel and flavor of a. place and a .East Side, by his career in the time and a culture of a distinc-:-' Rentals Available' Assembly, and by his election to tive sort. of New Bedford, MaSs.

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THE ANCHORThurs., April 10.

1958

5

Priest Recounts Ordeal in Red Slave Camp

Regina Mundi Films Just·ly Proud Of Low Production Cost Record

ERIE (NC)-Hollywood pro­ a film.to bring the organization'. ducers .boast of millions of dol­ story to the public. Cost was. a lars spent on their 'motion pic­ big factor. To offset it Father tures, but the Regina Mundi film Caldwell volunteered to handle company is proud of the fact that all details of the production it­ its costs are probably the lowest self. NEW YORK (NC) on record. priest who was a prisoner in "What Chance Has a Cripple," "We aren't likely to worry the first Regina Mundi produc­ a Soviet slave labor camp Cecil B. DeMille," said Father says his priesthood saved E. James Caldwell, founder of tion, has been seen by thousands of persons throughout this area. him from. the. despair of fellow Regina Mundi Films, "but we do Produced for well under $500 prisoners "who could find noth­ turn out complete sound, color (Fatller Caldwell even handled ing to live for." films for considerably less than the narration), the film has ma­ the first half-hour's production The degrading conditions un­ .A WARD~D FULL TUITION: Paula Martin, center, . costs terially aided the crippled chil­ on the quickest of Holly­ der which Father (now Msgr.) dren's cause. me~l~ed first place in the Mount St. Mary Academy· com­ wood's 'quickie' films." Father Gerhard A. Fittkau had to live Before Closure as a prisoner of the Soviet Reds petItive" examinatio~. Carla Rudyk left and Colleen McGuill . Calowell serves as editor, cam­ ' , , eraman, sound technician ~. and "Old St. Mark's Seminary," a are recounted by him in a book right, tied for second honors. lighting expert for the film com­ motion picture on the structure entitled "My Thirty-T h i rd· pany. housing young Erie diocesan stu­ Year," being published by Far­ Aids Children dents for the priesthood, was rar, Straus and Cudahy. In addition, he holds a triple Regina Mundi's second produc­ Sealed in Boxcar Shortly after Fat,her Fittkau assignment as an assistant pro­ tion. The film was used' in an was named in 19448s pastor of fessor of history at Gannon Col­ ultra successful diocesan educa­ SAN r ~ARINO (NC)-If there the defian't reply to the author­ lege, assistant headmaster of tional building fund campaign Suessenberg, in East Prussia, the is still liberty in this, the world's ities. But, she added, the Sisters Russian army swept through the .smallest and oldest republic, it St. Mark's minor· seminary and completed recently .that raised of St. Claire had been in San parish, desecrating the church, associate editor of the 'Lake $lO,ooO,OOO-double the original is due in a great part to the Marino for two and·a half cen­ . looting, raping, and kiUingpeo­ Shore Visitor Register, Erie' goal. turies and, if they yielded their pIc. dioc.esan we:kl~. He founded 'Establishment of a Carmelite courage a small grouP of fluns rights to the first blow by the On March 6', 1945, Father Fitt- . who defied San Marino's ousted Reds, all would have been fin" Regma Mundi Films a few years convent in Erie led to the filming kauand other prison~rll were ~~: as a result of his ~nterest in. of "Holy Family Carmel." The communist regime. ' "' ·ished anyhow. sealed in'a boxcar and se;i east . work o.f the, Ene. County, picture is unique because the Last 'July 29 the Red-"con­ Chain Reaction into Russia. In their 20. days CnppleQ Children s .Soclety. priest-producer "shot" much of trolled gov~rnment decreed that San . Marino's Reds were un-' in the boxcar, they received only A membe.r of the socie~y's the film within the Carmelite only the state school would be prepared for such defiance. The five meals. On March 25 those convent prior to its complete allowed to educate San Marino nun's reply to the - communists l;oard. of dlre.ctors, the pnest who had survived. were deposi­ conceIVed the Idea of producing closure to the public. children. Such a decree was di­ decree began a chain reaction ted at a slave labor camp in the The latest Regina Mundi pro­ reeted solely at the girl's acad­ which ended' with the govern­ Petchora-Vorkuta district of the duction, "Education on the emy operated by the Sisters of ment's downfall. Popular senti­ Soviet Komi Republic, which 'Square," had its local television St. Claire-the tiny republic has ment was aroused in the nun's straddles the' Arctic Circle north premiere on Easter Sunday. The favor. only two schools, this one and a and east of Moscow. film offers a half-hour sound public school. . Five communist deputies. Insulted, underfed and forced HONG KONG (NC) - After color' tour of Gannon Colleg~ chani,ted their political 'allegi­ to work for his oppressors. having been held by the Reds -There B"efore Reds, and .its activitie!1. ProduCtion ance, throwing the majority to Father .Fittkau drew inspiration, .. A copy' of the decree, 'sent to for seven years, a 44-year-old' cost, via the Regina Mundi Christian Democrats. Red from his vocation and persisted Chinese Jesuit has 'returned to· method, was less than $250:, .the nuns in August, was prompt­ leaders attempted to d\j;solve in ministering spiritually .to his 'ly answered by. ~e good- Sisters'· the nation's Parliament in 'vio-' his home ·'n Shanghai. fellowmen in defiance of' his Father Huang Tao-cheng, ·S.J., with. their avow~l to continue'" . laHon of ·the republic's constitu­ communist overseers. In five had been doing forced labor in teachmg ·.San Marmo girls. tion which says that Parliament PANGHKAK. (NC) - Colum­ weeks at the camp, there were. Tsinghai province in northwefit It was their right to teach, said must dissolve itself.' ban Father James Fitzpatrick: 71 deaths among the original China. This high and barren the nuns, and the right of par­ The government feli a sub­ was furnishing radio entertain­ 260 prisoners. ents to choose schools for their sequent vote gave the Christian plateau is known for its ex­ ment to some of his Kachin Barely Stand Up . tremely cold weather. Democrats the majority and they neighbors in this little village "I was not different," Father' children. Father Huang was born on Mother Veronica, superior of ~ formed the new government. in Northern Burma. Fittkau writes, "i"n my wretched April 17, 1914, and was ordained . Explaining that short-wave appellrance, in my physical . the academy, now recalls that on June 8, 1946. Th'e present re­ radio has world-wide reception, misery, in my struggle to stay she was fearful when she. made port on Father Huang' did not he tuned in broadcasts from alive, in my material helpless­ mention his physical condition ness :h'om any prisoner in camp. . India, Japan, Europe and the nor how he had been treated by United States. The people were Yet my priesthood gave purpose In observance of the Lourdes the Reds in Tsinghai. VATICAN CITY (NC) - The impressed. "Amazing," they all to evcI'y day of my life and saved Cent~nnial the Catholic Theatre Holy See has no official infor­ agreed. me from the pit of futility that Guild of. New Bedford will pre­ mation on reports that the'Cath- . Then an old lady in the corner swallowed up those who could .sent "Sc~nes from Lourdes" by olic bishops of Yugoslavia will spoke up. "Let's hear what they find noU1ing to live for in an Ellen M. Gaughan at 7 P. M. come .to Rome ,this Year. are saying in the next village." existence wrenched out of the Sunday over WNBH. TOLEDO (NC)- 'The Ohio A high Vatican official sald Crestfallen, theColumban ad­ context that had given it meanI.n her ne,west play Miss State Council of the Knights of the Vatican has seen the report ing." mitted that his radio had limit­ . Gaughan, a member of the guild, Columbus is about to start its of the semi-official Yugoslav After having spent some time' ations. new "help-get-teachers" schol­ in a hospital camp, Father Fitthas written an interpretation of news agency, Yugopress, .that "Ah, what good is it at all if arship program. . kau and a trainload of other the .story of St. Bernadette. the bishops of communist ruled Twerty-five to 30 two-year . we can't hear what's going on in Yugoslavia will visit Pope Pius. prisoners were sent back to the next village," commented college scholarships will be fi­ XII for the first time since be­ Germany. When the prisoners nanced by the state council in Panghkak's leading female radio fore Wolrd War II. But he said WASHINGTON (NC) --;A were released in Frankfurt An cooperation with local councils. critic. the Vaticim had received no in­ workshop for educators in adult Der Oder, Father Fittkau could formation other than the Yugo-' The money will come from an education will be held at the barely stand up becaW!e of his annual youth-fund campaign. A Delicious press report. Catholic University' of America weakened condition. A nun This year $90,000 has been ap­ Treat from June 13 to 24. The work-. helped him aboSrd a train propriated for youth work in shop will t>e under the direction packed with prisoners bound for ~ach of the six .Ohio diocese. of Capuchin Father Sebastian Berlin. He was admitted to St. A condition of· the scholarship Gertraud.'l> Hospital· in Berlin Miklas, for the past ten years awards will be that recipients BOSTON (NC) Harvard director of ·the CatholicUni­ on September 24, 1945. He re­ pledge themselves to do at least University is reported planning mained there until the end of versity division of adult educa­ to install a chair ot Catholic' two years teaching in a parochial tion. November. studies in its divinity school. school. The report was published in the Harvard Crimson under- . graduate daily newspa~erpub­ lished by the university students. Boston archdiocesan officials Truck Body Builders

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Ohio K of C Helps

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Harvard May Install· Catholic Study Chair-

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NEW LOOK FOR HISTORIC BASILICA: The Basil­ ica of the Holy Sepulchre, in Jerusalem, Jordan, will under­ go partial restoration, following agreement by Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land, Greek Orthodox and dissident A.rme~ians, Copts and Syrians. Basilica is pictured in histOrIC photograph taken shortly before nearly disasterous earthquake of 1927, which greatly weakened the structure that surrounds the site of Christ's Resurrection. A new dome has replaced the one shown, which was destroyed by fire, in 1949. NC Photo.

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..


Awateness

or Baptisnf

,',

6

I

The, Easter Vigil has centered, the attention of the faithful upon the great fact of their Baptism. The blessing of the baptismal ~at~r, the solemn manner of' renewing the baptismal promises, the association of Baptism with Easter-all these are bringing a new appreciation of Bap­ tism to the minds' of those who would learn from the Liturgy. , People u.sually pay little attention to the fact of their , own Baptism. They know it is ne~essary, but they feel that it is something that happened long ago so that is the end of it. These same/persons know,that the Sacrament of Bap­ tism is important and they would not dream of haying ,a new baby in the house more than a few weeks without the Sacrament. But what about themselves·? What about their own Baptism? The Church in her Easter Vigil teaches that an aware­ ness 'of one's own Baptism can change an entire'life. The Church teaches that in Baptism we share in, the death of ,Christ. "Do you not know :that all we who have' been baptized into Christ, Jesus have been baptized into

his death? . For we' were buried w'ith Him by means of

Baptism into death; in' o~der that, just as Christ ha~ arisen'

'from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also "

may walk in newness 'of life. For if we have been united with Him in the likeness of His death, we shall' be so in the likeness of His resurrecti~n also." , This sharing iii. the death' of Christ so that we might share in 'His Resurrection is not a fact that happened,once The Fami~y Clinic ,'" ,at 'our own Baptism 'and th~n is no more. ' ' 'M', ' ,The death and resurrection effected by our Baptism, ' ai-e', meant to' guide and control and change our lives' a8 d' , , , ," , lortg as we live. The effects of Baptism must be' const~ntly , , reeailed and renewed if weare to be true Christians--dead," By Rev. .1ohriL. Th~mas, 'S.J.' , to'ou'rselves and living in C~rist. Assistant Professor of, Sociology

'ot"he'r'ls' F'.-rs,t' 'O,b,I.-gat,.-on' '15 to'"Hom'e'" an' Ch.-Idre'n ,

,

@rhe.ANCHOR

St. Louis University

Weekly Calendar ,Of Feast Days TODAY - St. Ezechial, Pro­ . phet. He lived in the sixth cen­ tury B.C., and was one of the four greater prophets. He was the writer of a canonical Book ,of Scripture. Tradition has it that he was put to death while in captivity in 'Babylon "with the rest of the nation by one of the Jewish headmen who had turned pagan. H'is grave was a pilgrim­ ,mage for early Christians. TOMORROW-St. Leo I the Great, Pope - Confessor - Doctor. A Roman, he served as Arch­ ,deacon of Rome under Popes St. Celestine and Sixtus III. He be­ came Pope in' 440 and ruled when Rome was threatened by vandals and heresies. When 'the Huns swept the city, he sought out Attila and saved Rome from destruction. He also mitigated the sack of the city by, Genseric and his Vandals. More than 100 of his sermons 'are still extant. He died in 461 and' is buried· in St. Peter~s. SATURDAY-The Seven Sor­ 'rows of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Generally, this date is the Feast of St. Zeno, Bishop-Martyr. He served as 'Bishop of Verona from 362 until his martyrdom~in 371, at the time of Julian the Apostate. He is best remein­ bered as an ecclesiastical writer of distinction, his main. theme, be, ing the virginbirth of, Christ.

SUNDAY -: St; ':Hermenegild, The Easter Vigil spells, this out to ,us in~Jie 'Lessons. , active in parish affairs should the parents, par-' Martyr, A Visigoth prince, 'he On Holy Saturday' evening we heard' that the' life of' a' tlcularly the mO,ther of a large ,family be? In our pa~ish', was the son of King 'Leovigild baptized perSon is, a new" creation, a ,new, birth, a fresh there 'is some resentment beeau&e mothers of four, fIve, , and was brought up as an Arian beginning., It is' a creation that' must be cqntinu~llyre- or mor"e small children can't do" too much in ,th,e Altar, in the Court of Seville. He was d ' , 'converted by Bishop st Leander newe • Society, Scouts, etC. I get One rea~on is me,re thought­ and ~ his enraged father 'impris­ , The Vigil tells us that this new life is a fr~edomfrom t' d f h 'ng women lessness--:people don t stop to ~e- oned him. When he refused to 'th e bpn d s 0 f'" ' ,I~e only, 0, earl, , flect on the normal, rput1Oe, return to Arl'anI's'm, he was be­ sm., Th a t reqUIres a con t'mua'1 d' ymg t 0 f au,Its w,Ith one, OJ;' two, or problems' a big family ne,cessar­ '1' d" 'headed at the order of his father an d f al mgs an ,sms. no small children constant­ ily' presents. To be sure, mothers in 586. His brother, Recared, The Vigil tells us that the life of one who has be~n 'ly praised for activity. Why is who have cars, and, can afford succeeded to the throne, 'was united to Christ in Baptism, is a life 0:( growth. It, is a, ~;rf:::li~:~~s_understanding of ~a:~-~t~:r~::~=~ea:~a~r:~~~~ converted to ,Catholicism and grafting of the soul onto' Christ, the Tru'e Vine. There pecl'ally when they tend to be the exception brought about the return of the .. d cIeansmg . f rom the children are 'nation to the faith. must b e coOperatIOn; WIt h t h e grace 0 f G'0, in the average parish. any obstacles to growth, pruning, away of spiritual thorns. small?' _ The second cause stems from MONDAY-St. Justin, Martyr•. ,The life of one united to Christ in Baptism is a "life You're not the

an unrecognized element of sec­ A, native of Nablus, Palestine, first to raise

ularism in the minds of some he lived from about 100 to 165. that demands faithfulness to God. By Baptism 60d makes these questions,

Catholics. Although they profess He also is known as St. Justin. a covenant with the soul-'-He becomes a Father and Friend Ann. Man y ·to agree with the Church that' the Philosopher. He was con­ and Helper. ,His image is upon the ~ouI. Christ claims mothers with numerous children are a bless­ verted to' Christianity when the soul not only by the title of Creator but by the, title a' house full of, ' ing, this is one blessing they abQut 30 years old by reading the of Saviour and Redeemer. Christ is faithful to His pledge small children are quite happy to forego. In, Scriptures and witnessing the feel that they reality, they don't appreciate or heroism of martyrs, His two respect a large family and con­ "Apologies for the Christian Re­ to lead the soul, now living' a resurrected life, to heaven. receive little There must be faithfulness to God and to this, new ,life,' recognition for sequently ca!1't sympathize with ligion" and his "Dialogue With this new beginning. ',There must: be a constant renewal the important its problems. the Jew Tryph'on" are classed of ~aptism-a continual recalling of the vocati()n of:· B~P- ' work they are doing., Attention' 'F' t Th' ' F' ' t a m o n g the most' instructive

, tism-,-an: unceasing, r,ealization of whatinanner of 'men, we" and, praise 'gO, to those who ar~ _', ' , "irS lOgS, irS , "seconit-cimtury Christian writ­ '. ' a c t i v e outside the h o m e . . ' Now, Am~, lefs retur,n t~ yo'!r, ings. H~ was beheaded in Rome , are; ,we who have died, to ourselves and',live now a, resur-, " . : ' ;" , ,first, ,questIon. How actIve, In with,a group' of other Christia'ns. 'd rt 'th 'd' Ch' t' " ,.," ,ThIS IS,someth1Og of a paradox parish affairs should mothers of . " ree t e I e WI an m rls . ,.... " " ": ,: lor Catholics who place 'such TUESDAY-58. Basilissa and , ,There'is, an aX,iom that says Lex Orand,i, Lex Cred,ent,i~, '" '" hig'h esteem on ~o,t,herhood a,iId . large families be? I think I've: indicated all the principles, Anastasia, Martyrs. They. were The, Law of Prayer is the Law of ~aith." Prayer is faith' familr ,life. Perhaps i~ we: ex,­ needed, to formulate an adequate' Roman noblewomen who lived in action. 'If we 'would, ,see our, beliefs' we ,have only':to amine "the parish, set~1Og .m~re answer. in ,the first century and were , " ' . ' " ' ", Closely, we can, see how th~s 51t-, h f' Th turn·to the prayers of the',Churc.h. There m the Church s 'uation"m,ayarise.' First, there is a' hieral"chy of, among t e lrst converts. ,ey . . h t' 't' A are said to have assisted at the h prayer,s' are.t,h e, tenets 0 f ,our f alt.. ,'" !,', ,', Mor'e.' Pressl'n'" D'e'mands,' ' ,va 1ues In" pans ac IVI les.' ' , .. mother's' first obligation is to burials' of 55. Peter and Paul, SO, in this,~~ster Yigil. we find ,the, C.hur~h:s t~a~hin$' 'First,' every' active' parishre­ her home and children. Second; and for these Christian acts were on th~, ResurrectIOn of ChrIst, and On, our sharmg m that, 'quires a 'series 'of societies, or- it follows that in being' a good killed in a massacre of C'hris­ Resurrection ,by the ,fact of our, Baptism. Baptism ·is the, "ganizations, and committees for mother, you are,making,the best tians carried out under Nero.' Sacrament that erases time and 'space and unites tis to the its smooth operation. All mem-' contribution you cim make to WEDNESDAY - St. Berna­ dying and Resurrection 'of, the Lord. Baptism gives us a' ~ers . of the parish ~ave .an ob­ the parish. dette, Virgin. She was Berna­ rf '. Ch' t Th ' 't IT t' I hgatIon to cooperate 10 thIs work Third, if you are fortunate Soubirous, born at.Lourdes, new I e m rIS . ese are presen rea lIes, Ime. eS8. according to their respective 'enough to have some time and detie France, in 1844, the daughter of facts., These are the truths behind the cold record in a' capaciti~s. ' energy to spare, join with oihers a miller in poor circumstances. Baptism register. .These are' the spiritual foundations for Second as in all such volun­ in promoting' parish activities. Between February 11 anq July our l i v e s . ' , tary actiVities, some- members Just remember that for the pres-, 16, 1858, when she was 14, she The Easter Vigil contains God's plan fof' His people. cooperate generously. 'and faith­ ent, your best contribution ~, was favored with a series of 18 . ' f" I I fully while others SIt back and the parish will be made in your apparitions of the Blessed I~ gIves us ,a 'new awareness. 0 our splrItua natu~e., t let "joe" do it. ' • home. ' Mother, ,who chose the unedu­ gl'yes ~s a renewal of o~r BaptIsm that.must be a contmuous> Third, it is not surI!rising that What will happen to parish cated peasant girl to reveal to , thmg If we are to contmue to have faIthfulness andenthu­ those who are interested in se­ activities if all mothers take this the world the healing shrine at siasm and vigor in Catholic living. Catholicism is' not curing cooperation should go out' view? Well, I answer in the first Lourdes. In 1866 she joined the merely a set of rules to follow or beliefs to accept. It is a of their way to praise the active place, if parish affairs are now Sisters of Notre Dame. She died sharing in the life of Christ. members, taking mothers away from their in 1879 and was canonized in 1933. , .' 'bl " F o u r t h , and this is the all too most important work in the 0 ur BaptIsm makes that pOSSI e. human element in the picture, it home, theY,are doing more harm is easy to forget that these are to the parish than good. "'J;'he average lifespan of Amer­ not the most important activi­ Second, mothers with small ican women is steadily increas­ ties in the parish', that mothers children constitute only a limited ing, indeed, as one cynic has with small children, engaged in percentage of parishioners. Their remarked, "Once they reach the a much more important work; essential work is clearly cut out the age of 40, modern women may simply not have time to co­ for them while' their chlldren become 'almost indestructible!" operate fully in other parish ac-, are small. Later, they will have Hence mothers have many years tivities. These mothers -may ,not leisure and, energy to make a in which to make their contribu­ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER 'be sitting back to let "Josie" do larger contribution. tion 'to parish affairs. Wouldn't Published Weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese ot Fall River it; they may have more pressing Distribution of Labor a better distribution f)f labor , 410 Highland Avenue , demands upon their time ,and ' energy. In tpis connection I would like make more sense? , Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 I s~pp~se, Ann, there will' al­ to point. out the peculiar distri,. , PUBLISHER Lack Sympathy bution of work in the modern ,ways be some thoughOessness 'Most Rev. James L. Connolly. '0.0.. Ph.D. : You ask, Ann, why there is mother's life. She' tends to be in the way we regard faithful, ' ASST. GENE~Al MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER workers. But your happiness as 80 little sympathy and under­ almost too'busy during the child­ Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. 'M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll ,standing for big families,' es­ bearing and child rearing stage,' a mother is not based on public esteem-your children remain MANAGING EDITOR pecially during' the years when 3fld too idle once this is accom­ your enduring blessing. the children are small. ' ·plished. ' Attor~ey Hugh J. Golden

