04.18.57

Page 1

Revised'Liturgy

Attracts Cr'owds

o --

-

Rev. John P.Cronin

St. Patrick's Church; FaU River

All Anchor of the SOIlI, SlIre and Firm -

ST. PAUL

@

Fall River, Mass. Vol. 1, No.2

Thursday, April 18, 1957

Application for second·class mail privl· leoes is pending at rail River, Mass.

"Behold the wood of the Oross, on which nung the Savior of the world I" The Cross and Redemption have been're-echoing themes throughout the whole of Lent, but it is on Good Friday that they reach thejrclimax, for i~ is on this day the Church annually commemorates the Passion of Christ and His Death on the Cross. No empty memorialls this commemoration, but an ac­ tive sharing in the savIng merits earned by Christ on

PRICE, 10. $4.00 per Yr.

Two Priests Are Given New Assignments Transfer of two priests, effective as of next Wednes­ day, was announced today by Bishop Connolly. Rev. John F. Hogan, A.B., curate at St. Lawrence's Church in New Bedford, has been appointed Director of Catholic Welfare Bureau of .New Bedford and the Cape sidy, will also serve'as chaplain ot St. Mary's Home In New Bedtord. area. Father Hogan succeeds Rev.

Rev. James F. Kenney has William D. Thomson who was

been appointed to serve as a named administrator of St.

curate at Holy Famlly Church in . Mary's parish' in Norton last week. East Taunton. ·Father Kenney, who was or­ Father Hog'an, who was or­ dained to the priesthobd on June dained to the priesthood on Feb. 5, 1943 by the late Bishop Cas­ 24, 1945 in St. Mary's Cathedral sidy, served in parishes in Fall by the late Bishop James E. Cas- River until recently.

First Mass on 'Sunday

In Attleboro Church

I

, Easter Sunday will indeed be a most joyous one for Rev. Gerard Chabot, pastor of the new St. Theresa's Church on Baltic' Street, South Attleboro when he will enjoy the rare privilege of celebrating the first mass in the new $300,000 edifice for his parishioners. which to practice. disturbing' no Father Chabot was ap- one except Mom and Dad. pointed to the pastorate The present rectory, previously early in April 1954 and evidence of the communlty's extensive growth was swiftly indicated on May 3, when Bishop James L. COI1l10~IY•. granted permission for the bUlldmg of a new and larger church with s~ating capacity of 600 in companson to the inadeCIuate number of 350 In the old church. '. New St. Theresa's of ?ric~ constr.uctlon,. follows traditIOnal and slo;ple ll11es and Is modern. to the enth degree .in that the cry babies of the parIsh will have their very own "Choir Room," in

NONAGENARIAN BLESSING OF THE PALMS: Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Vieira, pastor of Mount Carmel Church in New Bedford, the oldest active priest in the Diocese of Fall River, is shown blessing the Palms at his church.. sun­ 'day. Rev. Luciano Pereira is at the left of Msgr. Vieira. .

Retreat League,

For Diocesan

Men Planned

Aloysius J. Kearns of the Holy Name parish in Fall River has been chosen president of thll Men's Division of the Our Lady the home ot Ell Mills on Baltio of Good Counsel Retreat League' Street, will continue to serve in for the Diocese of Fall River. this capacity. Plans for the organization ot The basement ot the church the diocesan league were made at

contains a new parish hall com­ a meeting conducted Sunday at pletely equipped to aid in the the Cathedral Camp in Lakeville efficfency ot the various types under the direction of Rev. Wil­ ot church activities. liam J. McMahc:1 ot New Bed­ Dedication May 18 ford, director of the retreat Landscaping is rapidly nearing movement. . completion and is expected to be Joseph P. Hartley of New Bed­ in tact tor the dedication date ot' ford has been chosen secretary May 16. eve ot the anniversary ot the diocesall retreat league of the canonization of St. There­ and James E. Fitzgerald of Fall . '