CHow

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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 10, 1958

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., April 10, 1958

7

Catholic Youth First Obstacle To China Reds

Prelate Upholds Public Meeting Prayer Habit. CHICAGO

(NC) -

ATHENS

(NC)

-

The

"first big obstacle" encoun­

Pray­

tered by the Chinese Com­

ers

at public meetings are not.'a waste of 'time, for they serve to "raise our minds to God * * * even if we don't long keep them there." This is the conclusion of Msgr. Daniel M. Cantwell, chaplain of the Chicago Catholic Council on Working Life.

munists was the resistance of Catholic young people to their indoctrination techniques. . "Once a communist told me that it was impossible to make a priest apostasize or to make a Catholic boy or girl well edu­ cated in, a Catholic sc\1001 give up his Faith," Father J. B. Bo­ racco of the Missionaries of SS. ' \, Valuable Function Peter and Paul declared in an . Writing in Work, the council's address to the Newman Club of Ohio State University. monthly newspaper, Msgr. Cant­ well declares that invocations Father Boracco, a native of offered at union, business and Italy, was stationed in Kaifeng, civic meetings perform a valu­ Honan Province, China, when able function, eve':!- though 'often' the communists occupied' the area. He is now superior of SS. , 'FROM . 'of , Attleboro"" for the 'Peter and Paul seminary, New­ thing to do... · ,purcha~e' of a ne.V1.:altar..r;:1iling for St. Mary!g 'GhlJ~rch, S~ekonk. ~wre~ce Rossi, Chairark. "Were I a cynic;" he, writes, ' ,'man 'of Catholic' Action presents check toFatner'Ke1ih~r,pastor,,~s Ora'I).d,Knig~tArthur He said the communists first ' ,adopted the "mild policy" of "I might be inclined to say that ,Mu1li~s (left) ,and Torbert Ma,cDonald, th,e.ma~n.,spe~ke~, ~right).}()ok,o~. ' " the 'pra'yers are obviously' t h e ' '" ,expelling from the schools Cath­ olic' students who woule not accepted social custom, and hav:e 0 .., renounce ,their religion. Later, ' nothing to do with 'worshiping he said that was "not enough God, honoring Him, doing His ~'antucket' for them. Jail and forced labor' will, or asking His help." 1"IllIII NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Arch- stinaey of those few: who have are now the means they use." H e ,a dd s: "I . ;wou Id a I so be' The third Cana Conferen<;e for te mp t e d t 0 say th a t prayers married couples will be held at bishop Joseph F. Rummel of eyeli and ~,ee not .. · " f a t h e r Boracco recalled the, · 1y d 0 no t ,a ffect th e prac- Our Lady of the Isle Church, New 0, rleans has reopened a Asks Reparation stirring, message sent to the out­ o b v~ous t· l ' d t d t t chapel near here where' a Cath':' Stating that "there' must be side world by a young seminary .Ica JU gmen~. rna e ,a mee - Nantucket, 'on Tuesday, April IS, lic Negro priest was prevented some ,spiritual symbol of repara" student'jailed'fof having defen­ mg~'":""the candld~tes. selected,;at :sponsored by the Family Life' pohtical conventions,. the socIal ..'Bureau of the- diocese.._ ,~~~r; of~~~ing. Mass '?n Oct. 2~ tion,and,tha~ksgiving,ntheAr,ch- ,ded the Pope., The 'young' man bishop ~irec;~d "that this should ,wrote to hiscompanionsl "Do. and, economic policies worked ,,' Re R d W M C· th ' th v. aymon . c ar y" St C '1" M" Ch I take the form, of three days ,of: npt ~ ,afraid.. The life ,in. jail b . ' an d ou.t a t "usmess UnIon ga .. 'Sacred Heart Church.. Fall'River', " ecl.l~ ~ . ISSlon ape, ",' I " " " , i$ riot sO b~(i. .On'e' '~ar) 'sur,vive. '1. ermgs. "'diocesan director of the Family Jesu,itBend, 15 miles south of prayer/" New' Orleans' Was reopened He asked God "to bestow His Do not yield' to' the communistS' .' , Good National Habit Life Bureau, and Rev. John F.' Eas,ter'Sunday. The Archbishop blessing".upOn ,·this decision and, ,in, anything against our Faith. On, the other b:;md;' he' con- "Hogaoj"Catholic Welfa,re Direc- ' 'had' suspended' serviCes at,the to gi-an~, that, t~~ eOJ1l~unity of Make our seminary like a f9rt- , tinlles" "were I ,asE:ntimentalist tor, Nti w ,~edford, will SUpervise chapel ,iriNovember 1955, ,when JesUit 'Ben~ may receive this that cannot·betaken. Make ,.' and"",, kind o.f~upex: patriot, I, the conference which deals with "the reiationship between pa"rents sOlI).e pari~ione.rs had"declined communication:, inthe'sPirit ot' it asniall V'atican~ by whicli all ,the faith/Charity 'and 'uhity ·that' Chiriese"Catholics may .be 1n-' " might find a ,great religious' and 'yo,'uhg adults.'" "i to accept Fa~her, Gerald r;ew~s, strength in American life on the S.V.D., a Negro priest who had ';must mark our membership' in duced to remain faithful to our basis ,of the ever present public; The second in' a series ,of Cana . gone' there to offer Mass. 'the~hy~c~, pf Christ.",'" ,,' " religio~."" invocations:" Conferences for marded couples ' , '. ",' However, Msgr. Cantweil dewas" well attended yesterday at ' Unfortunate Incident" , clares, "neither a cynic nor a St. 'Joseph Church hall, Fall gr;t~,~~~h~iS~~~~:~~e::~i~~~' sentimentalist, I am glad about River, under the auspices of the Council of Catholic Women of' to obtain only some inadequate our national habit of opening the p'' arish in cooperation with expl'essions . of genuine sorrow meetings with prayer. It is b e t - , over the unfortunate incident" ter to raise our minds to God, the Family Life Bureau of the which brought"about the closing . fl y, even if we d on 't diocese... h owever b ne of the chapel. long keep them there." The ,conference treated the "It is evident that we must He concludes that "prayer parerit':child relationship with CH~VROLET should make us more carefUl to special emphasis on the child's look for higher motives for the ..·th' f ' . f t b t opening of, the chapel," the be sure t hat we are on God's grow. "rom 10 ancy 0 pu er y. Archbishop continued. "Such 545 MILL ST.' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. side, and that we are not simply F a th er M cC ar th y an d , R ev. ,motives 'are manifestly' the fol­ enlisting' Him on ours.'" A n t'h',opy M . G omes 0f S an t 0 lowing:' We, cannot permit the Chx:is,\o; C,hurch, conducted the 'clos!,!d ,phapel to stand forever' ~ . ege ans' ami Y conf<;rence, whi(:h ended wi,th a as a iymboi of resistance to the Tuition Disc~unt '}lue~~io~ ,a l1d answer peripd. ' authority of. the Church and, of' contempt 'for, the holy priestS~: Micha,el's f::ollege at Catholic Graduates' 'hood 'in' 'which every priest of, W~~P9s~i .Park', Vt., will redu~e. .. • • " , - , I the Catholic Church participates ;.,'" tUlbon thiS fall for pare,'i1~s who. ,Win Fellowships. . . ;'Wecannot'permit,Catholic have m9re thqn one son.. 10 ses-',' . A-~~A,ltBOR ., '. t· gro:v up .10 . "th', t ' , ',' (NC)-Seyen~y;-, c h'ld' 1 ren, 0 IS"~ -,' , swV~r.Y ~Rev, E:rancis E. Mori:_sixJH·ad"u.at~,s of <;~thol~~cqneges ",mosphere of'resls~ance anddl's",' .. ' S " ," "and:. un,iveq;ities are., among, the., " }~spec~ for ~he thll~g~sOeflSenarty, .S.E., St. Michael's presibally mtegrated Vluth our holy • • • • 11III lilt .. iI!II III lIIII IiIIi iii, 11IIII . . . . ." III' . . . .'• • • ' .. • dent; .said ,that the $800,;tuition 1,089 ,yo,1,\,Vg men." a l1 q .v.;prp.en,;', . ' , ; , ." '.:. ,.,1 will be' reduced, to $600 ,for a giv~[l' .w.90dr,ow ,~ilson NatiQnal ~. Falt~,., ... We ,can~o~ .1Ild~lOJtely: !' econd brother and to $400,f,or FellowsJ1ips for graduate study depnve ,.the maJon,ty of. goOcl' ;i S . , , ", • ..' '.' " . 'i ' " and ,.well meaning Catholics of" • ,. 0' " . ," .•.• $' the.dhird, brother attending. at These ~ellowshlPs ar: gIven to' ,the use.pf;the,.!louse of,G,od and " the'same time.' ",outstanql,ng graduat~smterested.. . of prayer because of the· ob- , This year; St Michael's has,16 ,in preparing for coll~ge ~each' " sets ,of brothers and three ,fami- ,ing; W.or'~h $1',400 plus tuition f lies with three sons attending .. for ',(me. ye~r, the fello,¥ships, , upples . or 0 an simultaneously. ' we~e. ,IJlapepossible P:v' a I $24.5 ' LO:::>Z .. (NC::)~13i'sjl~p ,: l\iichal' In his letter to parents with ,million'" gra.nt from ''th,e Fo~d . Klepacz of Lodz has distributed ' , more than one son attending, Foundati,o,1\ a year agp. .. ' to hospitals, health 'centers arid ~'" . F.'. Moriarty wrote: "With the Fifty-three laymen, 18, lay,-" doci9r.S ',.a ,)arge ,'shipm~nt'," of ' cost'of education' constantly on "womer pndfive Sisters compri!le' 'medica,l. supplies sent to, Pol;md , ,j the, increase, the magnificent 'the, 76 ,.honored ,graduates of by: Ca~holic R~li~f ~ervices~" spirit of sacrifice manifested by Cathoiic institutions, accord~ng to National Catholic Welfare, ,Con­ youpareilts is deserving of 'a quick study by, the NCWCference. special consideration. I am hapNews Service. Notre Dame Uni-, 'rh~ supplie~ l}ad been se~t io py til inform ~·ou that the Admin- versity ,with' 17 graduates as re- 'His ,Eminence Stefan Cardinal istrative Cou'ncil has authorized cipi~l1t~ fpr outdistanced other ·Wyszyi~sk~,','Pr,!lI).ate'of Poland, me to announce a special Family- ",' Catholic institutions. ' who distributed them to various' Group Tuition Discount Plano" Polish dioceses.

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NEW VATICAN STAMPS': Vatican City Post Office has issued six,new postage

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of the .cente~nial;Yearo(.Lourdes. Thr~e dif;terellt defJig,ns, shOwing.. ,'", "~' "'~,,' the.,gr.otto, a wheel-chair pilgrim, ,and .St.,Bernadette, anll'six different colors 4istinguish, ... 75 WEBSTER STREET' -. the issue. NC Photo. ' ;,J IIIIIIIII;iI·i."'iII' ,···~

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Precious Fami'lyScale Missing­ Academy Seniors. 'Househofd'invokes St.Anthony Conduct Panel., By Mary Tinley Daly Once upon a time, a long time 'ago during the -Big Depression, a young father bought a scale to weigh his 'first baby. No ordinary scale would do, certainly not!' It had to have perfect precision bal- of birth, weight at birth and gain ance, recording accurately during use of scale. " . to the quarter-ounce. It was

The other day, in an idle mo­

the kind where you'd put ment, we t~pped over the scale

"Would it be embarrassing if your schools were to be judged by their fruits in the way of journalistic endeavors? Do our school 'papers indicate that they are the fruits of a Catholic school? . With these lead questions Lynne Marie Collins, a seni9r at the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, will will' open her panel on "The' Role of the School Newspaper:' To Inspire Right Choices." at the .annual New England Catholic Publications Conference to be held May 10 at Merrimack College, North And­ over, Mass. . . As chairman 'and principal speaker. of the' 'panel, Miss Col­ lins will aiso' introduce the top­ ics, "A School Newspaper Shou.ld . Provide Good Advertising 'for the School" and .The Necessity of Avoiding Pure or Mixed Gos­ sip Columns." . , The Academy spea~er. bas. . completed the journalism course required of all, candidates who wish to join 'the publications staff at Sacred Hearts Academy, and has been an active member of Shacady staff for two years. She is a member of the inter:" national ,journlllism society,

and read those yellowed signs. a blanket in,' then the baby There was Joan Canfield" now clothes - including the safety,

married; her sister' Maureen­ pins - then re­ "Twink" who graduated magna b a 1 a n c e the

cum laude from 'Catholic Uni-. needle to zero.

versity two years ago; "Jackie'; Mter ,the baby.

Hayden, ordained a year or so was bathed and

ago as Father Hilary,a Bene!iic­ d res sed and

' Joseph, .tine priest;. his brother, wrapped in the

soon also to become a priest;' blanket,' you'd.

Barbara CroarkJl).. (Mrs: Johl1 re-weigh and

Frawley) and her sister,:·MarY. ' ' you' knew ex­ ,There was KEm'Shipe,' pres- ' . actly how mimy ently embarking on a successful po u n d and business career imd,a few years ounces of ,pre­ later, his brother Jimmy,.' a 're-:-. eious bun dIe ':ou had. cent ,:Georgetowp. University . . . graduate now studying law. •• 'Matter of fact, that scale cost' Then, evidently, the' scale more than' the young, people 'sPent a good deaLof its time at could rightfully afford at ·the our house, when Eileen, Markie, time: and', the young mother' 'and Mary were, babies. thought it an extravagance. Thus ended the first· written .. "We don't rea~ly need such a record of the travels of the' sca~e. fancy job,", she prot,ested.:­ ]t .was during w(;lr-thne, me.ta~ "Nothing is too good fo!, our hard to come by, an<,l the scale baby," the young father said was in orbit-going from home to proudly. . home. Of those' Qabies~ we have. "If. she starts losing weight, no record. Just hope it helped; we want to know it right way." Invaluable in Sentiment' The young mother didn't Eventually; in 1945 it .came ieally mind. She was kind of back when Ginny weighed in, glad' that her, husband felt that but not too much use· was made way. . . of it. Like' Topsy,' Ginny "just Matter of Ounces grew" and by that time ",e could' sort ,of guess. how She was . The' notches on that scale we.nt . h b'b Th doin·g... :. . , up and up as t e a y grew. ,e 'We always envisione!l, bow­ 9-poundeI: became 2~. at six ever, that we'd use it ····for our ,­ months, then 30 at the end' of a childreri's children.;' . ' year; 'ounc~s meant little" and' And 'so it was, Lu a'nd Johnny quarter-:ounces wer~ ignored. , . brought their fout' to '. our house .:.. The nextyear"still- during the, to be. weighed...' Then it letter depression, a. prematur~,'l;>aby" fro.m Eileen: '!'Please,¥om; stick arrived at .the household':"-1!l')d ' 'the scale. in tbe' car:' trunk 'when' then was the. mother .gladto· you come?. rve' iiiways, looked' have that seaier' Every,quarter';"forward 19 weighing my, ,ouncewasa.'ma#er of.vital con~ baby on tfiatfamilY.'scall~.'~..... • ,. cern as the'tiny 4 pound 4' ounce And, so, niimy 'years later, ift little iEdlow struggled for lif~; April," 1958;, 'when' :the ,afore- . A, slight "weight dip and there ,mentioiled' father' ,ah~ ~o!her" .. ~as sa~n~ss in .that hOlis~hoid!,a' are n<1 longer young; ;tl)ey 'l~k . lIDlall gam meant, smiles' all· "all' over ,.the' .nou'se' 'but they· 'round,. Finally, aftermpnths,of can't"find the scale. I~':dbil;jrs' back-and':'fort~, the scal~ agaih and cents; it is' not'.·as~' valuable' ,went up ,and ~p an~ ,~P. •• proportionately as !t was' in the' ,!hat lIttle premle h~s ~ow Big pepression. But ~ in senti­ gamed 171 pounds over hiS birth ment it's invaluable. weight, has seemingly boundless St.'Anthony, it's' up to you! energy and is the father of four quite hefty children of his own. . Goes 'Round and ~Round "'You probably guessed;' the then,-young father was, the Head of the House, Pat wa's the first baby, Johnny the second. Next to weigh into, the ring at our house came Tommy; then Eileen, Markie, Marr - and finally Ginny. . The best-to-be-had scale had • permanent place' in the. bath­ . room durin'g goodness ~nly South S.ea Sis. knows how many months,. add­ Hy~nnis Tel. HY:81 ing up to years at our house. Between times, '·however, .there·" ,' were friends' babies to use it , and, like. the mlisicin ,the.' old , lOng, "it went,'rourid and' 'ro\lI~d: " :~ and came back her'e." . , :'," . . ~ . ' .. Time after time' it ,left . our bouse .to ,pinch-'hit- for 'some other family;' And, just for kiC;ks, . w~ ,itept !l'!-; ~dhesive-taped :sign ' on. the· underside 'of the sturdy iitsi~~rit:" 'ilame' o{baby;date ' .

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MARIAN CONCERT: The'Sacred Hearts Academy Glee Club, Fall River, will participate in the Annual Marian Concert sponsored by the Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses at the Cohannet School, Taunton, next Thursd;ly evening. Pictured are officers of the Glee Club, left to right, Carol Jerome, president, ,Geneva Maxwell, secretary­ treasurer, Mary Ca.~tro.. prope:rty manager and Kathleen' ' . . Stevens, librarian. Quill and Scroll. ··Leslie Salvo, editor-in-chiefcof Janua, the academy's y'ear book, will also conduct panel; "Pho­ tography vs. Art in the' Year­ book;" She completed the journ­ alism course in her sophomore year, worked on Shacady in her junior year, and was appointed editor-in-chief of Janua in her senior year. She is also 'a Quill

a

and Scroll member. . Both high school journaliSts were speakers at the Merrimack .College Journalism Conference' last year when a skit written' and produced by Leslie Salvo' ~ to contrast a gossip column and Shacady's personality colurn III was enacted by Lynne Collins, Elizabeth DeFusco, and Barbara Levesque..

TDuhey's Pharmacy 75th Year

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,~p,.escription'SpecinJists, S~~e '1883"

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for Bris'tol'Co~nty:

Mission'iil'yto SPeak At D. of I. Banquet Re. Dominic AnilUnziata, SS. CC., who is visiting this country from Japan to raise funds for his' missions, will be the guest speaker at the 42nd anniversary banquet of the Benedict Circle No. 61, Daughters of Isabella of North Attleboro at 6:30 next Wednesday night in the Floral Club, Wrentham. Chairman Mis s Genevieve Riley wil be assisted by all the past regents of the Circle. En­ tertainment .will be part of the program.

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ifhat Answers Your Calls ' \When rhe Drug Store Closed

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Touhey's Pharmacy celebrates its 75th Anniversary by bringing to Fall River' another FIRST -'- ·the new Electronic Secretary that "8erVesyouwh~rith~ Drug Store is''Closed ,(between lO:P. M.and. 8 , A. :M:. daily aiui.S~nda'ysbetweenlf...:M.. and:~ P: M.) ,-", ," '.

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,Bristol County,' Trust .Company

Surgica1 Appliance Co. .. Pharmacy Hearing Aid Co.

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TAUNTON, MASS.

Arthur /. Shea, ,Prop.