Turn To Page Nineteen 'fum To Page Nineteen

that first Good Friday afternoon. Nor indeed Is It a despondent and melancholic congregation who participates In the liturgy on this day, tor reflected throughout th8 service are the triumph ot thll Cross and the glory ot the Resur­ rection ' - both provocative of . hope. Richer Prints . In his retorm ot Holy Week, Pope Pius XII ha.s sought above all else to render the services In • torm most beneficial to the people attending, that they "may be led more securely to derive richer frult$ trom a living parti­ cipation in the sacred ceremon­ ies." To this end the ceremonies ot Good Friday have been slmpll­ tied and set at a more convenient . and devotional hour. Formerly held in the morning, they were attended by a mere handtul while throngs flocked to the less Important <though by no means unimportant) afternoon devotions in honor of the Thre8 Hours Agony. Now the liturgical service 18 to begin ideally at Turn To Page Fifteen

Solemn Pontifical Mass At Cathedral.Tonight Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D. D., Bishop of Fall River, will be Celebrant of the Solemn Pontifical Mass of the Lord's Supper at 7:30 torilght in st. Mary's Cathedral. The solemn ceremonies of the next three, days con­ stitute an invitation to all to come 'andparticipate in John J. Murphy, processional a' celebration of love and oross bearer.

unity. They care a public Prlesta at the Consecration of mainfestation ot the unity of all Christians with Christ and with one another through charity. The ,same sermon on charity and unity continues through the liturgical functions of Good Fri­ day and Holy Satut'day. Sacri­ fice. the highest form of love, 11 demonstrated by the commell\or­ ation of the Lord's Passion and Death on Friday and the Im­ pressive ceremonies ot the Easter Vigil on Saturday. But the somber tones ot the past forty days ot Lent cease at the glorious Alleluias ot the Mid­ night Mass of Peace and Hope on Easter morn. Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, rector of the Cathedral. will be assist­ ant priest tonight. Other officers of the Mass will be Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis and. Rev. John H. Hackett. deacona ot honor; Rev. 'Alfred J. Gen­ dreau, deacon of the Mass; Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, subdeacon of the Mass; Rev. Humberto S. Me­ deiros 'and Rev. Paul F. McCar­ rick. masters of ceremonies. Holy Oils Blessed Bishop Connolly celebrated Solemn Pontifical Mass and blessed the, Holy Oils at the Cathedral this morning. Assist­ ant priest was Rt. Rev. James J. Gerrard. V.G. Other officers ot the Mass were Rt. Rev. James Dolan and. Rt. Rev. Edmund J. Ward. deacoM of honor; Rev. Hugh A. Galla­ Kher. deacon of the Mass; Rev.· Alfred J. Bonneau, subdeacon of the Mass. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros and Rev. Paul F. McCarrick were masters of ceremonies; Rev. Adalbert Szklanny and ·Rev. Ed­ ward J. Burns, chanters and Rev. 0

the Holy Oils were Rev. Wi11lam D. Thomson. Rev. John E. Boyd. Rev. John J. Galvin, Rev. Donald E, Belanger, Rev. Lester L. Hull, Rev. John T. Higgins. Rev.· Arthur G. Dupuis, Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau, Rev. Wl1llam R. Jordan, Rev. Roland Boule. Rev. Ambrose E. Bowen, Rev. Howard A. Waldron.

Deacons at the Consecration

were Rev. John J. Hayes. Rev. William E. Collard. Rev. Joao V. Rezendes, Rev. Francis A. Mc­ Carthy. Rev. Aurellan L. Moreau, Rev. Raymond T. Considine, Rev. Edward J. Gorman. Subdeacons at the Consecra.­ tlon were Rev. Henri Charest;. Rev. Gerard E. Boisvert. Rev. Daniel Shalloo. Rev. Leo T. Sulll­ van. Rev. Henry R. Canuel. Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, Rev. AnthoIlJ' M. Gomes. Good Friday Bishop Connolly will preside at the Friday ot the Lord's Pas­ , sion and Death ceremony in the Cathedral' tomorrow at 5 :30 P.M. Rev. Arthur W. Tansey will be celebrant; Rev. Alfred J. Gen­ dreau. deacon; Rev. Walter A; Bu11lvan. subdeacon; Rev. Hum­ berto S. Medeiros and Rev. Paul P. McCarrick, masters of cere­ monies. Easter VlgU