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-jo.day's Fashions,'

Vote to Remoye Hospitcil Nuns

Timely Suggestions Offered .For Brides and ,Bridesmaids

OFFENBACH (NC)- Ignor­ ing protests from more than 15,000, citizens, the socialist ma­ jority in the Offenbach district council in Germany voted to oust Catholic Sisters from a hos­ pital where they have served for more than 60 years. The Sisters of the Most HolT Saviour have been ordered to leave Offenbach district hospital by April 30: They will return to their motherhouse in Buehl. The ouster was the final move in a series of conflicts between the Sisters and municipal and district authorities since the s0­ cialists came to power in the state of Hesse. Last September, a new wing of the Offenbach hospital. was opened, but the Sisters were forbidden to place a cross or a crucifix in the new wing. When the hospital Superi­ or wrote 'in protest to the mem­ bers of the district council the -socialist council 'president called her disloyal and asked for her removal. , When the congr,egation's Su­ 'perior General, refused to re­ move her, hospital authoritiea backed by the executive com­ mittee of the district council, voided, the standing agreement with the Sisters that had been in force' ever since 1895. 'They refused to negotiate a new agree­ ment until all of their demands had been met, inciuding th~ re­ moval of the so-called "disloyal" superior. The superi6r general refused. 'More than f5,OOO eitizens pe­ titioned the council to keep the Sisters, but the socialists out­ voted the Christian Democrats 'by seven votes and won in their move to oust the Sisters from the hospital: •

By Ellen Kelley Here's to the bride, as she walks up the aisle to the altar to be united in marriage to her beloved! All brides are beautiful, you must have noticed. On their day of days they virtually bloom with happiness. To the 'solemnity of the sacrament is added the, mascara, perhaps. Too, plan to joy of feasting amid family wear your usual shade of lip­ and friends. And then there stick, and just a touch of rouge is the subjeCt of "wedding for a faint blush effect.

garments." (Remember the guest Flower Combinations, "who had not on a wedding gar­ Apply'just a' hint of your,fa­ ment" in the Biblical parable?) vorite perfume or cologne. You The bride, of course, is the see, you're carrying fresh fiow­ cynosure of all eyes. She is ers and 'they alSo have a, fra­ garbed in the gown and acces­ grance. Speaking of flowers, the sories of her choice, and is majority of Spring brides are thereby beautifully enhanced. carrying sprays of flowers, and (Incidentally, chemises and interesting floral combinations trapezes may' be fun for every they are!, day. In modified form, they may , I attended a local bridal fash­ look chic for bridesmaids. But ion show' recently and noted - for her momentous starring these lovely unusu81 combina­ role, today's bride wants to wear tions: A spray of white orchids the traditional wedding gown.) with ivy; a spray of tiny white SPELLiNG PROFICIENCY WINNER: Doris Dupont, Chiffon isn't nearly so popular rosebuds' wit~ stephanotis;, a at Jesus, Mary Academy, Fall River, receives the a senior "for wedd lng gowns as it is for spray, of valley lillies tied with ,ev:ening wear 'tbil; year. How­ ',wide white satin ribbon; a spray certificate of proficiency ,from Sister ,St. ,Vincent de Paul, ever, anent .chiffon . . ,bride ,or of white daisies; a tiny bouquet "principal. '~his' award was sponsored by the local chapter of bridesmaid will exclaim in de­ 'of blue violets; a medium-size 'the N.O.M.A. light . . over a nylon chiffon Colonial bouquet of small white ~own I noted yesterday . . . it roses; centered with one pink has a high boat n~ckline, fitted rose .. the whole surrounded by bodice, a widely 'bouffant skirt white (wired, to "stay put"!) lace. • . will double for other impor­ Indeed _ there's infinite variety tant occasions (as dance or din­ in the:' style of bouquet and ner gown, etc.). It's available in flower combinations. luscious tones 'of rose pink, ,I, find that I've forgqtten the maize green and platinum white subject of nail polish for the · . and, despite its luxury look, bride: natural or palest pink nail isever-so-modestly priced! pq1ish is your ticket, girls! If Chantilly lace is very popular YO~Jr nails become broken and this Spring •.. it has an heirloom need to be disguised with arti­ look . . is lovely over satin or fidal nails, do keep them a mod­ taffeta, and, is defini,tely glamor­ erate length. Furthermore-keep ous to look upon! , ,'YOUr pair: style ,simple. You 'SplU-Level' Skirts ,~now which hair-do becomes If you're a bride-elect .. and you ml;)s~ .. wear it on your day R. A. WilCOX CO~ choose to wear a wedding gown,' of days •. and keep the dramatic you'll select a floor-length style ha~-d~ for later. 'OfFICE FURNITURE, • • with no train at all, or with a Bridesmaids' Gowns I. St"d, fer I• •odiate ~Ih", train varying in, lepgU:l fromIncidentally, ,bridesmaids' • D E S K S . CHAIRS sweep to cbapel:to full cathedral gowns', were 'never lovelier. flUNG CABINETS fashion. At the mom~nt,.. th~ in- They're "av.ailable' just, ' about termediate chapel length is verY

• fiRE ffLfS • SAFES ,'everywhere' you look-in color­

po pular nereabouis., fQU)ING TABlES ful assortments .... :and i':1 '8 wide TlJe ' ballerina : skirt;, Jonger . ',_ AND CHAIRS' than caU"length but noLreach- ,choi~ of .fabrl(:s~n,d,sty~es. ~n ing 'the ankles is losing"much of, 'eff~tJve grouplng I ad~~ed r~k. RICHMOND (NC) ~ Virgin­

, ," " " . , ,_ cent~y .. wore bouffant gowns 10 its popularitY." However, there.s ~.. 'h" ' '11 ," W tt ia's B~shop has inv~ted the other

22 BEDFORD ST•. · I tf' "I ' : 'd' 'f p' .., suns me ye ow, ,wore" a eau­ a d e1J,g 1 1,1, '[\JlW,l fila rom arl~, ,{ t·" 'legh' h f Jb" d d 'th :membe~ of :tll~ U. S, ~iera~hy FAll RIVER 5·7838 _ the "split'-level" ,skirt that" ~~. orn, a ,~, an. e w~ to be present as guests of the sweeRs the: #pot:in,: ,back a~a ,i:~~h~~~;~~~~~~ro~=~(':t~~ , 'dioCese: at, the' 48th annu'al 'con-. ' , , ,.' . . ' " - . '·· . . _ _n _ _ curves up',aboVfl, ,U:le ,ankle.m bouquetso{bhie violets. ' " ' " venti~n . of the Catholic. Press ' : DIOCESAN CATHOLIC front-ah, Igh-style compromise 'A' t'h" ,, . . ,. . no er . group appeared 10 , f tho ASSO<;lahon here, May 20 to 2 3 . , NURSES' GUILD' that many·o IS season s brides W'II G ' ft S . g , ' presents, fih'~d appealin · 1n my 0tIPin.ion, li~e~;;'een~e7~e a v:~ , gr::~n~f ' t IS gown (shown recen y m a .; . I SORRY! No "Herring' Marian Music Festival ees.). The local bridal fashion show) is ,wee~mg ;,' Willow or Lobster Stew _ r t' ti" . t' (. fabnc was paper-thm taffeta .• I ove les III s Immermg sa m 10 the tyl '01 Ie h th BUT you're, sure to Thursday, April 17,'1958 Fall ill Love with rich cream or stark white tones) AS e .. a. Sl ? h Stsea . g at 7:30 P.M. a ,ccompanym. were • • or swishy white or cream PIZZA COHANNET SCHOOL toned taffeta. ?,ad.e of matchmg-color taffeta, Cohannet St., Taunton, Mass, Veils this seaSon do indeed m .Plq uan.t bonne~ style, and each at . I gth '11 t bridesmaid carried a sheaf of TICKETS - Adults $1.00 vary.m en . . you . no e American Beauty roses: These StudentS $.50 them m short lacey ~oucho~rs " are but a few of the bridal ideas Tickets available at the door in shoulder-le~gth, f1Oger-hp or you'll find so interesting this R&e. S MattapoiseU. Mass. -or from members of the Guild floor-length~ 10 tulle or lace. Spring. One of them may be All are nOthmg short of enchant­ ideal for you! ing. Head-pieces vary too, for

CPA Convention

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this deli~hlful new bri~al seaMothe, lIOn. You'll exclaim over newly,

popular crowns .. some outlined JEFFERSON CITY (NC)­ in rhinestones some in rhine'-, Mrs..: James T, Blair Jr., of Mis- ,

.tones with ~arls, others, out:-," ' S?,uri" has beet'! ,na'm~~ M~ssouri',s lined in sequins and pearls. mother of t~e' year~ ~~ '75-y~ar -rhe Juliet" cap-remains a lead- ,old Mrs. Blair was notified while log favorite too •. the tiny cap 'she \V,a~ in St. Mary's'.,Hospital, \' that hugs the head .~. outlined in' : recoveqng from a, ml1~ heart pearls. ', ' 'attack: S~e exp~cts to, receive \ Lighter '~k~7UP" :-, "':, ,the '. ~I~atl(>.n, ,from ,her so~, at, , Helen Aubertine Br~9h So, you've selected the dress, April 20 ceremonies. ' , Owner and Director , I ' the ve,il" the head-piece. You've A . Ab d Spacious Parking Area made' all al;~oilitment for the ,merlcans, roo Wedding and Mass.: The flowers" FRIBOURG (NC) - Fifteen WY 2-2957 have been chosen. Now - you young" America~ st,udents are ,1,29; A,lIen, St. New Bedford have a date with the hairdresser, sp{\nding their 'junior' coilege the day before, maybe esarly, year' abroad 'at'the Foyer St. early in the morning of your Justin here" a residence owned wedding day .. one of the most and operated by the' German remembered days in your life! Augustinians in connection with You've forgotten your make.­ the Catholic University of Fri­ 11]>! That's right, make-up. You bourg. lICe, make-up is more important Georgetown University in today than any other, because Washington, D, C" is sPonsoring today make-.up must look more the project, which is now in its natural than ever before! Every third year. 273 CENTRAL AVE.

bride strives to achieve a natural The project is attracting a look. growing interest ~ong George-, NEW BEDFORD

Incidentally, the lighter the town juniors; to whom it offers make-up, the better. Use a light, an excellent opportunity for the WY 2-6216

powder base, no eye shadow,. trip abroad and .t the same light touch of eyebrow pencil, time the advantages of gaining, IIlO eye liner, a soft touch ,?f additional ~eademic credit..

_SAINT ANTHO,NY' NOVENA

AU.BERTIHE

of

Funeral Home

NINE - TUESDAYS

'

BLUE RIBBON

'LAUNDRY

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'-IN PREPARATION FOR

FEAST. OF SAINT ANTf"ONY, JUNE 13

BEGINS TUESDAY, APRIL 15th

Services 10 A.M. (Mass) and 12:10 (Mass) 3:00, 5:10 and 8 P.M.

RADIO - WSAR - 7:45

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OUR LADY'S CHAPEL

Jl'rancisean Fathers -

572 Pleasant' St., New BeMorll

A plenary indul~ence is c-ranted on each day of the nine Tuesdays to all those w~o receive the Sacraments and on the nine Tuesdays visit the chapel and pray to St. Anthony and for the intention of Uae Dol, Father. (Leo X1D, M~ch 1, 1898.)

.

Your Parish Guild Should Help Your Pastor Secure Subscriptions


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Principles 'Jus'ti:fying- War. ". Virtually' Il1effe~tive Now ...

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By Most· Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.·

"

Bisliop .of .Reno

General Sherman's famous definition of war, once so offe~sive to pious ears,' is now conceded to be a flabby understatement. Grim propnesies of "what another world war would be like 'leave us limp and shaken. The Holy Father, with his vivid' While the siege of ~astel Nuo­ imaginative' realism, never vo was in progress the main ceases from holding. before. concern of the belligerents was the world the,'Gorgon's mjr-. not to injure the curious Neopol­ ror, lest in our folly we confront itan crowds wpo kept wandeting the annihilating actuality.' along the firing-line in search , But the l' e of excitement. "The besieged, no have been wars less considerate of the city than and wars. There the besiegers, make signs with. a was even a time 'handkerchief when they ·decide w hen war to fire an9- give warning in a promised to be­ loud voice so that the populace come. civilized, could find safety. . not to say tame. Holed up in Capua, the Aus­ Its object was trian commander, Count Traun, not the shed­ sent word to the Spaniards that ding,. of blood he lacked oil for the Blessed • (no more, a t S a c r a r r i e n t , ;lnd promptly re­ any: rate, than' .. ceived two pack-'saddles of oil, was absolutely 50. pounds of wax candles,. 50 n'ecessary) or the destruction of pounds of chocolate, 50 more of , COMMERCIAL CLASS OFFICERS: Juniors at St. Anthony High School, New Bed­ pro'perty, l-,ut to achieve victory coffe'e; 100 lemons, 'with'''othet by an elaborate employment of useful provisions: Who' 'would' ford, heading the commercial Class are, left to right, Dianne Boucher, secretary; Lorraine strategy. mind fighting such. a war! Roy, president; Theresa Pepin, vice-president, and-Lucille Fredette, treasurer.. To Recover Kingdom . In Sicily Prince Lobkowitz,

In" the Spring of 1734 Don held :out in Messina for six' Carios; "by thegl'ace of .God . months,'and when his provisions Infante of Spain, Duke of Parma,' ran short, was permitted to emContinued from Page One PiaCEinza, and Castro, etc., Hered- bark for Trieste with all the hon- impressions. And all the more '.Il Pri.nce.of Tuscanny..;.. ors of war. At Syracuse the Mar-': credl't m" st be allotted .to her, MILWAUKEE (NC) - Parents that" . parents can be helped • l"'-l'''','Grand ... " ·for ·a greater. p'art of , often ' develop a "bll'nd ~ . . spot" , at ~verc. ()me their "blind spot" ~ and:' Generalissimo' of the.. armies . chese; Orsini ·informed the Span;- benause of~Il1 CathoFcMajeSty iii Italrll,:' -iards that,he would like to, ill-,i, their lives their father was not report card. time. discussions with teachers ';rt proclaimed his intention' 'of re:'··I ., spect',fheir, trenches One reason is the parent's ,dif.., . meetings, of home and. school. 'l't , . , as a ma.tter, a Catholic...."." covering the Kingdom '0£ the·" 0f mIl ary cunoslty;' and. was. . Father Walsh, 'pastor of St. .ficuIty in admitting that the.ir . units.

T"(,Q,..., Sicilies. from, Austria,n immediately obliged. Louis Church,Fall River, said children can get low grades, said

thralldom. . "', 'Hand of God' Father Lewin loved the Mass' MX:~r Charles ;J. O'Neil, ch~iJ:man. These units, she continu,ed, , ~e 'vas a likely young prince, ' What clinched the decision for "beyond description," was' of the"Nat,ional C;ouncil of Cath­ stress, th,e ~utual I;esponsibilit)' ju~t turned 16, and his right to .the Neapolitans, however"was' a sought out, for help because of. oli~ . "Women's., Committee, qn. of ;parents and t!ilachers to edu­ ,th~thro.ne of Naples, if not with-: 'report that the' bloqd of.si: Jan-"his sympatfiy and understanding HOI;ne,.a~d·Sch091Assoc~a~io~s. . . cate.,children•. Some ~.arents for­ out blemish, was' at least as. uarius had liquefieci out 'of due of family problems,:and·was.par','Instead of understanding that. sake· their right ,aIHl. responsi~ liti~ng as that of the Hapsburg season, thus obviously approving ticularly devoted to the sick, thl,'!J C1'l.iJddid Well andp~tio~th:" bili~y of education,. she said, and El)'lper()r.pope .Clement ...; xn~~ .. tile transfer of' authority.' As the ~/ 'e~PeCially 'a~·<General'. Hospital, •.. a )ot.. of effort. to get :,that' '7$," otllers feel ;that : their, theqries sriiiIe~ benignly ,on' t~e venure,,' :AustrEm 'Viceroy's confessor' Fall. River; St. Luke's,New Bed­ parents sometimes feel 'that the on.. educat,ion,. are, . superior to ho'ping to recover Parma as, the marked, in all thIs could be de- ford; Cape Cod Hospital, Hyan­ child' co.uld have 'ea'rned higher those of the teachers, reward of his complacency. tected "the hand of God, which nis, and County Hospita~ :in St. grades' if he tried," she e)l­ Both extremes can be helped, Since 1707 Austria had milked . is wont to transfer kingdoms Mary's Parish. plained. by mutual cooperation, Mr& Naples and the Sicilies, imposing from one people to another pre' "I need not tell the people of /J:.. teacher at Holy Angels O'Neil concluded. heavy taxes and governing with cisely when injustice and op- Hebronville of the value of Academy here, Mrs. O'Neil is the little discernment. As a conse- pression. have reached iheir Father Lewin to them,", Father 1l10ther of four children. She qiJence there was a notiCeable limit." , Walsh said; "This being his first ' prepares programs and manuals lack of enthusiasm for the HapsTotal casualties of .this war, and only pastorate, he lavished, for local home and school units. burg', cause, and Viceroy Visby no· means insignificant in his pr~estly. affections upon them .. She declared there is also' a conti pleaded frantically but' in . European 'politics were less than and, in every way conducted feeling on the part of some . vain '.~. for reinforcements,. from 100, ,m()stly wou'nded. It inau:" .himself asa;nide~,1 pa,stqr•., '1. parents that perhaps "Sister is Vj¢niia;for :his army and fleet. gurated. tlie Bourbo,n' dynasty;: '. kno'¥ Mine and: Mine, know..Me':' to' blame"; fortlie low grades·' ,Anthracite &~itu",inoUi :~ate 'i,n Marc,h ~:Don '. Car~os , of Ui.e' Two' Sidlil(.s;which,;i£rlOt • ~?~Ic;l,!'i.aveibe.en.writ\ei1.M him of 'their children. She sl,lggested ' erossedthe Neapolitan 'frontler',' blameless 'in its.•conduct was far as It was ofthe·Master:"'., .' 0Fall Rivel;; Rt. Rev. Humberto a~d was eiitertained by: the ,'.Ab;:·· from being 'reign ~f terror ' , : ,Ceiebrant: of the ,Mass::Was Rt. S:· Medeiros, Diocesan Chancel~': b,;>t. of· Mop,tecassino, who '~as and oppression' that' the'-liberal ReV. :·,Msgr. 'James .J. Gerrard, ,1, • g¢:l1Ially affable. The' Austnan historians have' painted it.. , p,astor of St.· Lawrence Church, ' lor,and Rt. Rev, James S. 'Barry. Automatic Coal Stokers . . V~ceroy promptly lost b,eart" .' Mulling over: a w:;.r like this, New Bedford.' He' was 'assisted . . 0f,;Worcester. Bag Coal- :Wood threw l:Iis troops into scattered so· considerate·,andpolite moral· by Very Rev. LeonardJ. D;'jley, Monsignor . Gerrard presided' Charcoal fo~tresses, and fled himself to' theologians (the Neapolitan St.. pastor . of St.·· Francis' X;lvier at ,the chanting of the Office of sarety in. 'l'apal territory. ,But Alphonsus would be one) would 'Church; New Bedford, deacon,. the. Dead prior' to the Mass. Les-' t~ere were brave soldiers'I)D'·the' have had little difficulty in ap­ and Rev..William D. Thomson,' soris were chanted· by '- Rev. 'Aus\rian side, and the~war plying the· accepted 'Just~fying pastor .of. St. Mary's, . Norton, Gerard J. Chabot, pastor ·of. St. sE(ttlWd ',down to a gradual re+­ principles.. -\ sub-deacon... Theresa's, Attleboro; Rev.. John d~ctf0i};of. 'tre fort~!ilsses. '. . Two 'hundred years later, un­ " Rev. Cornelius, J. O'Neil of', F,' ,,,Laughlin," pastor of" Holy' del' conditions' of. total" warfare Holy. Ghost, Atttleboro, was. Ghost Church, Attleboro, and . :This 'W:as done. ":with the ut­ most humanity", as. a' Florentine and ·to!al destruction, th~ prin-· master. of ceremonies;· Rev. Monsignor Gerrard, ,0!:1server noted. When the·'~ain. ciples may remain the same,. but', Edwin J. Loew, St. Mary's, Nprth The Priests' Choir under the . 640 PLEASANT ST. citadel of Naples, the Castle of· their .application has :become a' Attlebor'o, censer-bearer;. Rev. direction of Rev. James F. Mc­ Sant'Elmo, capitulated, the Spano; .matter. 'so agonizing as' 'piaCti- Donald A. Couza, Holy Name,' Dermott chanted the Office and NEW BEDFORD ish General invited his defeated ,cally to. annul their effective­ Fall River, and Rev. AlbertJ. the Mass, Interment was in St. WY 6-8271-28-3 . opponent, the Count of Lossada, 1ess. There ,ar~ wars 'and wars. Sl)ovelton, St. James, New Bed-. Patrick's Cemetery, Fall River. to dinner· that evening, and the What .. we could be' faced ..with ford, acolytes. f~llowing night the c~m.pliment." makes the campaign of D~n Oar'7' Present were many Diocesan' 1Il(,as . returned at a brl11Jant re- los look, .like a' pleasin,g example priests including the following' C~l)tlon. of opera. buffa.'-' ;, ,:{ e,' ,,;; ·,Mo~·signorr: Rt., ,Rev.' .John j.;,

. • ••• •• ' •• ' . -. " J . : ' ' S h a y , pastor of, St. John' the';

• RecilEstate Loans' , Evangelist, Church, . Attlebof(~;;

Rt: Rev. J. Joseph SU.llivan, pas-,,'

• .. Sa~irigs 'Bank. Lif~ Insurance ,tor, of .Sacred H;eart' Church,'

'Fat'her Lew,·n

Emph · Paren . t s'Oft' as,zes e n Dev~'op

BI· d SpO t a t R'epor.t' Card .Time

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DAVID DUFF AND ,SON COAL

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.~, 'Check Thes~ ~'Banking"Services

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Christmas a'nd Vacation\ Clubs . ' Savings Accounts 5 Convenient Locations

NEW BEDFORD

INSTITUTION for SAVINGS This ,is a Film 'which MUST be seen by Eve~y Catholi~r'

II

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, ....' . ' llJli ( JUNIOR CLASS' OFFICERS: Members of the two·' Junior groups at DO:minican' Academy,' Fall I:tiver, "who serve as officers are, ;(standing) left 'to right, Anne Ouel~ lette, .president" Una:. Raym~md. vice-president; ,Sb.ej]a De-, Moura, president; (seated): 'G.'eraidine Gagn()ll,tI:eas,ur¢r~:,,:, ..

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Equity De~ands Similar Rights For All Pupils PHILADELPHIA (NC)Praise for the natiQn's prog­ ress toward establishing just relationships between so­ eiety's varied groups came at the opening session of the con­ vention of J\merica's Catholic educators. "Parents are free to supervise the education of their children. Religious schools are flourishing. The graduates of such schools are eligible for any public or private employment for which their education has prepared them." These examples of "justice .and equity" were cited by Fath~r Joseph T. Tinnelly, C.M., dean of the school of law at St. John.'s University, Brooklyn, in the Jeeynote address at the 55th an­ nual convention of the National Catholic Educational Association in Convention Hall here. Glorious Stay Speaking on the convention theme, "The Right to EducateThe Role of Parents, Church, State," the Vincentian priest, who is editor of the Catholic Lawyer, said "On the Federal level, and in many of the state!" students of church-related schools receive the benefits' of

bus transportation, textbooks,

f ree Iunt h es and other measures'

-grantS-I','l-al'd Whl'ch are manl'- '. festly designed for the' health,' i, safety 'and' welfiire of America'" youth, irrespective of the school attended." " However, he said in his pre- . pared addl'ess that despite 'such' , progress, ,"justice and equity de:.: marid 'more than this." He del.: cIa red that "the state which im:..·' pOses taxation for' the seclJIar ' educatil>n' 'of its· youth should'" provide that education to all without question of religion." "But how shall this be done," he asked. He told delegates "to' bring to America the gloriods story of Catholic education." "Let America see the need 'and w.e may depend upon the great heart of our beloved country to f~nd a means of afding Catholic parents with sacrifice neither of r~ligious principles nor of con-·. stitutiol1al safeg'u:lrds," he"main':" ined . " .

lf

'Ma,r,..ria.ge.." . P. i,an Shows :R"esult's' i TRENTbN' eNd) _ Sep­

8ratiQns. and divorces mari­ tal disputes where m.inor

~ildren are involve.d have ~en ".suprisingly~' reduced by an experi,ment in mandatory re­ conciliation efforts.

THE ANCHOR- . Th~rs., Apri(10, 1958

11.

Cardinal Urges Economic Aid For Poland

I

NEW YORK (NC) - His Eminence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski finds it "in­ comprehensible'! that there could be major opposition in the United States to giving economic aid to Poland, according to a Polish-born writer who has had one Of the few' interviews the Primate' of Poland has given since his release by the com­ munists. In her new book, "Home to Poland," Mrs. Christine Hotch­ kiss,a member of the staff of The Reader's Digest, quotes Car­ dinal Wyszynski as saying: "There is freedom in. Poland, freedom of talk and of worship, more than in Yugoslavia; still Yugoslavia received over a bil­ lion dollars in American aid, though its Archbishop Stepinac is still in a communist jail. How can the American people permit it?"·

' .

AT U. S. CROSSROADS: d MESSAGE f

This outdoor ' .,billboard, located at ,the Cross­ roa s, 0 America-East 42nd and 5th Aven ue, New York City-was erected by the Gen­ eral Outdoor Advertising Co. as a public service: NC Photo. . .

,., Bishop McNamara .was conce­ .. Poles in Need. , '. crated ,to serve as Auxiliary . 0 Quoting the ~ardinal-'Primate Bishop of Baltimore on Marc.h The Fall River CYO wiD 29, 1928. When the Archdiocese as saying that Americans of WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxsponsor a c.adet dance tomorrow' Polish descent should be iliary Bishop John M. McNamara, of Washington became a residen­ night from 7:30 to 10:30 in the d encour. aged to visit Poland an to brmg of Washington has quietly ob­ tial· See in 1947, he was ap­ Catholic Community Center for their children along, Mrs. Hotchserved the 30th anniversary of pointed Auxiliary to Archbishop seventh and eighth graders. kiss, who visited her homeland his .consecrationas bishop. Patrick A. O'Boyle of Wash­ T'. he dramatl'c club of the CYO last, 'year, continues: The 80-year..:old prelate has ington. will hold a Spring dance froJll "He said that he had read of' ordained' more young men than' , Born' in' Baltimore in 1878,. . ' the discussions in the Polish-· any other, living U.R bishop. By' Bishop' McNamara studied at .8 to 11 next Saturday night ill'" American press in the' United the end of 1958 he will have .Loyola .College, and St: Mary's the ~ente1-" for' high school st~:" States'on whether aid'should be' ordained'more than 2,000 priests. Sem.'inary; Baltimore.

dents only., extended to Poland. .,

.. nI~'you'~e your child Ul"d.o·· ~.~~~.~~~~~.~~~OOO~.~.'.~. ,; you' 'debate whether yolishould'o :& " ,. . . ".<"" . giV~'hiin help or not?" he asked.. ~·:O' "If, yi;lil see .yOUr mother i? need, do, :you wrack your bram and . . ' '. "

discusS wnether it is 'suitable' to" ~

huhy with help? Everyone who '

cah'should aid those who are in

dire' need, and this nation is in o!o

dire' need."

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Washing·ton Prelate M or k s A nn.versary

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Y'OU th Ad ora t-Ion ,I~~ Doyon May 25 tOO

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WASHINGTON (NC) - Na- • tionaI Youth Adoration Day will ~ be ,observed May 25, Pentecost Sunday, Msgr. Joseph E. Schie­ der",.director of. the Youth Pe-, par,tment,- Nation,al. CathQIic,. Welfare Conference, announces. :Msgr. Schieder said all Cath,.! .-~ olic youth of the United J. ' are urged on that day to receive i Comm,union and make a visit· to., . . , ' , th,e.. Blessed .Sacrament. , The observance is being spon-"j sored by the three NCCY, sec' , tions: the diocesan ~ction, the· National ·Federation of Catholic 0(. College Students and the Na- • e tional Newman Club Federation. joO-:.".... 0

'Sta~es'

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VQtican Museum Has Modern Art

A New Jersey State Supreme committlle reports the results after a six-month experiment ~ATICAN CITY (NC) A introduced in 10 New Jersey Hall of Modern Art has been set • counties carried 'out under a aside by His Holiness Pope'Pius recent edict of the state high XII in the. Vatican Museum to court. . house newly acquired gifts from If you cannot. go to Massabielle •••.come and honor Mary at,La Salette,' i Reconciliation ~fforts had been, , '. mo<,lern artists and collectors of ..... lluccessful in 10 of 160 cases contemporary'art. . .in .in, Lo urdeso '. '", " ivhich involved minors. ~nothe:r., The works·giY~h.t~'l"ope in-, ~O reconciliations' were brought' '. chide some.'by :the _FrenC~ipl.iint­ ,PLENARY' INDULGENCE abol,lt· by lawyers ·before the. " ers George/! IRouau~t, ';Maurice cases. ,ytere. turned over to court- , Utrillo and! JacqueS VillQh,' Rus­ ';"HiS Holiness Pope Pius XIIrthrobgli:the Congregation of the Sacred 'Penitentiary, ~rants II appointed marriage counselors' sian-bornOsip Zadkine)s .also Plenary Indulgence once during ;the year to all the pilgrims who will visit the La Salette or "reconciliation' masters," 'as" 'represented as· are' 'the ·,Italian Shrine in Attleporo, receive the Sacraments and pray at His intention!i in the Shrine Chapel. provided in the supreme court'll . Giorgio d'i Chrico, 'Mario ,~ironi, edict. In 15' other cases still Giacomo Manzu and Pericle o Schedule of Devotions pending "there. is yet hope for Fazzini. Daily: Masses, 6:30, 7:00 and 8:00 a.m.

success," the committee reported. ~~~~~~~~;mm~~iiIDi~~ Confessions: 6:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

California Plan !! Benediction: 7:30 p.m.

The new system calls for a Sunday: 3:00 p.m. Prayers; Stations of the Cross; Sermon; Procession; Rosary; Benediction; series of consultations with the Veneration of the True Cross; Blessing of automobiles.' marriage counselor before the 4:00 p.m. Blessing of th~ sick. separation suit is brought before 7:30 p.m. Benediction. a judge. The program is similar 6:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Confessions. to one in operation in California. The consultations are optional Perpetual Novena Devotions to Our Lady of La Salette are conducted every evening of the in cases where children are not yea.". at ,7;30 p,m.; English sermon every Tuesday; French sermon every Thursday. ;involved. The program, in operation for Parish groups, societies and schools are invited to make a speclalpilgrimage during the the past six months, will conti­ Lourdes Centennial Year. Groups will be received at the Shrine on weekdays and Sundays, ·nue until September 1960, at afternoons and evenings: There 'will be a candlelight procession for evening pilgrimages. Contractors · which time the program of man­ Pilgri~age organizers, please write to: : datory reconciliation efforts is expected to be extended to the 464 Second St. ; Rev. 'Father Director ! entire state. The Supreme Court committee FALL RIVER which submitted the report Oft the experiment is headed by OSborne 2-2143 · Justice John J. Francis. The Tel. Attleboro, .1-0 008' . ATTLEBORO, .~ASSo , eoml'l'littee is' directing operation, ,of the pr.ogram.

'Attleb~~o,

SOUTH END

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communi~~" ~ith

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Electrical

LA SALETTE SHRINE


The Yardstick

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Qlomm'un-ist·'Re~\e~i~a',Open""I)~,ive

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':Me'm.ber~s· Apa.thY',!'Hin~ers To Set Up Schlsma~8c'Church',:,

', 'jth'in U''nlons '. " .. Democracy W

HONG KONG (NC) - Com-' toward religion in general was, munist China has intensified its summed up in a recent state­ campaign to set up a schismatic, ment of Chang Chih-yi, deputy , By Msgr. Georg~C. Higgins I "patriotic" Catholic Church. director of the United Front de­ Director NCWC Social Action ,Dept. ' The' Red plan calls for ihe partment of the Communist , The 1957 Labor Day Statement 'of the NCWC Social immediate election of "patrioti~" party central, committee. ,Writing on "Political Cooper­ Action Department placed 'a great deal of emphasis on the ,bishops, especially in dioceses' where bishops faithful to Rome ation of Atheists and Theists" in importance of rank-anq-file participation in local union stili exercise their authority; the the ,communist bimonthly, Ph~l~ ,affairs. The. Statement' reads in part as follows: "Individual' financial dependerlce of all oS9phical Research, Chang stated trade unionists are required priests upon the state; and the that communists are atheists and (1) the ideological unionist; (2) , not only to att'end but to the "good" union man; (3) the training of seminarians 'under they believe that religions are 'partl'cI'pate intelligently and I I b t '. 1 ' ) the aegis of the state-controlled harmful opium, always on the oya ucnbca member; (4 Patriotic Association of Chinese side of, the exploiters. However, vocally in local and regional the crisis activist; (5) the dually Catholics.' "religions will disappear when' union meetings and to do so. oriented'member-':"i,e., one who, Elections Underway mankind is completely liberated 'th l ' t " while giving support to the WI regu arl y.

The communist' Peking from the pressure of social and union 'in all esse"ntial respects,. O n th e fa c-e

People" Daily says at a recent' natural forces," he Wrote. ' .t th t views production and efficiency meeting the p'atriotic association e f 1 . 'k a from the point of view of man­ soun d s l 1 bel a agement and who has a reason­ in 'Fukien urged Catholics to COU' rea son a. t . e e, e , ' able hope and expectation of accept Communist party leaderpropos1 lon, ship, and announced' ,that "to · 't graduating 'to a supervisory or B u t 1S I re­ guarantee an indepen.dent , t' ? H mana,gerial' position,' (.6)' the uman chur'ch" b1'shops wou'ld be electe a IIS 1C, · card-carrier or indifferent mem­ be mg nature' ed throughout the province b e - , ' . what it is, do ber; 'and (7) . the unwilling . WASHING'TON, (NC) . unionist. , ·fore May 1. . we have any

Patriotic bis~~ps are ltnqw,n to The, U.,S. Supreme Court has , 'It ,is estimated that the nuin­ reas0'1 to an­ ' h a v e been el~cted already , I ' n " '' ben of those who belong to the refused, without :co~in,ent, · . . t that th t lC1pa e e ' ' Shanghai, Cheng'tu, Canton, Soo­ , r I, t y f first two of . these seven cateto review the case of a man, m a].o o and T,sinan," . . ts gories is approximately 2 p'er chow, . t e d 0f VIO . 1a t'mg. th e FlOrI­. trade umoms The Shensi' Jih 'Pao, report- conV:lc sl'de 'S of ~ent apd 10 per cent r,espec.tively. da state obscen1'ty statute, "who th1 ,. , .sh. / in an, l'ndoctrinatI'on meetl'ng '.'.. '11" . They can be counted;'upon ',: to g ow up . o'f Catholl'cs I'n S'hensI' p'rovl'nce, cI' aime d th e,l aw''18 uncons t't 1 u­ the ml'IIemum-wl regularly at the , meetings of take an active interest in local states' that the patriotic associa_tional. ' I I . ? union affairs under almost any J h G M tth a th th e1r oca unIOn, c'l'rc'umstances. tion there proopose,d' that "secret 0 n " a ews w s e fI't for promotions given to black bi,sh_petitioner, ,In Nov~mber 1956, reading 'only' what is I would have answered "yes" 'th' t' h Not so the other 88 per cent ' th C' , al C rt of Record children,"

to IS ques lOn w en we were ops a'rici black priests" (vicars' e rImm ou, , ' g the 1957 Labor Day who in varying proportions, fit Du'val County, , Fla" fou. nd Obscenity Test

d ra ft m capitular) be henceforward con­ Statement, but 'frankly, I would into the 'other five categories. sldered "illegal" in China. Matthews guilty of violating the In June 1957, the U. S, Su­ be more inclined to, say "no" It appears very unlikely, acState obscenity law by exhibit­ preme Court, in its Roth deci­ at' the present time,' The more cording to Seidman and his asUse Fall~Aways ing ,certain pictures ,to IL child, 'sion, established a new legal I 'think about the matter, the sociates, that there will be any This move paves the way for '. His. conviction was subsequently 'definition obscenity. At that mote I am c.onviri~edthat, if we wi.despread and sustained par- the arrest and trial of all Cath- upheld by the Florida 'Supreme 'time' the court ruled' that the are going to be realistic at all, . ticipatiol') by thts minority group, olic ordinaries,'loyal to the Holy Court, Then Matthews sought standard for obscenity is we will have to settle no'j-mally in union affairs except in periods 'See who have, been appointed to have the U. S, high court "whether to the average person, for much less than majority of crisis, . by Rome since 'the communists review the state supreme court's applying' cO'1temporary com­ representation at the average Deeply ,Rooted Problems t90k over mainland China in 'ruling. mun,ity standarq.s, the dominant local union meeting, particularly Assuming that this is so, we 1949,' 0 ,Reject Argument :' theme' of the 'material taken' as inithe mass production industries are faced' with an extremely . Messages 'from Chinese priests In "his petition for' review, 'a whole LppealS to the prurient the larger industrial centers: serious problem. Obviously, as, reveal that· in' ·an ,attempt" to Matthews challenged the consti- 'interest,!' ~ have a hunch that no amount Seidman, and his collaborators "disguise ,their persecution, the tutionality, of the ,Florida ob­ I MatthewS' petition"for rev·iew of! fervent exhortation by re­ ,remind~, the apathy and in~if-" Chinese Reds are employing ,'fal- -, seenity statute on the" gr.ounds 'asserted that the Florida' .61>-' ligious leaders' and trade union, ference of the majority of union . 'Ien.;.away' Catholics "and secret that it "prohibits exhibition !of - 'sceriity statute violates 'Federal officials is going to convince members "hinders the growth agents in the patriotic' associa- bOoks, pictures and other things : constitutional "guarantees, 'of 't'h'e average rank-and-file union of. functioning and effective tion. As in Canton, these apos- to 'the general public on the basis freedom of .speech 'because' it member that .he ought t9 tear democracy within the union tates and agents publicly accuse of the undesirable influence said allegedly makes' the reaction of himself away from the family movement." That's stating the the' bishop of all manner of exhibition may' 'have 'upon youths'the test of obsc'enity for television set and hurry over to problem as mildly as possible.' crimes against the state, which youth." ' all p'ersons, ' th~ weekly or monthly'ineeiing '" There is',rio, easy 'cure-all for are expanded and ',magnified in He asserted this test of obscen­ 'Horior Judge of his local' union. this problem. Certain tentative the local communist press. " ity 'had already been struck WASHINGT0:N (NC)---,.rudge Worker's View, S!Jlutions are 'referred to in the Reds' AU_tude down by the U; S. Supreme Ronald N, Da~iell, who gamed This hunch of ours"which is .Seidman book,.'We may ',ha,veFinally the government "of- Court in-its'February 1957:rul­ national prominence.last.Fall for . probably shared by the majority more to say at a later date about f"IClally" steps in,.'arrests the 'lng involving a'similar'statute in .. his" part in ,efforts" to enforce of people who have thought the~e and similar proposals bishop and' announces that' it is Michigan, At that time the cOurt desegregation in Little Rock, ,~as about this problem at all, is wblCh have b~en dev,eloped ,by, not persecuting, the bishop. but "found"the Michigan "law objec­ . ,been named to receive the ,1958 stated 'as' a firm conclusIon in other expe!ts m the fl~ld.,. only'ading in- accordance with :" tionable',' 'remarking that.' the Outsta~ding,AI~mn\l~,awa~d of • ne~ book entitled "The !'Work­ ,~Mean~hlle:-,-and .thlS IS, ~he .. the demands of the "Catholics." "statute' tend'ed" "to' reduce"! the the law center of GeorgetowD ..i, H' U""" only pomt we want to make Th tt't' d f Ch' . R d' , , , " ',. . ' , , ' , , e a I u e ~ er Y,lews IS mon by Pro­ here, it would probably be 'V~ry" mese ,e s ,adl,lU populatIOn of MlchI~~n:~o Um,vel'sity:, ': fes~or Joel Seidman '. and three . -:..--------­ of: :his associates from the 'In;;' unr~alistic to go' on ,taking , it' . ' ' ' :. , , d"';strial Relations Center at the for granted that the 'majority ' . Ufiiversity of Chicago (Univer­ of'rank and file union members of Chicago press, $5,75). I

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WIt regularity.. Unfortunately -unless we are badly mistaken ually think about their union -this just isn't going to happen. and thejr union leaders? Why It should be not~; in con­ did they join a union in the first clusion, that this 'problem of place? What do they expect to rank-arid-file apathy and indif­ get out 'of it? What percentage ference is not confined to the of union members can be ex­ labor movement. On the con­ peeted to attend the meetings tr3:ry, as Se!dma? and ,associates of their local u~oQ? pomt out, Identically the same ~he answer given to this last problem confronts mariy other quesiion by Professor Seidman types of organization. arid his collaborators is tacked This' fact is small comfort in­ on as a sort of footnote to their deed to the labor movement analysis of' the, differeht· ~tipe~" -but' it does, ser~eto: suggest tllat

of:,rank-and..;file union mem.,. .' we"are dealing 'with 'a' 'problem­ bers. ' , ' . which is too deeply ,rooted 'in '

They' have 't~nia:tively distin­ 'human nature 'to be'··solved in

euished s~x~n._,<Wf~r~,!1~,.ty.pe.s,..... ~, ,bU,PiY I;ly ,th~: applicati'oo

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HOLY FATHER AND . DELEGATE: Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognanj, Apostolic Delegate to the Unite!! ,StaJ;es, is shown with the' Holy Father :during audience ~few months a~o• . TheDelegateis observing his silver anniversary as the :rope's representati~ "in this cOuntry. N e , p h o t o . , ' , .

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AND YOU' BUY GAS


Nazi Martyr .

University Hea'd Installation Set For Wednesday

Tunin" Repairin, & Rebuildin,

Beatification cause of Father Titus Brandsma, 0.' Carm., a Dutch Carmelite priest· who has been called the "hero of the Catholic Press in Nazi-occupied Holland," has been opened by the Sacred Congregation of. Rites. Preliminary diocesan processes , for his beatification were started in 1955. BOl'n in Oeegekloster in 1881, he died in a Nazi con­ centration camp at Dachau in 1942.

WASHINGTON (NC) Msgr. William J. McDonald, a member of the university's staff for nearly 20 years,

will be formally installed as the ninth rector of the 71-year-old Catholic University of America next Wednesday. His Eminence Edward Cardi­ nal Mooney, Archbishop of De­ troit, will preside at the cere­ monies in his capacity as chair-. man of the university's board of trustees. His Excellency Archbishop­ Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, the Apostolic Delegate, will read the official decree of the appoint­ NEW BEDFORD PRE-CANA: at­ ment by His Holiness Pope Pius XII of Msgr. McDonald as rector tended the first session of the Pre-Cana Conference for.. of the Pontifical university. engaged couples at the Kennedy Community Center on Acting Rector Sunday.. Priests giving the talks are, left to right, Rev. Msgr. McDonald, a native. of James A. Clark, Rev. Luiz. G; Mendonca and Rev. Roland. Ireland who was ordained for Bousquet. the Archdiocese of San Fran­ cisco, joined the university's teaching staff iil 1940 afier re­ ceiving both his master's and Continued from Page One doctor's degree at the institu­ . ERIE (NC) - Nearly $11 mil­ the Basilica facing· the Square'. tion. . lion was raised in· an Eire di­ .He spoke his. brief message. in He served as vice-rector of the ocesan school fund drive which university from December 20, a strong· clear voice. The talk was had aimed at collecting $5 mil­ transmitted by 'radio allover 1954, until he was nal!led in the world and was televised on lion, Archbishop John Mark .June, 1957, as acting-rector to Gannon, Bishop of Erie, has an­ Eurovision, a European ·TY net­ succeed Bishop Bryah J. Mc­ nounced. . work. Entegart who became Bishop of The campaign began February The Pope's Easter message Brooklyn, N. Y. Msgr. McDon­ 2 and' closed last week. A total, ald was appointed rector on was a pastor's talk to his people of $9,339,123 in pledges was ob­ -in this case; all of Christendom. November 30, 1957. tained from laymen in nine He called'on men to let the light diocesan districts. Another of Christ shine in their lives for "only 'th'rough Christ and'. in .$1,400,000 was obtained from other sources. Christ will man achieve his per­ Continued from Page One The fund drive was lllunched ~onal perfection; through Him The total predicted by the his works will be truly ,alive, for construction of the new St. NCEA for grade and high school his relations with his fellow men Mark's seminary imd six region­ enrollments next Fall was 4,786,­ and with creatures well-:-ord.ered, al high schools, for the eXPllnsion· , ' 013, an increase of about 180,617 his worthy 'a'spirations 'satisfied. ,of, seven, existing parish ,high over the estimated· total of In a. ;word, th~ough, Christ. and . schools, and for special parish . 4,605,396 for the current school- . ,.building needs. .from Christ, mail will have full­ year. ness !lnd' perfiiction .of life even . .Grade S~ho~)s. : befor~"·there:.arise·-<>Ji. the. hor i ": Though the NCEA. siatement . zbns.o'.f,eternj.ty; anew 'heaven did not deal'with the .doubling . . ... . ' and·a'new,... earth." " ,. . of entollment since 1945, a check :- witholit rilenti6ning .. ai.omie • 'of figures for. that year' indi-, ':warfare ~or coniuunisni'i the 'pope cates the sChools' 'constantpoint~¥ t~ ,~odles,spp.no.sophies movement·to~ard tllat. ,and' tgQdless:\yays, of, liv!ngas ' Grade school'enrollment, needs . tliecause ior~at and ~ffei:i~g to reach 4,173,588 tod,o~ble the in: the world'.; "-, East Taunton's

1j)45 total· .' .' 'The'sPleridor of the Rc;!surJ.:ecAccording ~ the NCEA;" ~sti- .tion should. 'I:>e :ail Invitati~n:to Food Shopping' mate, these schools will enroll ' .men' 'iQ' 'pufthe .light 'of th~ist an estimated, 3,959,513 pupils back iii the wOrld, :to', inake . all next Fall. This will be an in- : souls and bodies,peoples and crease of about 1Z6,500 ov~~ the 'staies;'l~ws ai;ld plans,for tpe estimated enrollment of 3;833,­ future' conform to His .teachings and designs. 023 this year~

Co. Designers & Builders . of PIPE ORr.ANS P. O. Box 347 New Bedford WYman 3·8683

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ROASTS

Enrollments

EDD,IES

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Have you ever wonilered Do I , lI11ve a ..ooat1001 .... CaD I be a

priestf, : .. '. Would. I;' be a 'rood Jlriestf.1f you have" you,wll1 lind­ great help Iii • brief booklet wrlt- .. ten eSpecially for youngmen'Uke 'yOurself. facIng •. decision that ciui'. change your entire' life. This bookh!t tells about the· Holr. Cross ,Fathers who ser:ve ChrIst 'across the world" as parish priests. for-' elgn missIoners. priest-teachers. and home mIssioners. Its plain. direct. language wUJ help you 'take the best road to serving ChrIst. Slmply'llII out and mall the cou­ pon below. The seconds It take. -. may cl1ange your life.

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MILD and MEllOW

EIGHT' O'CLOCK COFFEE ,SPECIAL SALE!'

Holy (ross Fathers North Enston:Mass.

HARPIST: Miss Phyllis Ensher, well-known New England harpist, will parti­ cipate in the Annual Marian Concert next Thursday eve­ ning at' Cohannet . School, Taunton, under the sponsor­ . ship of the Diocesan Council of Catholic N utses.

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Please send me free Inrormatlon' thoo.Holy CrosS Fathers.

abou~

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O'NEIL FISK TIRE 276 Central St., Fall River

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G~~~T ATLANTIC &PACIFIC ~~~ DEPENDABLE FOOD RETAILERS SINCE 1859

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.Knowlandls:Against Private School Tax

High an enrollment of 841,414 to double the 1945 total. . LOS ANGELES (NC)-U. :5. The NCEA statement said that Senator William' F. Knowlalld in the next school year 'second­ of California has reiterated .bis ary schools will enroll .. about opposition to' taxation of non-: 826,500 students. This will be profit, religion.. sponsored' an increase of about 54,100 over schools in California. . the enrollment for this year, Speaking at' Knights of Co­ estimated at 772,373. iumbus Communion 'breakfast, As for colleges and universi­ Senator Knowland said he ties, the NCEA estimated ·that in wished to. re-emphasize "his the Fall they will. enroll about statement made last October

322,000, students, an ·incireas~ of . before San Francisct's Com~on­

about 12,000 over the estirtated· wealth' Club "i'I' am' opposed to

310,000 e!,!rolled'this year..... :. . the',repe~l of:tl;1x. exemption' for'

'nonprOfit ·schools in. California," , he 'declared. . ' : ' . ' .... ;i', A proposition on;the Novem:" ~r '.1958" ballot would reimpose' taxation on.nonprofit ,~lemen­ ta~y, and· high '·schoolS in Cal­ ifor.riia; . ". .' . ;.

.

WHOLE, , SPLIT;' " QUARTERED or CUT-UP

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Stamp of Personality

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. Urges Satisfying Creative

Desires in Leisur.e, Time

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By Donald,;McDonald

Plan to Tighten

Obscenity Laws

In Eng Ian d

.\ .

Davenport Catho'ic Messenger

This is a kind of a sequel ,to the ~rticle I'Y rote here LONDON (NC)-A sped-· two 'weeks ago regarding modern work; its lack of creat­ al parliament~ry committee iven'ess and the consequent ·attitude·of so many. workers has aSked the'House of Com­ towards that work, an attitude thaf~isfrequently misin· mons to tighten in some : te rpre t ed as one sprl' nging'a few acres. of-land, so ·that.while' ways the existing laws against from laziness and willful. he may' have. to depend upon a: pornography imdobscenity in Britain. shoddiness. factory job for his. subsisten~e, The' committee made the sug­ A number of people com- ... he will be able. to stand with gestion, which probably will be

mented on that article. While one foot:,on t!'t e soIl and t~e other adopted, that a new bill be in­ all agreed that much of modern ''in the. ~actory/~nd he WIP thus troduced to effect these cha.nges. " . f t 'ensure both hiS economIC" and wor k IS, In ac, hI'. I Tb . It put forward as the basis for non '­ creative psyc 0 ?glca eCl;Ul ~ ~lUm. new laws a carefully weighed and therefore MonSignor LlgUltb. doe~ not clause defining as obscene any­ does' not cor­ .counsel, ali· do some of our all­ thing whose "effect 'as a wl?oIe respond to one out agr,~rian~; ~h~t .f;errbo:f. is such as to tend to deprave or of the natural shOUld, ;~o ac. 0 . e an, . corrupt . persons to or among desires' of the ' In the ~Irstb plac7, hte Wt~kS, that , whom it, was likely to be dis­ h 'h" person e cows. "tributE~'d, circulated or offered . woul,dn t, '. e' .f air 0 ,~:: desire to ':",'Som~ of us just'could I)ot live 'fot-sale:';' " . "make" things on ~e.,l~nd; if we had. t? depen~, .. An .' additional •Clause adding ,', , upon, our clty,.bred Wits and re- ':',,'01', :which ."grossly offends a ::' : '-.~ " . ,," ';1. 1",,' ,t han' ra th e· ''''''1 . '. ' mereiy, "do"

source~u ,ne;;s. , '. , ' , . ,reasonable man's sense of de:' BRUSSELS' WORLD F AIR:'This first., poster of the things'::""yet the

But simple ,ownership', of five~etJ.cy,'~ was,deleted after some BJ'u'sselsinh~rnationalExposition shows mankind contemp­ 'feeli'ng' was'

or ten acres 'of land,' enough 'to 'disagree'inent among the com­ . that' one should·'"

·'rneet':a.'greatdeal oHhe family's' 'mittee members. ' '. ' iatirig his' oWiJ.work~ , The 'eX:p~~itiori opeI).ed A.Pril i7and not "'bring ,this subject up" be-",' "food needs, will make a' great Legal Tangles the Vatican exhibit, Civitas Dei, show man's'happiness cauSe it can only encourage' ·'many creative demands upon the The committee also disagreed,

depends on God. NC PhotO.

worker' frustration and resent- .:'wOI:ker, ,his wife and .children, but eventually decided to recom­ ment. The· implication in this ,and will give them at least a mend as a defense by anyone

.. criticism· of my article: is that· taste of what Pius XII was talk:.. accused of pornography or ob­ there ·is no solution to the'prob-' ·;'ing. ai;>out when he said thilt " scenity"that the matter con'" 'j, lem' of "'personalized work and,. fal"filiilg is in ~any, respects th~ .cerned is of artistic merit, which' . . . ' n since" there' is no· solution, dis-', :,"mo~t ,noble. occupation" .of ml1 " ,would:H1ow a' freer circulation" " .. , ' writes Archbishop' Assaf, Hil they, werll;'lD " cussi6n'·6f ,the' problem 'can· be, " The worker who says he can;- "forsome!ofthe'so':called Classics. ,·,,;...~st'·, (}.J~:: " . .th.e";U:~I.Y Land th. Is Easte.rtide. The poor but a sterile exercise. • .. " .';' ."not'afford to .buyevena modl;!~: ,They' islIg'gestedthat 'serioiJs' of" ·V 'd' refugees of 7;arU. (TransJordan), remaiD W~W'f'could argue 'from au-'~ acreage' on the edge ~f a ,city. fenses,"shoi!ld' be plinished bya .,'. , :.c;,' ~.. ' bomt;le'ss and lJOor.h~the,~dH of aD:de1y thoitiY"'~:l}d point out ihat 'Pope' :.: IDay."ljot 'be. alt?g7ther; .ca,ndi~, ,:rpaxim,'!m ,fi~e., 0£.$5,60.0 or three ~.' 0" 'anc(m~unti,ngfear, for th.e future. From the .' Piu's:Xr~ h,:fs ~elivered' s~v'eral "'par~~cu~~~IY ~f ~e f~nds It .neclfs,-, yearS: }mprIS.omnent:" . ~" ~: deptbs.,oftheir need and suf!eriD. the1 ,

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"THE 'AN'G' ('I,S "WOUL'D' L '. BE , TENS'( ••'.

major addreSses on "depersonal'-" saryto, ~J:'ade, m hlsfapu~y: caF, ,;.' The .'CO~~,ltt~ rel?orta~~ltization" in .recent years a'nd"'I'",·tve.rr.,.,~~o,,~r,~hree.years, :~i'-.,)edt?;"~lffrcu!tl~s'.ln decldmg could let the argument drop at row~r,g,~e~\lIly on.each occ~s,lOn, .,.what.~,off~~~lv~, and. har~ful that: .,' e , ' A thiid suggestion:. let us de." ,a.nd~lD· provmg such cases In a Bii('it';happen's that ,theret.re'A' vot~' '~ore of~uI: .ieis\lretin:I~, >50ultr~. o~ Iatw· th t' thO . . .........

""." ., ,. . ,'. k' .. d .' ot" to the a tual making of things . ' 'asser e d a ere ,eXI"... some ,thl,hgs wor er~ ,cfan °h' n ... 'If thO '':''.' c.., , .. ' '. .",';' " h" " ~' "a considerable' 'and, lucrative . ," to sO.IXe.' the ,Problem' 0 'mec an-':--:,. ",.Ei~'"I~ one ~rea ~fl" ~!'J1a" 'trade' ,i'in·. pOrnography which" ized "'routinized work, but to sat- .. 'hfe where boredom .~s. seldo~, .. ' k t f I·t ., • .1,,, c , • . ' • " t h .. ' . d't'" th' t' 't' ma es no pre ense 0 I erary or !Sfy' tpelr creatIv~ dleSI!es m . e . etxPd~nelncthe 'kl .tIS. ~Mn ..e ~rISh;S artistic: merit 'but exists solely leisUre 'time-rapid y Increasmg s u 10.' m I IS' an t am w 0 to d t d 't"

in 'our day-at their disposal. : observed. 'that' ,"boredom vanpan er 0 epravi y.

h h ld' f h I .......- '0'"n I Y I 'd~ not mean that. we hav,e ': ish~s;~m t e t resho 0 . t e '., n .-..ame to be pessimistic' about the pos':' artist.. , ANAMOSA (NC)-More than sibility" of work itself bein~ " I ,do not. m~an we must all ;a fourth of the 830 inmates at the eventually transformed into" construct StudIOS, buy smocks Iowa,.' State, Men's Reformatory mQre specifically human activ­ and palettes and go to, work. here' claim to: be Catholic but, ity'.: 'But until that day comes, I Those are the ~cci~en!als of .art. only two per cent actually.prac­ " beiieve there are some things !he e~sence' he:s In ~he ..work ticed their ,religion before enter- ' that can be done here and now Itself, m ,t,h: .sbmulatI~g-.mte~- ing the institution. Only one man which will at least counter much Iect~aI ~CtdlVlty of /as~l()nmb~I~' in· the prison was .graduated of',:the personality, ,~u££oc,ation',,' one s ~m ·.a P~J; ICU fir. 0 . J~c ,from' '3.: Catholi~ high school.

and: ennervation in factory' and~ and then expressIng that mental ~

o£fi~.e. .. " concept by' 1pilklng the' ttii l1 g 1'" , : .•

.. . . Itself, whethe'r-··it Tbe: as ·simple .'...., . What I am suggesting are not .as a ceram,ic ashtray or as cQ~'opiates. They are 'positive" ac-" plex as a 'crucifix or a w a t e r . ' . "', '. tiorts worth-considering whether color. ' ".' ;,' "

"GEOR' G'E'M'M" O''NTLE

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THlf' HAN.DS. OF THE HOLY "FATHER ARE THE' HANDS· OF 'O" ' , ".' CHRIST ... MAY HE BRING YOUR STRINGLESgGIFTS TO 1'HE , ' SUF'FERING THif NEAR EAST ... HE WILL BLESS' ,,"",'-", ,":' CHURCH ':,' . ,,', OF ·'YO'·"UR',.C·H'A',,'·RITY·'.' , ,'." .•'" '..".":' ""i'.'·" . " . ., ,;{', ','" PRIEsTs CANNOT'DO':ALL THE- WORK, cir·even the moSt',of it!!! They,absolutely require the"assistance of missionary 'nuns; Si~ ::: :.' ",,·'tcr:Luc·'y·~aiid Sister· Hyacinth wisb.tociffer'" ... "•.. ",".. ; '/ 't~eir,~oung:live.s co .theservice of Christ In;',,, . ~ His "poor , of li\dla. ,'Eacb must .have"a ,total of .. $300 for her support during her two·year peri- ': .od of'. intensive training' and PJ'eparation, for' .this great work. You will shar,e, in the merits 'of a liie.of' selfless work ,and prayer i~ you can ',' support. a girl'in the novitiate. Can ,you affo~d , i , - - to have a 'nun in, the familY?" Yo~ 'play pay !",' , , the $300 'over the two'year period in a~y,mao-" " ner.:9f installm.ents convenient. to you. . ,IIOW" 'IMPORTANT ARE' cm, LDREN! The future' belongs to the ,ehlldren of 'today and tile Church of tbe' future' in" tiieNear'East "', will 'depen'd 'entirely ~Dthose 'l)tti~ ones who are trying to dr~w.· clos'er to"Chrlst. Will. you help a child to know Christ better ••• ,wili'you build 'for the'futnte'today? $10 'wiil buj a First Holy Com.· munion outfit for a refugee 'child and convince the child of tlie deptb aDd breadtb' of the doctrine of the Mystical Body. of Christ. Tbe Ilmple prayers of the child will be your reward.

d there is a contemporary' "work, , p..,'U,·,.,,·,m.·,b•.in,g· '~,;,.·H" e,.,a,ti,n, g' .,' pro'b''O'Iem'"'' or·not. If they' .h.'ave'\,' .-·,A!1 op,whateverwe make w e . . . , will ·imprint the indelible" " " ," '0'., ' . 35 Y ' me~it,:they are"even m?re merita f n I' t h ' ; ; ' ·,ver· .. ears .,: " torfous because' there' is , indeed's hml\'O our.persofna I Y" d n,; :s' I -"'of':Sdtlsfied'Service' aworkproble~.. w_<?eprocesp is~r()m .I_~room . a 0 . , '"806"NO:'MAIN : .. - : " , , " . " , ' , ' " '" artifact-:-there simply no STREET.; In' his book,,,"The Heart of for boredom. ",. Mari," Father. Gerald ,Vann ·a<1-. fall River OS 5-7497 vises workers and tll'eir wives.' ,', .'''. that they can satisfy 'their crea,. BOISVERT tive, artisiic desires by'''making , " " , a family." And this is no pla)'flll' I .:II~"5URAN~E AGENCY " '.. . '. . ' 'am1?iguity by' Father' 'Vann. I s : : ' .. .. there anything more challenging,· All Kinds Of Insurance , .. an& in the end more satisfying, ..... 96. WiLLIAM STREET, th~n ihe 'fa:shiOl)ing of a family? . , NEW BEDFORD. MASS; '1" This. "artistry is even more , , ' " ' , , " ." " .. ". .,' k DIAL WY 8 '5153 - "Wsa'whale ~ta"'.-a drinK; challenging than one S wor ". c • with inanimate materials" sinc~" '" Persorial' Service 17 DELICIOUS FLAVORS , respect for the personality and the racial freedom of the.human BEST SINCE" 1853 wiii' of the children is one of the A~ given cond}tions.. Of course, this WE DELIVER kind of art-making requires an Inc. .', CALL. ' adjtlsted sense of time-scale; one ;. M 0 VER 5 wy 9-6264 ,

must be." al:>Ie to perc.eive that ';', SERVING ., 'an'd 9~62'65

this' is ':1' 15 or 30-year project in which at least the majo,r ele­ fall River, New Bedford ments" of its' beginning, middle . ' Cape Cod Area an4' end are clearly understood. Agent: For ,thdse "who want to hav~ ,. A:ERO MAYFLOWER a developed exposition of the ' ' 'T'R'A" N' SIT C"O'- INC • art"elemeilts in the making of a .... ' . • .• :, 45 SCHOOL ST. family, I' recbmnlend a reading " Nation-wide Movers A., So~ Firs' St. of Father"Va~n's book. . . " WYman 3-0904 . NEW BEDFORD A second suggestion: this one 30~ KC!inpton St. New Bedford froin Msgr. Luigi Ligutti, the.. director of 'the National Catholic Rur~l Life ·:::onference. If at al,l. DOLLAR BUYS,: ." possible, 'the 'worker should buy

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THE ANCHORThurs., April 10, 1958

15

Holy Hour for Vincentians

'0

A Holy' Hour will, be con­ ducted Wednesday night at 7:30 in St. Mary's Church, Taunton, in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the founding of the St. 'Vincent de Paul Society in Taunton. Rt. Rev. James H. Dolan, P,R., pastor of St. Mary's Church, will conduct the Holy Hour, to which all the people of the area are invited to join the Vincentians on this glorious oc­ casion. , The officers of the 'particular council of the Taunton area are: President, William Fagan; first vice-president, Richard Dono­ hue; second vice-president, Mario' Gracia; secretary, Law­ rence '">ivirotto; treasurer, Cam­ ille Denis.

-Photo courtesy of F1'ank Adams, Attleboro Slt'n.

THE REV. OWEN A. McGRATH, second from .left, told a gathering of 185 members of ThomasP. McDonough Council, Knights of Columbus, at their annual Communion Breakfast at the Rome Restaurant in North Attleboro that the people of South Korea are hungry for religion with thousands being converted to the Catholic Faith. Fr. McGrath, is a Columban Father from Milton. Shown with him, from left, ate ,the Rev. Martin S. Welch, chaplain at the Domin­ ican Academy in PlaiJiville; Toastmaster Edgar C. McGowan; Past District Deputy John' Tucker' of Stoughton; Grand Knight J'oseph J. Sullivan; Breakfast Chairman James P. McNamara; and Past Grand Knight John J. Stanford, who has not missed ,a breakfast in 38 years.

Ordinary ~ees Need For Liberal Arts

Parade

. GALES MILLS (NC)-Bishop John .t. Wright of Worcester, said here that "know-how'" ST•. MARY'S, as chairman and Mrs. Grace train'ing has an important place NORTON O'Brien as co-ct1airhtan. in a scientific age-but must be Final arrangements were On Wednesday night at 7:45 supplemented by "know-why" made by committee members in a whist party is slated to take / education. '. ' . ' . charge of a minstrel show to be place in the lower church hall He added that if SCIence ,and presented next Sunday after­ with Mrs. Rita Lacala as chair-' technology at;e allowed to crowd noon at 3 o'clQck in the Norton man and Miss Ellen Robinson as out the libera~ arts in the name Elementary School auditorium. co-chairman. Tickets may be of strengthening. America's ?e­ A second performance is slated obtained from any member of fenses, there w111 be nothmg for the same day at 8 o'clock the committee. left to defend. with Jimmy Cole directing. Bishop Wright said "no college ST. JEAN, has a right to the name of col­ Rev. William' D. Thomson, FA~L RIVER lege, that does not include the pastor, is honorary chairman' Following the business meet­ liberal arts in the curricula." and Mrs. George Bauza and Cor­ ing of the Women's Guild which Russia's launching of the first nelius McCarthy are co-chair­ will be held next Monday night Sputnik is an "indication that men. Committee chairmen include in the church hall a whist party' they have gone a long way in the know-how of education," John Drane, program; Mrs. is scheduled to take place. Mrs. Clarence Rich, refreshments; Mattheu Labecki, chairman, will he declared, "but that is not enough." Miss Beatrice Desormeau, candy; be assisted by Mrs. Laurent Se­ vigny, Mrs. Roland Lafleur imd "Even scienti,Sts need the Mrs. Donald Anderson, usher­ Mrs. Archie Toupin. background of a liberal arts ettes; Miss Dorothy Butts, tick­ education," he said, "if they are ets; Mr. Drane, publicity, and to know the purpose of' their Mrs. James Blount, posters. discoveries." ST. PAUL'S, TAUNTON

Warlord's Kin ~ Becomes Priest

KYOTO (NC)-Young Mich­ William J. Fagan, president of Particular Council of St. Vincent ael Tokugawa will not follow ihe de Paul conferences, Taunton, example of his infamous Japan­ will be the guest speaker at the ese ancestors, the ,Tokugawa annual Communion breakfast of shoguns. He has become a priest. The son of Baron T6kugawa,' the Women's Guild which will be served next Sunday morning Father Tokugawa is a descendant in the church hall' immediately, of the most violent and Chri;t­ ian-hating rulers" in Japan'. ' following the 7 o'clock Mass. hilltory; The committee in charge in­ eludes Mrs. Oscar Hedberg, Mrs: . The' Tokugawa family came William Lamb, Mrs. William F. into prominence in ,Japan early O'Donnell and Mrs. Joseph 'in the 17th century after Ieyasu Braga. . Tokugawa unified. the 'country and established his, capital at ST. JOHN THE BAPTIS;r, Edo, now Tokyo. In 1614 this CENTRAL' VILLAGE .' Members of the Women's famous warlord launched a vio­ Guild will spons0l' a meat ball' lent. persecution against his and spaghetti supper to be country's 300,000 ::hristian8and ' served from 6 to 7:30 Wednesday ,closed Japan to the West. His son, Hidetada, who suc­ night, April 23 in the parish hall. The Ladies Guild has' also ceeded him put thousands. of. pledged to donate $100 to the Christians to death. The Toku­ gawa family, remained in power Stonehill College building fund. Miss Joyce Whittey and Miss, until Commodore Matthew C. Margo Desjardins of the CYO Perry reopened Japan in the 18508. distributed Easter favors at the Sol-a-mar Hospital, Dartmouth, Sol-a-mar Hospital, :Qartmouth. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER

BROOKLAWN

The Little Theatre Group and the B, M. C. Durfee Group will entertain at the open meeting of the Women's Guild at 8 P. M. Tuesday in the parish hall. Mrs. John J. Crawford Jr., chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. James R. Clarkin, Mrs. Joseph C. Giblin and Mrs. Herbert F. McMahon. Election of officers' will take place and refreshments will be served.

FUNERAL HOME,. INC.

ST. JAMES, NEW BEDFORD

The Ladies of Msgr. Noon Circle will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7:45 next Wednesday night in the lower church hall with the Pastor, Rt. Rev. Hugh A, Gallagher, offering the opening prayer. President Mrs. ~atherine F. Clarke will preside over the business session after which a social will follow. Serving on the hospitality committee are Mrs. Mary Neagua

R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine Roy

Roger LaFranee·

EMMITSBURG (NC)-James P. McGranery, former U. S. At­ torney General, will addrel!lll a special academic convocation at Mount' St. Mary's College bere in Maryland, April 12. The gathering is the second of AMSTERDAM (NC)' _ Th ' three marking the 150th anni,. , , e '_ versary of Mount St. Mary's Col­ Ca.thol!c . People s party scored lege and Seminary, described as gaIn~ 1~ the D?tch Netherlallds. the second oldest such institution prOVInCIal elections and emerged . th try . , . th t" t , I n e coun . as e na Ion s s rongest party. Mr: McGranery will be award- . Catholic People's party candi­ ed 'honorary doctorate of laws at dates for the 590 seats in 11 pro- the convocation which will stress vinciallegislatures won 1,898,114 the role of the college in U. So votes, Jlearly a third of the al­ education. most six million ballots cast. They. won 190 seats compared with the ·186 they had held' iii· NOTRE DAME (NC)-A grad­ outgoing legislatures. uate program leading to the , The Communists party suf­ degree of master of arts in theol­ fered losses. It polled. 238,996' ogy will be inaugurated at the . votes and· won 18 seats. University of Notre Dame next Protestant-oriented parties-­ September, Father Paul Beich­ Anti-Revolutionary party, Chris­ ner, C,S.C., Graduate School tian Historical Union, State dean, has announced. The new 'Reformed party and' Reformed· three semester program will be Political Union-received a total open to priests, Brothers, Siste" of 1,236,618 votes and ·135 seats. and laymen.

Catholic Party Gains. In Dutch Election

.New Program.

PRAYER BOOKS

ROSARIES and

RELIGIOUS GIFTS

Christ Child Society DETROIT (NC)~"How the' Christ Child Society Can Best . Serve th& Needs of the Com­ munity" will be the theme of the 14th biennial convention of the national organization to~ held here May 5 to 7. More than' 400 members .of the society from' its . 38 chapters all over the co~n-, try are expected io attend the' meeting. .

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Under the Spiritual Direction of a missionary of Our Lady of La Salette, members will depart June 25, 1958 from New York aboard the 5.5. lie de France to visit Lourdes during The Year of Jubilee-proclaimed by the Holy Father to commemorate the 100th Anniversary of Our Lady's appearances toSt. Bernadette. 57-day itinerary includes: La Salt!tte ••• Paris ••• Brussels .•• Cologne ••• Wiesbaden .•• Strasbourg ••• Lucerne .•• Geneva ••• Lyons. , '. Milan •.• Venice ••• Florence ••• Assisi •.. Rome ••• Pisa ••• Genoa .•. Nice •.• Marseilles ••• Corcassonne • •• Angauleme ... Tours ••• Rouen ••• Le Havre •••• from $1,244.

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Hollywood in: Focus

J. Edgar H'oover Condemns

I 16,'

St. Agnes

Saints In. Crosswords

Films Glorifying Gangsters '----.....;,---8y

Henry Michael-----....,.--' n

By William H; Mooring .J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI, in an appeal to Geoffrey Shurlock, chief of Hollywood's Movie Code, warns against an "apparent trend in the motion picture field ... to glorify the gangster and elevate him as a false idol for American . · youth." . not laws to control shows which Shurlock, whose office~ as lead ·them into crime? the' FBI chief ack~owledges, "Oscar" Show has "made diligent efforts.. How did you enjoy the Oscar '. to elevate the' standards of de­

.

cency ,reflected in mov.ies", has w served. offi<;ial notice on all the HollyWood pro­ ducers who are members of the Motion Pictures Association (The Johnston Of­ fice). Unfortu­ nately he now bas little power beyond persua-' sion. The Code is no more effec­ ive than .individual film pro­ . ducers care to make it. . Atto;l;ey General Edmund G. · (Pat) Brown of Californ'a s' I, 1­ multaneously reports on the

Show on TV? From our seats in the Hollywood Pa'ntages 'it t!;ipped along typically. After Bob Hope kidded TV for its old films, the Academy put on some older ones! The stars had cer­ tainly turned out for TV. It even seemed unnecessary to drag Mae West from a well deserved and timely retirement. A gas~ of a;nazeri1e~t greeted the announcement:.· '.'Miyoshi· 7. Umeki, as best supporting ac­ 1::--+-+"-+­ tress". I was less surprised than many. Four weeks ago I wrote U here: "Typical Hollywood senti­ ment could give Miyoshi Umeki so an 'upset' ballot". It did, al­ ..."!!"......._ . . . . .

th h D' V ACitOSS. - 50 Shelters oug lane arsi of "Peyton i Y.adares 61 Hail Jllal')'

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-THE ANCH~R

~~hun., April 10, 1958

H

Urge. Re.-examination Of Lutheran Views ,STUTTGART (NC)- A plea for Lutheran theologians to. re­ examine their position on the veneration of the Saints is in­ cluded in a book written by five German Lutheran ministerll. , In the book "Catholic Reform­ ation," Lutheran Pastor Max Lackmann says, '~OuJ;' views of the veneration of saints can and must be corrected." , Martin Ltiihet: himself, Pas­ tor Lackmann points out, did not mean to eliminate entirelY the veneration of saints, bUit merely attempted to corred what to him appeared to be "abuse." Since this is the-case, lie con­ tinues; "why should an 'abuse' do away with the !use' of a prac­ tice which in itself has, great merit and religious value." , "Catholic Reformation" is the cooperative work of five Luther­ an Pastors' associated with Die Sammlung (The' Gathering), a group' of' Lutherans aimed at establishing "a new positive' re­ lationship with the Roman Cath­ olic Church." . .

findi~gS of his "Citiz~ns' Advi1l­ ;.~~~~s:n~o:l~~eL~~~~:~~~~o~~ 6 :'na.i.~~::~ent. ~;~~:e:e~a 88~~f~~:b 4S ~~~~j'r In

. 11 Tread • native. DOWN 44 :iH~; WAS · ory ommittee on rime PreYention". After a year's study were expected ·to tie or fight it 16 Hawmer M' Hnman orran f HER SYJlIBOL, n'io·uj,:.r.IAlC this ~ommittee, by "general a­ out between themselves. 16 A'r..matlc b"rb 55 S.....ed B Ve.tment U I,oot lIDid' ;,~ment" connects "an increas­ Red Buttons won as the GI - 11 Au altar elntb 51 A.sembly S Skid 46 Kind of , ! . 18 Baby (Ita!.) place • Apar_nt metal SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ...:... A · ing use of. broken bottles, chains husband of, M1YOshi in "Sayo- 19 Add fuel 68 Doctor' of houRe 41 Mao'. na.... 34-year-old priest has' 'been . .~aild 'razor blades by juvenile 'de- ' nara", just as' Lan,ti.c.i.pated. My ZO,(s~aaml'iotaal of. Divlottr I AU""ker., .9 GIrl'. ioy (abbr.) wltb .ton... - 51,PertainluI( nam.ed by. tbe 'local Junior ' '. 511 Stamped .• Fluwer . to a win I( , : linquent.!;" with certain TV pro-' ·'other selections papned as "best·' II Il:ye Chamber of Commerce as this :~,am!, ~orn.~.o~ ~hich ':feature actor", in the: same fiim. (:1 good :~i':agle =~ ~:r:er. , ~:~.e... g~ ;~r:led .city's ."putstanding Young Man I'" to 14 CrIme f11ms datIy "and '" performance lIl, a falsely 'written _ "-.SIII>: ,IS THE .. 'it .co~P".... , . . II·Blbllel;'1 55 Kind of fndl of ]957." . even 'more on SaturdilysamL' character); Joanne' Woodward ~T.~.~~.~.ss 611 ~'?~iRE 8RB .• lIG ~,~~.~:~:He is Father James B. Flynn. !':Sundays," .. as "best '3ctress.. ·..in "The Three, Z8 Right (abbr.) .. IlIED 10 Oose ab.t1uen... n Freueb river 86 Bend II Jl'amilJ''' 61 Nomadic . , F f E " d D'd an a'ssistant director of the Cath-' .FBI chle! Hoover Ul'ges every aces 0 ve an aVI Lean, ell Read. ,6'7 SHE 18 U.b ' 69 Amounts olic Social Service imd the direc­ . NAlllEU IN 11 Soutb Amerl­ ,pOssible effort by film producers --again for "K,wai"-as "best . carelnlly _ "'wk.,emnaab,J'. crat­ ... eet ' " . . SO Homan orgtul' THE MASS........ Nln mammal. .... , tor of the Sari Francisco Work­ ..Ir or. ~ )·.. ~.e ••lve 69 ThinA'. as 11 A.ri.toeratle name , -to see that the people of Amering Boys' Club, which prOVides Ie "1' I I' th', I t d "A '1 L 'n t 1'1'.. n.."a . hand 1\\ Rngulr.... la 61 Cre." a,.. par !CU ar y ou~ you , are· .. ·. expec e, prJ ove ,0 get II Ceajnnctlo" . 11 orr (!lrel"" 6Z Hu.te a .residence for dependent and not subJected .to films of the... the '~best song:' -award, perhaps' III Saered . '. 12 Plooe 01 16 SHK WA.S 6S SI.. we.t· neglected boys between the ages "Nelson' type (the United Artists' because I cannot understand 116 :i':.~~:~~: ban 1. ~::;In~ 18 triii'ejj"­ 66 R::~~~i:1( .. of ]6 and 18. film, "Baby Face Nelson" star­ anyone appreciating "AH'1l the . sa D......"d 15 Every ZIJ Tupmo". 61 Appeal Father Flynn also is active in M' k R ' w" , . 40 Negative 11 SHE DIED 28 Pronoua 68 Kalrle's ae. nng IC ey ooney), merely .ay , even half way. But AH'II 12 JJirt re.ldue AT A SI I,e.. 10 J'al't of tbe JACKIE, an interdenominational because opportunistic elements· the Way" went there 13 V.. ucher YOUNG _......._ . tr..ublesome fnut (pl.) .. ' . 44 V.. un/: goat 18 Seed SZ Grasp , 13 Inclined effort to find foster homes for in the movIe mdustry appear 'Phony Cr d·t 15 HER ABliSER "overlnlr' .3<1- I!:'n..rani woll<way children, as well as in several dedicated to the pursuit of profe 1s WAS MADE 19 Size of type 85 (lreek god H Uay . other social welfare organiza­ Its above all else". ~~at Pierre Boulle gained the n Deni';;" ~~ ~ti:w~:1r 81 C~e:'l~r coU~a ~; ~:~:iant 01 tions. wntlng award., for "Kwai", 48 nanee .tep 84 Hard 38 Se~pent

one (pI.) ."b.laaee S9 A.mlle

80 To the right I Kefauver Report Ignored P roved that Academy 'voters , 'II Gamhlinr cU,be. 86 C.. me. lorib eountry 82 Regret have short memories or just do Exactly two years ago the not care about professional 'hon­ GLASGOW (NC)-Mrs. Mary Solution on Page Eighteen o Senate Subcommittee '(Kefauv­ McAlister, mother of four, cap­ er) which investigated juvenile esty. Last year a "Robert Rich" of each individual increased." won t.he writing Oscar. He tured the. Kelvingrove constit­ delinquency causes, made its . , . The 400 worker~ had come to. uency here for the opposition . turned out to be one of 'the report. This indicated that "in­ Rome .from Vigevano near Milall Labor party in a by-election. communist . writers Hollyw'ood', telliljl'!nt, responsible leadership'; , . to give ~he Pope spec.ial pairs had "fired". He never picked She becomes the 22nd Catholic and an ?roused sense of "puplic VATICAN CITY (NC) - The­ of shoes for himself and many up the Oscar. member of the present British responsibility" might lessen the Church has always protected pairs for the Italian poor. House of Commons. Thi~ yea!; Kim Novak accepted 'the worker., His Holiness Pope glorification of crime in movies . the statuette for the abse;'t Pius XII reminded 400 shOe in­ ~d TV. . What has happened since then!' ' Pierre . Boulle, although': Carl, dustry workmen from ,an area Forman and Michael Wilson, where communist influence is T~ere have been ·theatrical re':' &sues of several crime shocke'rs . both identified under oath as strong. which the Kefauver committee .Glle~time communists, are said He added that "particularly to have done most of the screen deplored-including the Cllrrent­ now is she desirous that an' in­ story for "Kwai";The Academy. It' !evived Chessman St6cy­ ~t should clear up all doubt. If crease in·the national revenue be and -the production' in Helly­ .... achieved so ,that prices may . there is' tQ bea bar against em­ wood of more sensati@nal pl'!ying alleged communist~ , be stabilized and the' earnings: delinquency films. The TV .net':' who refuse to clear themselves works' have stepped up by. two ther1~. should be a bar against: oooooooooooooOo ec three hundred percent. West­ giving them Academy, honors•. erns in' which violence and law­ More than that the' paying tessness are the mainsprings._ 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. public has a, right to know by Crime, violence and illicit sex whom a particular screenplay is alld .. in movies and TV are not the, written. Phoney credits are a· 80le cause of juvenile' delin­ breach of good faith. quency, but investigation has' proved they are most potent con­ tributors. Behind the scenes, re­ John B. llPonsible men in movies and The Only Cath.olic College in the Diocese of Fall River TV have. admitted to me that this is so, but say they are helpless to stop' the trend be­ . Joseph A. Charpentier cause this kind of "entertain­ Reg. Pharm.

and Sons, Inc. ment" is profitable. 1902 ACUSHNET AVE.

NEW BEDFORD

Legislation Needed OSTERVILLE TEL. .WY 6-0772

When,. before the Senate Sub­ GArden 8-6509 PRESCRIPTIONS

commit~~e, I docume'nted many films as likely to trigger juven­ ile ~rime, Hollywood public ex"; per~s did the best possible hatch­ et jo\:o on me instead of turning their energies towards some sO­ lution of the real issues.• The Suocommittee's published find­ ings, analysed and upheld my opinions in every detail, but instead of facing constructiveo' criticism in' the' spirit in which Our Lady' of Stonehill it was offered, the big' men of show business wasted their time GET ACQU~INTED ,WITH YOUR COLLEGE BACON 'liNGUICA FRANKS and money on a '.white-wash VtSitors Are Always Welcome campaign.

':i

Priest Outstanding Young Man of 1957

:i

-=::::.. ."0"

Catholic Member

Shoe' Workers .Give. Present to 'Pope

('S,ave With Safety" -New Bedford & Acushnet Co-operative ,Banks

. :--1

CONTRACTORS BUILDERS

BROOKLAWN

PHARMACY,

STONEHILL COLLEGE

~LEBEL

'-DAVIDSON'S • •• Ma~Gre.gor Brand 'Pork Prod. ·Hi~kory

This will not work any longer. .Conyenient catch-phrases about censorship being un-:American' will not work either. Legislation: at least State-wise, cannot be far off. It is too urgently needed. We have iaws to prevent liq­ uor liellers from Ie'ading our youngsters in drunkenness. Why

SHOULDERS

Smoked

LlNGUICA

Scotch Ham

HAMS

LEAN and SATISFYING'

At YQur Favorite Store in Southeastern New England

HELP YOUR COLLEGE TO GROW

- - - - - - -- - - - - - - Rev. THOMAS C. DUFFY, C.S.C.

Dlrector oj Buildmg Fund. StonehiU Cotleg. PHONE CEdar 8-2221

NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSETTS


flf Fribourg, has been a,warded a grant of $20,000 by the Rod:e­ feller Foundation. He will use the Rockefeller Foundation's grant for studies on Nikolai Lenin, Russian leadel'

Foundation Grant FRIBOURG (NC) - Domini­ can Father Josef Bochenski, Polish philosopher and profes­ eor at the Catholic University

. THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., April'10, 1958

17

of the communist revolution whcl . died in 1924.

-~._~ .

....----

TWO PERCENT PRACTICED FAITH: Father Cyril F. Engler found that.only two percent of the Catholics in the Iowa' State Men's Reformatory had practiced their faith before imprisonment, although one quarter of the 830 inmates .called themselves CaU~olics. NC Photo.

Debates Co"tinue

Spotlighting Our Schools

This Sp;ing a housewife's fancy is the thought of ke~PIng the budget balanced. Her ~st fnend is First National where the thing to save is cash!

CHUCK ROAST

CHOICE - Cut from heavy tender ;teer beef

Bone

for a delightful oven or pot roast.

In

ShO'g'" . Id'•.e rs H a' b', .

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FRESH

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JESUS MARY ACADEMY, topic: What Should Be the Teen-, FALL RIVER Young lender agers Responsibility to Society?' , Rae Souza' and James 'Blaek- . , A musical play, "Bernadette of Porlt ~ Roa5ti lege are scheduled to take part . Lourdes," will be staged by the Cecelian Glee Club at 8 o'clock in a Radio News Script 'Which Wednesday night, April in' 'Will be limited, to exactly five' F~eshty Ground the school auditorium, followed Leem Beet Young and Beth Mur" by a one-act comedy, "Be a Lit:' tie Cuckoo," presented by the phy will participate in Poetry Interpretation. ' Ilel'!ior dramatic club. six to eight minute memo-: A The high school students are participating in a library quiz rized Oratorical Interpretation will be given by Louise Dumont contest conducted by Mother St. Bellview - Strong &Stttr-cfy Ambroise', librarian. Prizes will and Juanita Fernandes. The remaining two numbers

be awarded to the papers with GAt Household aIeodi

the highest rating. The object of consisting of a six t9 eight min­

ute memorized interpretation in

'11 GAL JUG 31c JUG the undertaking is to stimulate reading interest. . , a humorous vein will be sup­ W 0% ported by Justin Kelleher and Senior Catherine Goulet will Cleanser 2c off Sate CANS take part on May 3 in the Eighth his sister Katherine Ke~leher,

while the participants in the

Annual High School Prize QJ toe Floor Y1GAL serious interpretation will be Examination in Mathematics, CAN . • ' off CAN Wax Susan Koch and Elizabeth ll~onsored by the MassachuSetts . lARGE, Quinn. life insurance com'P~mies. Sponges Sma" Stu 10e Me<! sa~ 1ge SIZE Sister Mary Virginia, RS.M., Awards of $150, '$125, $100 and Principal of Hol~ Family High, $75 will be offered for the best lARGf white is attending the N.C.E.A. Con­ examinlltion papers: ROLLS C. .ed' vention in Philadelphia, and the Seniors Jacqueline Caron, Mercy Conference held in con­ Annette Jusseaume and Cecile Nadeau are competing in the junction with the Convention. 1958 national essay contests of For YOUI' Finest Freshest Pl'oduce! , ST. MARY'S HIGH, the National Crusaders Youth TAUNTON Federation. "Drinking and Yellow Ripe-W_cl."fut with your Breakfast Cereal Before the Easter vatation, 10 Youth" i~ the general topic of members of the Dramatic class the contest. presented a Paschal play, "The' HOLY FAMILY HIGH, Seamless Robe," by Esther NEW BEDFORD Washed - Sweel and Tender Averill. It was directed by the The Sodality of Our Lady of, school's drama coach; Miss Mary Good Counsel organized in Sep-' Benson. 3 LB ... BAG ' Dorothea Sullivan as Prisca, tember and approved by our Linda Menoche as Moxa, Fran-' Most Rev. Bishop ConnOlly on Fresh, Tender. Long Green Spears ces Corcoran as the crippled' " Jan. 24, 1958, has received of­ girl, Asubah, Elaine O'Keefe as: ficial announcement of affilia­ L8 tion, under date of March 19, Bethia, Carolyn Baker as Sarah, and Rita Mastromarino as Naral 1958, with the Prima Primari One 01 New England's most popular coHees is now had the leading roles in this Sodality in the Roman College thought-provoking story which of the Society of Jesus under specially priced. Try mild, pleasing Richinond. Your ond touched poir;tts of Christ's public the title of Our Lady of the t~sle will tell you it's your best coffee buy at this life, His crucifixion, and resur­ Annunciation and SS. Peter and new lower price. rection. Paul. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James J. ,The Roman soldiers were por­ Gerrard is the spiritual director trayed' by Mary Silva, Lorraine of the Sodality, and' Sister M. Bakery Specials! Travers, Patricia Morrison and' Nolasco, 'RS.M., is the faculty Lee Jackson. moderator. ' The Local Safe Driving Road­ The members of the Science EACH lAO! E-O, sponsored by the Taunton Club with the Club moderator Junior Chamber of Commerce' Sister M. Charles Francis, Betly Alden : Sunday, April 27, is open to all RS.M., and interested students EACH . the girls in the school who Pos­ attended the Rhode Island Sci­ Bre~d 1 ~~~~ sess a driver's license. Prizes ence Fair held at Brown Uni­ will be given according to the _ .•._ - _ . - _ . versity last Wednesday. skill, endurance and attitudes ~or The members of the Mon­ of the partiCipants entered in the signor McKeon Debating Club, Punch - Blend of Tropical FrUit Juices competition. under the direction of the Club's F~od Beverly Tompson, school li­ 00 coach, Atty. Maurice J. Downey, 1 Fordhook - Sweet Tender brarian, has caught everyone's wiIl participate in the Massa­ imagination with the colorful' chusetts State Speech Festival Cakt! Moxes - Whote. Golden, Etc. 1002 spring display in the library. PKGS and Debate Tournament to be Newly elected members of the held next Saturday at Clark 1 Green Tender, Flavorful Sodality were represented at the University, Worcester. The de­ Sunshine 902 Open House Meeting at Jesus bate topic. United States Foreign PKGS Mary A-cademy, held recently. Aid Should Be Substantially In­ Leona Morin, '59, was elected creased. will be supported by Mixed - Tasty Combination prefect; Elaine Van Zandt, vice­ Mary Jane Rimmer and Rose­ lOoz prefec:; Vivian Gamache, secre"" anne Thomas; the negative side PKGS tary; and Joan Smith, treasurer. wiIl be presented by George Thomas and Ronald Pacheco. Solt-Weve Bathroom In Sugared Syrup In the speech contests the fol­ 1202 White or ,lowing students will take part: ... Colored ROME (NC) Thirty-five CONT In the original oratory entry' seminarians at the North Amer­ where the student is required to ican College are among 300 Same low Sell·Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity - We Res~ve the R;ghl t~ Limit Quantities speak from six to nine minutes American citizens in Rome who Robert. A. Lawler and Mary Jane donated a total of 200 pints of Walker will represent Holy blood to Rome's hospitals for Famil)'. the poor. The three-day cam­ Joseph C. Duggan Jr. and paign was sponsored by the Patricia Oliveira will partici­ American Women's Rome Asso- , pate in a group discussion the elation

23;

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m~~~~:;.~

Spring Housecleaning Speci'als f

EAcH$I~19,

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39c 39c 33c 29c


,/

THE FIGH ING CHAPLAIN,

NEveR. MIND THAi. WUND

1'HE' ALARM! EVER'Y e.ECpND COl.(l'I,Ii~

WHILE MAl tEE", DI{iGtll'ro A' A gv'&OY,

HER fATH£R. Ot.rr OF THE ROOM

WHEI:£ HE WAg HEiD ~/CONEF:.. YOtiNG 0

.. {;(.~, CHAPLAIN TIM AHeARN KlAIT' ·AND . wATCH£' FO~ HER. IN iHE .' GECRET PA~44G£WAY'.~~,

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t~ Oregon Masons Aid POAU

,SchQlarships

'Scottish,.' R,',it.e.'.. I,-n.. ·Camp'aig''n·, '~'*gai,nst f ..ee':~ Textbook$'·· .

~:',,' ' . . .;

!hurs~,

Continued from, Page One Eileen Black; daught¢r of Mr.

-THE ANCHOR' April 10, 1958

.·Cr~ssWord 'Sqlution

~~~a:;:~;F~~~~iS L~U~~ac~~h~~'

Catholic University

'Opens in Argent.ina

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -The bish.ops of Argentina have form­ ally established the:' Catholic University of Argentina' here to.' be known as the University of" ' . St. Mary of Buenos Aires; The new university will have a's its· rector Msgr. Octavio. Nicolas Derisi, noted author.

:By 'J0S41~h: Breig . . . . . 'an:a~~~t~h'MUrphY, daughter' of .. .. Cleveland .... niverse· Bulletin .,' . ."".. '\ .... h"'t ,., ". .... . Mr. and' Mrs.·James'P. Murphy guess. IS t arna,ny a MasonJJiust feel slightly ill Sr., 115'Fifth Streei, St. Mary'S" wer.the sitila~ion in 'Oregon. .... '. .' . . . Cathedral School and Parish. Scottish .rite 33<l d¢gree )Vlasons. in that state have Cynthia Ferris, daughter of .t.!arned up with POAU in an effort to take free textbooks Mr. and Mrs.' V. J. Ferris, 838 . were' won by the next highest :Broadway, . St. Patrick's School away from. children 'in' C~th-' . . , . ·rankingcompetitors. Miss Mary oIic schools. " . If it religious school buys'a '.and Parish. . Kathleen McCarty of 407 High typewriter to teach typi!lg, Honorable .Mention . Street, Somerset, a member of . Honorable mention is given'to I ' POAU, if you have for~' POAU wants the school taxed. St. Patrick's Patish, Somerset is' IOtten is short for Protes­ ',Oh, POAU can be piddling the following students for .their a pupil at Somerset Junior High tants and Other Americans small. very creditable work in this Kathleen' Gifford, daughter of and the daughter of Mrs. 'Bea­ United for Separation of Church False. Allegation competitive examination: Mr. and Mrs. Martin Gifford, 111 trice E. McCarty:. and State, In Oregon, Scottish rite Mary Veronica ,Murphy, Buffinton Street,' SS. Peter and· Joan Monahan, a student at POAU'S main

MasOns, by their own admission, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Paul 'School and Parish. Case Junior' High, the other win­ reason for be­ are working with POAU to de­ George Murphy, Peckh~m Road, Lorraine St. Onge, daughter of ner, is the daughter of Mr. and jog is' to make

prive Catholic sc..h ool . children Little.Compton, R. I., Josephine Mr. and Mrs. R. Roland St. Mrs. Thomas J. Monahan of 335 lliings difficult

. of free textbooks. .J Wilbur School, St. Catherine's ·Onge, 401 Whipple Street, St. Seaview Avenue, Touisset, 'and f 0 i: Catholic

To this end, the rite's educa-' Parish. a member of St. Michael's Par­ &merica.

tion committe~ circ'ulated a state- . . Patricia Johnson, daughter of Anne's Parish and School. Sacred ~earts Academy ish, Ocean Grove. Its chief' too~ ment. to 2,000 public school Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Johnsqn, Ann Mary Turner, 'daughter These two' scholarships are ill this noble teachers. 67 ·Highcrest Road, James. W. end e a'v 0 r is The statement falsely alleged Morton 'Junior High School, of Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Turner provided for by the Marian Scholarship' Fund established by .Q.f 117 School Street; N~rUi Digh­ what . it calls "separation' of that Catholic schools 'teach "gov:"Holy Name Parish. , ' the 1958 student body in honor church and state." . .' ernment' doctrines that' are Patricia Gifford, daughter' of ton, is the winner of the four­ : PAoli 'has no use ,for the foreign arid contrary to' the Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Gifford, ..year full tuition. sch.olarship to of the Lourdes Centennial Year .eparation set forth in the .Con­ American concepts 'of goverri­ 671 Third Street, St. Mary's ,the' Academy of the Sacred to.be supportecl' yearly from th~ Hearts High' School ' awarded student government treasury. . ltitution: "Congress shall make ment." Cathedral School and 'Parish.' Six students received honor­ iIlo .law respecting an establish':' . "This is evident," said the Scot-' Alvina.' Miranda, daughter of . each year to the stlldent from able mention for· achieving the . tish rite statement, "by simply Mr..and Mrs. Antonio Miranda, the A~ademy Elementary De­ ment' of religion." partment who tops the scores in next highest scores. :rhey are in . That means 'that Congress is reading the textbooks." This 87 Everett Street, Samuel Wat­ the 'competitive examination. the 'order of rank: Sharon' Cro­ I!orbidden to set up a governm'Emt amounts to saying that the State 'son School, Espirito Santo Par­ This scholarship' is the gift of 'nan, SHA' Elementary; Diane 'church .and compel .people to of O'regon has been giving un­ ish. . Mlhere or contribute to ·it'. ' American textbooks .to Catholic Barbara Ann Carey, daughter the . Sacred .Hearts Academy McGee, Somerset Junior High; Carol Dalllaso, SHA Elementary' The Constitution does·.npt sat­ children. of Mr. and Mrs. C::ornelius Carey, Alumnae Association. Leslie Fennelly, Pocasset School; .isfy POAU.., POAU wants "sep­ Many Must Feel III 194 NashUa Street, SS.' Peter and .The second four-year full tui­ ai'ation" to' 'mean that religious Stuff and nonsense. Any­ Paul School and Parish. tion scholarship competed for by Brenda Shea and Susan Shea . , citizens (especially Catholic cit­ body is perfectly free to ex­ Mary Fatima Brum, daughter students from all other schools SMA Elementary. .izens) are not entitled to the amine any textbook used in any· of Mr. and Mrs. 'Joseph Brum goes to Margaret Silvestre, '.me government benefits· as 'Catholic school in the·land. Any­ '674 South Main Street, St. Loui~ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter lIOn-religious citizens. .' . body who will do so will find School, Santo Christo Parish. Silvestre, 83 Norfolk Street, Fall NO JOB·.T·OO BIG ~ . In practice, POAU policies add that the charges are preposter­ S!'!aron Fennessey, daughter River. 'She is an eighth grader NONE T9<) SMALL lIP to government discrimination ·ous. . of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Fen­ at .St.. Michael's School and a against Catholic Americans. The Masonic statement w~nt nessey, 2788 East Main Road member of St. Michael's Parish. POAU is nothing if not small; on to say that the Church (the Portsmouth, R. I., St. Anthony'~ This scholarship is the gift of IIOthing if not petty. statement calls it a "sect") "de-' Parish, St. Patrick's School Fall Mr. John .F. Creamer of New . POAU does not want children ~ands that the public support River.' ' York,.in memory of his late wife, ill religious (for which .read its sectarian schools." And furth­ Theresa Lo'wney, daughter of· Vivienne' DeMarmon Creamer. Catholic) schools to ride in er, that the Church "schemes and Mr. and Mrs; Jeremiah Lowney, Two half-tuition scholarships Main Office and Plant .school buses. . demands .for itsel~ a monopoly 232 Fifth. Street, St. Mary's POAU does not want them to' on all' education." . Cathedr~l School ,and Parish. LOWELL, MASS.

. M~I:e stuff and nOhsens~:' ~joy' ·.theservices. of public IS:aren Daley, mece of Mr. and Tele"hone Lowell

ltealth doCtors or nurses. '. ' A week before the Masonic Mrs. George A. Gregory,' 131' , GL 8-6333 and GL 7·7500

POAv' does 'not want CatHo'fic . faise!:'oocl were "distributed, Warren Street, SS. Peter and . . ELECTRICAL " American youngsters to get any - Gov: Robert D. Holmes of Ore­ Paul School .and· Parish'. Auxiliary Plants CONTRACTORS of the gov~rnment aids that gon denounced the campaign ,other children get~including . against free textbooks as plain Residential - Commercial BOSTON textbooks. downright bigotry. ." Industri.al . OCEANPORT, N. J. POAU wants 'hospitals oper­ One thing is' certain~it ~ure 633 Broadway, Fall River ated by' religious denominations is ,small. It sure is petty. It sure PAWTUCKET, R. I. to be excluded from federal aid. is enoughto.make many a Mason , OS 3-1691 ...... •••• ...... ... Surely, said the physician feel slightly ill. . who heads the staff of one ICE' CREAM ~ hospitai, POAU "does not'expect LEO H. BJERUBE. Mgr. reasonable men to believe' that :. '.~ the operation of a modernhospi-' . 951 Slade St. -Tel. OS 5:;:7836 tal staffe'd"by doctors and n u r s e s ' of air creeds, and caring' f~r' men""'. l. • {' v t ,',,} r of aI(faiths and nO,faith alike. . . ,.T~lrd Order Regular of is Pli~pagation of religion in the St. Fran'cis ". sense that funds used for such . . , .. ;., ":;" Offer to Young l'v1;en a~d Boy.s .. ., purpose are.for the establishspecial oppqrtunities,. ,to \ :"1", '. meni of a religion." study for the PriesthoOd. 'Lack " . Wrong, dpctor. Precisely.,that. ()t funds no obstacle' r : is What :POAp wants peo~ltf·,.to ) . For fr~,ther informatiiri,~if~t;. 'A~PLIANCES' -believe. ,.' .' .. ":,, to " .'. . '~' POAU. ~ought a proIlosal,ttiatFATHER STEPHEN~.,T~O~R •., " FALL RIVER Congress give religious schools .. .• .. .,FRANCISCAN: .. ' the slime. ~x<:ise tax ex~mption PREPA'RATORY SEMINARY FRANCis J. DEVINE , ARl:HURJ..j,qUCET.. MAILING SERVICE enjoyed by public schools for. . P. ·BOX. 289 " " "'HOLLIDAVSBUi(l··iz. PA.. nec"qsar,y; .,;.educational-equip'.~~!!~"'"\"" /. " y' . "., r:1<o""'''''''-_-';~ '''' '' : , .

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SPORTS CHAnER

Lauds Holy Cross Decision On Spring Football Drills' By Jack Kineavy Somerset 8igb Scbool Coaeb

The decisj~m of Holy Cross athletic officials to continue the policy of no Spring football practice is indeed laudable. It was' gen'erally believed that'the Crusaders, who face powerful' Pittsburgh ·and Syracuse in their opening two games next Fall, would re­ The impending season JIIill be vise the policy of Spring Barry's 38th at the Cru~der drills this year. Holy Cross helm. During his tenure the last conducted Spring prac­ Purple and White have compiled tice in 1953. "We made the decision to "fore-'

go Spring prac­ tice only after considerable thought," said athletic direc­ tor Eugene F. Flynn, Monday. "And it' was agreed by :Dr. Eddie Ander­ son, the coach':' ing staff a'nd other me91bers of the athletic association that it would be ,rol: the best interests of Holy Cross' football and 'our overall athletic program to continue without Spring drills. " "The fact that several. of our outstanding football players are also vital members of our base­ ball, track artd lacrosse tea111ll arid Uiat two of our most res~ Peeted opponents, Dartmouth and Colgate, (10 not conduct Spring practice' sess'ions 'had 'a bearing on oUr' decision," 'conti­ nued Flyim,' "but basICally we feel doing without Spring prac-:­ tice guarantees that football will not be. overemphasized at Holy Cross and will retain its proper place in a well rounded athletic program." . Barry Has Amazing, Record Altogether too often required participation in Spring grid drills has deprived the baseball, track, and lacrosse teams of out­ standing performers,boys who themselves would prefer to com­ pete in the il)season sport. How­ ever, by the time Spring"prac­ tice is concluded, baseball, par­ ticularly, is well into its sched-:­ ule and football latecomers find the' late start too great a hurdle to overcome. , Holy Cross, of course, is and has been for years, under the, guidance of Coach Jac\l: Barry, one, of th,e foremost ~ollegi~te baseball schools in the cou,ntry.

the amazing record of 587 wiqs

against only 132' losses aDd 5

ties.

Prospects Excellent' This year the Crusaders will be pointing for Omaha and a possible repeat on their 1952 NCAA championship. For the past three years, they have had to bypas,s NCAA competition be­ cause of the conflict, between ,Holy Cross commencement and

. C.Y.O. JUNIOl{ LEAGUE CHAMPS: Meinb~rs of St. Mary's Parochial Sc~ool. Taunton, ,cha,mpionship basketball team are lef.t to'right: first row, William Tripp, Richar~ hi the event that the .Cross has Quintana, Ronald Doucette,' Peter Hickey, Edward' Corr. Back row, George O'Brien, Pau .a.representative year, they'll be Fit~gerald, Coach Joe '}legan, .Richard Brezinski;'Harold, ~leary, John Whitters, Fa-thel . free to participate.' : , : F e r r i s , c.Y.a. Chaplain;' and Peter McDermott..·

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. Pre-season' prospects at the Cross are excellent. . Among tQe " A' f nine lettermen returning itorri the 1957 t~am w~ich won 16"and: Continue!! from Pae-,e One ~ost ,only 3 are, thre~ starting, Wing Preview . pitchers, all jhrliors. WOJ;khorse Oi'iginally' the meeting l!atf LONP,ON' (NC) -.- Premi~r , "li is asserted .that if people,db of the staft' last' year was rig~t- oeen scheduled for the tradi­ Nikita S~ Khrushchev of the not believe in a God, of whom bander Hel Deitz who won 8 tiQnalgathering spot: the aUd.-, even the faithful have not got'a a~d}os~ l.r ~~~ rarf,no",a,~~th~r tO~,ium of the Jesus-MaJ;i,e Acad.. ­ Soviet Union has,' told a clear , impression; ,~shch" veopl~ French news'manin Moscow rl~~hander,: ..,~t€!dj~)~>~'p,d 0 emy. Since those attending thf: co that he thinks there is, no. ,God. cannot be guided by loft feelings 'r¢eo,rd,:".'.'rl.i l1e ' sOut~p~,w::;;[J;l~~ meeUng ,have·.. a ,grlilatinterest Serge Groussa'rd,! . correspon-, ol"humanism. But Comuunista Defino,.was 4 and 2. '! '.': ',.'. ':";, in the charitable institutions of , a~e' the' most humane people be­ Ha~li?i"~e"cat~~i,~g~,c~~{~ the, Diocese" it was decided to dent, for" the, Paris, daily ,4l "calIse 'they do not struggl~ only Figaro, was interviewing Rus­ once agam will be JUnIor Larry . th . f th 1 t t RancoUrt" of ' Shelbu,rn~: 'F~lni, give em a prevle~ 0 e a eS' sia's toP. political figure when be ,so that they themselves can'·live ., Charities Appeal, achieveJ!1ent ~sked Mr.' Khrushchev': ."Does .' 'well.' .•" Mass:; .rated'with tI~e best IR thEl in . connection with the annual God' exist; does a'higher powe'r " Citing the current American E.ast:: .Other returning,.:isFind:meeting." AU' attend4ng "the recession where millions '0£. pe~ outs jnclude centerfielder ,Dick . . d exist?" Beraraino,· an All-Eastenl'selec':' meeting have been mVlte . ,to pIe are out of work"Khrushchev IYIr. Khrush~hey's "answer, aC­ said: . , ' .. view the Bishop ,Cassi~y Wing "This is the law of capitai": tron. last ~pring,.To~· Ryan; ,dip:;, of the Catholic Memorhll HolDe. cording ,to. a . Radio Moscow tain and," secpnd ,bas'eman,' and , Tpis ,is the new ,chaI:i~ab~e broadc1!st monitored here, ,was' ism where private ownership of the means 'of production' reigns. shortstop Ron Liptak, a junior facility, for the Aged Chrpnically '''And do you think there is one7" from Bridgeport Conn..-Starting Ill. With, only the finishing Mr. Groussard answered "Yes!; And most of these millionai.res consider themselves to be people berths at first. third, a'nd right touches remaining before occu­ Then Khrushchev continued: who believe in God. What is are up for grabs. pancy, it was decide~ to open "I think there is no God. I such a faith in God worth? We· Attar Candidate the new wing for inspection on freed {Ilyself long ago from such communists are against this." Last time we talked with Al this fitting occasion. a concept. I am a partisan of a Attar he mentioned taking a Activity Begins ." \ scientific point of view, and fling at varsity ball.' Al was AIlEach of the parishes in the science and faith in supernatural Gounty at first base for Durfee. Diocese will be represented by forces are irreconsilableopin­ Should the Fall River native th' ions which exclude one another ell' c 1ergy, t rus t ees an d 1958 nail down the initi<llsacl!;, the Chairman.. The meeting ,annu­ necessarily if one is consistent to Crusaders' infield would be com- ally l\erves as the "kick-off,~' for t:le ·end in' scientific opinions. •• po'sedthree quarters o~· varsity the Catholic Charities Appeal. :; , basketb;lll ·Q1en.Ryan, an'!! qp,-' Much' ,activity has' already So. Dartmouth' tak, the l!:eyst0 l1:e combinat.ion, beeneviderit in the' Special

LONDO~' (1"/'C) -:- A. pe~m~­

v.v ere Ai's team,mates, on the hOQP Gifts ·.. section of, the, Appeal. and "'yannis nent 'Africa Center is io be set squa4:l.. " , Hundreds ,of Representatives up in London as, one J;esul't: of .", Final boo.p statistics, released have ,accepted invitations from So.. D~rtmout.h last week indicate that ';Attar ;1 high-level Catholic conference with a 78,~ foul ~hQo'ting', per':' Bishop Connolly to contact,busi­ WY 7-9384 l1ere. Purpose of the cent~r ~ill ,. " nesses throughout the Diocese ~ to help the CathoVc mis~ion~ cylltage was second, oI'\IX, to Ro'n and 'solicit' their ,support, for the Hyannis 2~21 . __-. '. .: and provide a, focal ,point for J.iptak in that department. Lip- Appeal. Their contacts are now B'ritish Catholic contributions t<)k had 1m 8J.8 mark to lead being readied at Headquarters the Crusaders at the foul line. toward the development. ,of With half of the s'qu'ad' 'gradu- and will be distributed shortly. Christianity throughout' the Parish supplies for ,the Appeal NAGASAKI '(NC)---:-Plans at'ing, Attar stands an excellent were a,wakening continent. delivered last week and the are almost complete for re­ chance "of' moving' up' to the iQdividual Parish Committees five in the '58-'59 'sea­ construction of the historic starting son. ' are already, lending their effor1.$ to ,insure the ,success of their Urakami Church of the Im­ With the opening of the local parochial undertaking. ,T h e maculate Conception here. baseball season fast 'approach- _ Special Gifts part of the Appeal. In its 'day, it was the largest ' ing, a fayorable turn" in' the MAKES YOUR'

Catholic church in the Far East.• weather is the best thing that. will be. conducted from April 24 to May 4. On May 4 the l'arish On the morning of August 8, CAR RUN BETTER,

could happen. The month of Appeal will commence and 1945, it was' destroyed by the March was the poorest on record,

BOWLING - SKAliNG, -".' At New Car Dealers· atomic bom'b which leveled this the weather bureau 'listing· only conclude on May 14.

port city, of 1,530,000 people.

and ServiceStc:ttions· ~peeial Arrangements Foc . three clear days. A clear ·day in "t:~)-_lJ~~~n~~-'~~·:I· . .. . Statue Stands " .Everywhere the meterologist's lexicon is one BANQUETS Urakami church served a com­ wherein the sky in 80'per'cent munity of 12:000 C~thoiies-des­ free of clouds. cendants of the original Chris­ , There' were 16 days of rain, tians from ihe time of St. Fran':' 10 'of snow, and 8 fogJ:,'Y days~ tis Xavier. About 8,000 of them As Ii result, baseball team's got were killed by the bomb;" in very few sessions ,outside. A number of parishioners in April, thus far, has been more BURNER SALES I the church' at the time of the Your neflr:est l:Jl~i'l box is a F,r~t of the same, 5 of the first 7 days • &, SERVICE, blast, were killed along with being rainy. It all ad~s, up, to'''.

Federal "br3nch, office" th31'S their pastor, Father Nishida. , low scoring games in the early

open 24 hours a day (0 make 21 Wilbur St., Taunton After the atomic blast one season, with pitchers who have

portion of a church wall re­ saving e3sy"for you, No traffic. no been drilling indoors' for weeks'

VAndyke mained standing. A side wall, far ahead of the hitters who 'parking: no weather problem~, ,it included a broken arch and a .:. . have been handicapped severel~. •.....I-..~_u.-7..._ ... _a_' Withdra"'Mlls, are juSt as simple' statue of the Blessed Virgin gaz­ as savings 'payments. ing .skYward. 1 Familiar Symbols .~ This ru'in has grown to be a , • • • • • • • • for FRU ,a".-"Y~. familiar symbol of the city's des­ • •' . . . . d u' ,hi. coupo" ,arti..a . " . Rt. 6 ~t The Narrows in' NorthWestport .. truction. It has been pa,inted ;"1 EE/KIT se" ,. "d de'an,. 0" , • • • •1' . _FR ,....it .10'''''' a , \ and photographed countlCllll· ,Insured. . IOCcou"" e •• times. D:r IJ .,.8. ... : . , ' 0 _ : 'The Several years ago; a commit- , Go ,~ , 'En.tire Family , .v. .• SlGNt ~ ==~...:....;.:~::-..-._-:-_..,..== tee headed by Bishop Paul A. SaVIllP ." , Can' 'Dine' •.. ' Yama~chi of Nagasaki began -'gene;, _ Sf. & NO.·' -­ soliciting funds for the'rebuild­ ~0':lOml~~ ing of Urakami church. Appeals for funds were made 'throughout 'of fall lli"le; ,,' : . the nation, and in 1953, Bishop , And loaft •••• Yamaguchi ,went to the' United , No , No. States ~o ask for contributions. .• • • • • • • • • • • • WE PAY POSTAGE! , I As a result of these endeavors, , ~r Re.se'X~ti()Q~ , '. .... . ~. 8uft'icient money has been raised, ... Ph~ OS 5-.7185 , ·;.... ·~st.-po.id,~~dr!~~~~~elopes, ready to m~"'" to beJ!in construCtiOD of 'the Dew' ~" , , '''1 I"" . churda. "

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Soviet' Premier Khrushchev Says 'I,Think ,There Is No God'

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THE SEVEN 'PARTIAL SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS TO 'MOUN1' ,SAINT ~ARY'S ACADEMY IN FALL RIVER CYNTHIA FRANCO

MARY ANN' HUSZCZA

CYNTHIA FERRIS

Five United States Archdioceses Observing Sesquicentennials·

EILEEN BLACK

Father of Five Becomes Priest

PATRICIA MURPH¥

PHYLLIS PYTEL

KATHRYN

CARVALHO

Jesuit Sees Discoveries Leading Men 'of Science Back to God

LONDON (NC)-A retired of­ . NEW YORK (NC)-A worldDaniel Linehan" the s~ismologist cer of Britain's famous Cold­ , famous Jesuit scientist says con­ stream guards, was ordained to tinued progress 'will soon lead whose discovery th'at there is land above sea level at the South the priesthood in Westminster his fellow scientists to the re­ Pole, buriep under 8,297 feet discovery of God. cathedral here at the age of 66. This is the belief of Father ice and snow, was recently con­ He has five grown children. firmed. - Father Rudolph Elwes was "It will help scientists answer ordained ";y his long-time friend, Pope~ a number of unanswered ques­ Archbishop John Carmel Hee­ tions," Father explained. "Ice nan of Liverpool. New York, Philadelphia and lishment of a province of the is one of the most delicate inTAIPEI (NC)-Catholic mem­ Father Elwes studied at the Bardstown (Louisville). Dominican order in, the United bers, of a Chinese drama' group , struments we know for measure­ Beda College in Rome after re­ Two papal briefs of Pius VII, States, 1792-1808. To him' were who recently returned from 'a ment." tiring ,from, the British Army, "Now that we kn'ow Antarct­ dated .April 8, 1808, establishing entrusted the offichil documents European tour refer to an audi­ in which four of his brothers , ica has land beneath the ice," he the division of the original creating the new Sees, and ap­ also served during World War ence with Pope Pius XII, as "the added," geologists will be able Diocese of Baltimore were ,lost pointments of the new bishops. , II. One of his brothers is Simon outstanding event of our lives." to determine w,hether it is a Dr destroyed, probably by the Because of troubled conditions The 50-member operatic group Elwes, well-known British pain­ continent or a series of islands. French government. Duplicate in Europe, he ·realized that he 0 ter, who is now living in' the of the Republic of China included Meteorologists will have a clue eopies of the offiCial documents might have difficulty in getting three Catholics. The Holy Father United States. ' , did. not arrive in Baltimore until to America immediately.' He, told the group "The persecuted as to what effect the antarctic has on warming and cooling the August, 1810. therefore, 'had duplicate docuCatholics of the China main­ priests and, 80 churches in this earth, and how this effects. the 'Archbishop John Carroll then ments made, which he gave to vast area shortly after the divi- land are ever in Our U~oughts. 'oceans and earth's total water CIOnsecrated, three of the new friends in Italy and France. (It sion. We continually pray for them." . sufi'ragan bishops. The fourth, was one of' these duplicates that Miss Mary Yang Chu-chun, 22 supply." . In any case, the Catholic popu­ Father Linehan said "the most Bishop Richard Luke Concanen, Bishop-elect Flaget brought back lation in the United States has year-old opera star, remarked: significant thing" to ,result from the first ordinary of the See: of from France in the summer of grown to an official figure (Offi­ "To have the privilege of an au­ IGY will be a "greatly simpli­ . New York, was consecrated 1810.) cial Catholic Directory, 1957) of dience with 'the Pope was some­ fied, view of the whole of sci­ April 24,. 1808, in Rome, where " Philadelphia, See thing 'of which I never dared 34,386,351. There are 26 arch­ ' ence." Another Irish pri~st, Francis,­ 'he was .residing. - He never dream. It was wonderful." dioceses and 111 dioceses with "We are discovering that more reached his See city. He died can Father Michael Egan', 'was more than 49',700 priests. J'une 19, 1810, in Naples, where appointed for the new See of and more things are related," The ,cornerstone ceremonies "he said, "that they are first he had been' detained by the ,Philadelphia. He 'had been en- for the Baltimore Cathedral of NEW YORK (NC) ...:.- Msgr. cousins. Eventually we may be 'French military' authorities as gaged in pastoral work thete .the 'Assumption' of the Blessed Thon,tas' A. Donnellan has been able to prove that life originated • British subject. £tom 1802 to 1809. He was conVirgin Mary were held July 7, appomted a chancellor of the' .. with a prime parent, perhaps First U. S. 'Consecration secrated in Baltimore's pro­ 1806.. The edifice ,was dedicated New York archdiocese. The ,with' solar flares on the sun. Cathedral of St. Peter by ArchThe division of the country's bishop Carroll Oct. 28, 1810: He May' 31, 1821, by Archbishop , archdiocese with 1,500,000 Cath- _Then science .will discover the first See and the appointment died in Philadelphia July 22, Ambrose Marechal, S.S. Its olics, has two other chancellors, . one author of all nature" 'the 'solemn consecration as a cathe­ ot' four new' bishops was the' 1814. f~ve vice-chancellors and six asmost simple Being of all, God result of repeated requests by Sulpician Father Benedict J. dral took place" May 25, 1876, slstant chancellors. Himself." Bishop Carroll, beginning in Flaget, a Frenchman who was a ' with Archbishop James Roose­ velt Bayley otficiating. . ·1792, two years after his conse- missionary and seminary profes­ By a decree of Pope Pius XI, ceation as first Bishop of Balti- 'sor, was elected to the new.See more" In 1799 he was assigned of Bardstown, Ky. In '11'141' he' issl,led ;on Sept. 1, 1937; it was • coadji,ltor bishop, the Most had Louisville named as his See' declared a minor basilica. Prerogative of Place ,R.ev. Leonard Neale" the. fir.st , ,city. He was consecrated by On July 25, 1858, by a decree bishop to be .co~secl'ated wI~hlt1, Archbishop Carroll in St. Pat'" the prese?t hmlts of the Umted rick's Church, Baltimore, Nov. of the Sacred Congregation for Sta~es. dBIShop Neale had served 4, 1810. Earlier that year he h~d the Propagation of the' Faith, and the Archepiscopal See of Balti~ as ea, of Georgetown College journeyed to France to protest to , from 1799 to 1806. He became his superi~r his appointment as more was given, the "preroga­ tive of place," making its ~tdinary of the Balti~ore archa bishop, but to no 'avail. • GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BATTERIES archbishop first among all arch-' dlOces~ v.: hen ArchbIshop CarFirst Agreement bishops of the United States. roTllhdied .I';l 1815.: . It was during this visit that • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS The plans and supervisory e ongmal DIOcese of~altl- he managed to secure from, a­ FAll RIVER ,NEW BEDFORD HYANNIS NEWPORT mo~e embraced all the tern tory friend a copy of the necessary construction of 'the 'Cathedral , sUbJ~ct to t?e U. S. government. official documents issued in were greatly aided by a Prot­ T~e mcreasmg number of CathRome on April 8 1808 which he estant, ;Benjamin H. Latrobe,' who was engaged at the same o ohc~ spr: ead over such ~ vast' delivel:ed to Archbish~p Carroll. time on the ,erection of the U. S: tern tory ~ade t~e creatIOn of Bishop Flaget died in Louisville Capitol in Washington. Funds new Sees ImperatIve. " Feb. 11, 1850, in his 87th year. Replying to a request from Following the consecration for its construction were twice Rome, Bishop Carroll, on No- ceremonies in Baltimore the ·aided by a' state-approved lot­ vember 23, 1806, suggested Bos-' prelates' remained' for ~veral tery, at $10 'per ticket, (in 1813 ' and 1819). The cathedral's bell­ ton,New York, Philadelphia :md weeks in consultation with Arch­ ·Bardstown as ,the cities for new bishop Carroll: They drew up an shaped' towers are said to be Sees,' On Jupe 17, 1807, he'rec-' '. "Agreemene' for the unification similar 'to those on the Cathedral' 0f!lmen~ed the priests he would ' of Catholic discipline' in the 'of the Assump,tion'in 'Moscow. -'-~' , like to have as the new, bishops: tfnited States. It forms with the P~is VII, April 8,1808, ,by hjs Acts of the First'Natio~al'Synod ,' '-bulls '''Ex debito pastoralis of November 1791 the earliest Let thy heart officii" and "Pontificii muneris,", code ot' canon law' in' the Cath-' div~ded the Dioceseo{Baltimore olic Church in'tnelU';:S. ' receive and set up the' new Sees, apJlrov,Catholics Incr'ease. -" 'my words. Lf;lh~st dividend' on Savings Accounts 'J ing the suggestions of Bishop . ,The original DioCese of BaIti-' Carroll, and elevated Baltimo're more' was 'erected on' November ,Prov.4:4 to.an archdioces~., 6,1789 by a bull of Pope PiusVI: Bisho~ Cheverus Its ,'first· bishop, Father' John Father John Cheverus, a na- Carroll, 'who prevj0l.l:sly.' served nve of France' and a missionary' 'as Superior' of the Missions of' JEWELED CROSS' COMPANY •

among Maine's 'Penobscot" In- ,the United States and. PrefeCt 1'40. ATTLEBORO. MASS.

dians, was; named' first· ~ishop ~~postOlic,- estimated the' 'Ciltli:' MANUfAcruuu OF o CRUCIFIXES AH0,ARTICLESOF DEVOTION of, Bos,ton. ;He was consecrated olic population to be.'about'25,000 ~' in St. Peter's Church, Baltimor~, :in 1784. " '. by Archbishop Carroll, Nov. 1, .. ' There appear to be no'pfficial unO. , ' ~atho~ic population figures, fo! FOR'ECONOMY

He was recalled to France in 1808, the year of the first di"i-, 1823. In the, meantini'e, he had sion of the Diocese of Baltimore. EAt

Served as administrator of the, Ten years ,later, ~me authority ,Diocese of New York from 1810 reported there were '~at least" Meniber Federal . Member Federal Deposit' to 1815. While ,serving as Arch-' 100,000" Catholics but there Reserve System Insurance Corp.

'bishop -'of' )30rdeaux he. was', have ,been challenges of the're­ That-R-Rich'N'Yellow-Robust named a Cardirial ,Priest, on, liability of this total. " . " '. from 80 North Main ~tree'; Fall River, Massachusetts

Feb. 1, 1836, six months before Bishop Gerald Shmi'ghnessy', his death there. S.M., in his carefillly prepared A native 'of Ireland, Domini..: .book, "Has the,Immigr~nt.K~pt "Fall River's -Scho~l Saving's Bank" FARMS': can Father .concanen, was named the Faith?" comes' to the" eilti':' first Bishop of 'New York. Re,. mated total Catholic p~i>uiation 145 Washingto~ St. Fa~rha:ven' . siding ffJr"yearS' in Rome;' 'he of-195.000'foI' the! year 1820;Qt· , , Just off Ro'ute'6 ' ',' ' ' " served as representative 'foi :the, ~ sai,d, that there w;ere Some ,70",

This is a sesquicentennial year for five arch'dioceses of ' the United States. April 8, 1958 will mark the 150th anniversary of the first division of the mother see of Baltimore and its elevation to the dignity of a inetro- Bishops 'of Ireland and-' for politan see. On the same Bishop John Carroll. He was date, four new suffragan consecrated in Rome April 24, Sees were created: Boston, 1808. He was active in the estab­

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