At the Easter Vigil service Sat­ urday night at 10:30 Bishop Con­ nelly wlll be celebrant. He will be assisted by Rev. Ar­ thur W. Tansey. assistant priest: Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis, deacons of honor; Rev. Alfred J. Gendrea.u. deacon; Rev. W~lter A. Sullivan. subdeacon; 'Rev. Humberto B. Medeiros and Rev. Paul F. Mc­ Carrick, master of ceremonies.


l,Clft'~n

American Countries' Fi9J~t

fttnlfiltration' By'Communists . "

THII ANCHOR­ 'Thurs., April 18, 1957

2

Mell1l nll1l WClJsImOll1lgf-OIi1

Telke Dtioceie Census

PUJbUuc: OI11lDy Censor

Over Radlio, TV

Mass Now Celebrated WASHINGTON (NC) - A CHICAGO (NC) - The chair­ "survey of Bouls" eonducted in man of the Federal Commun1­ (NC) tors In battling communism. Per- Each Thursday Night the Washington archdiocese by cations Commission said here the Ambassadors from 19 Latin Am­ Ionally, lind as a Catholic, I 'more than 23,000 Catholic men American public is the only ,fJrlcan countries; luests ofth1l ,am very much aware that the At New eedford , Mass 'Is celebrated at 8:00 P.M. has been termed "a tremendous oil;y, were surprised to find local, Church's' help' is invaluable." , censor over radio and TV pro­ Thursdays at Our Lady's Chapel ,ramming and Congress has ,reporters tiring more questions Ol}e' 'ambassador,' however, In New Bedford, Father David J. auccess." The project was. sponsored by Wisely "withheld any power ot about communism 'anything e l s"than e .about ' free"ly adnll·tte'd the Reds al'e no Flem Inil', 0 .F.M . , announces. Dally Masses at the Chapel are the Washington Archdiocesan censorship over the programs 1.'he envoys, representing the immediate problem for his home­ land. EI Salvador's Dr. Hector at 7:00, 8:00, 8:45 and 10:00 A.M., ' ,Council of Catholic Men. The broadcast by radio and television Or aniz tl f Am I State 'we~e he~e o;~~arll;r::na 100ds~ David Castro noted communists and 12:10 P.M., with additional men, in pairs, called. at every stations." wm,.ightseelng" and economic have bee,n, outlawed in the tiny Masses on First Fridays at 6:00 dwelling In Washington, Includ­ George, C. M,cConnaughey, 'tha mission. ,Central American nation 'since A.M. and 11:45 P.M.

ing the White House, embassies FCC chairman, told the 35th 1932, when they falled "In a pusq ,

and legations. The 'leading questions:. How for'control of the ·government. Dighton Men Form' Walter F. McArdle, chairman , annual. convention of the Na­ I aerlous is the Red threat south \'The nlllitant and .devout of the ACCM religious activities tional Association of Radio and , of the border? What are you, Catholic faith of Salvadorans Ho Name Unit doing about It? ' Atty. Mllton R. Sllva, chairman committee, was in charge of! the Television Broadcasters: "Con­ gress knows that when the Notably outspoken .was Nica- 'has kept the problem under con­ or. the Fall River Board of Police, lurvey. In'remarking on the/suc­ laIlua's Dr. Guillermo SevUla- trol," he ,~aid. "We're especial.. lauded members of :the newly cess of the survey, he praised the government. attempts to control' Escua. He said he was con- ly proud of our Cat~olic Action formed. Holy Name Society of dlligent work of the volunteers speech and ideals it is paying :Who conducted the survey, and the way to regimentation and a Yineed that International com­ ~ youth organization. The Reds" S't. Peter's Church, South Digh­ dictatorial form of government." ',munlllm has a well-mapped "plan have never gotten a foothold In ton, for their courage and deter­ , the cooperation of the public. Mr. McConnaughey said the First returns Indicate there are . ,for the eventual con'quest of all the one age ,roup where they mlnation in fostering a true Latin America.", usually count' on sympathizers." sense of positive Catholic Action. "SUbstantially more Catholics public is sometimes "fickle" and than expected," McArdle said. slow In getting aroused, but '~:It has three, chapters," Dr. The Fall River attorney stres­ Bacasa declared. "First involves I led the ever-present necessity for The last official census listed a "serious and determined" in get­ :. control of nation's government; Catholic men everywhere to unite figure of about 240,000 Catholics. ting the klnd_ 9f show it wants, the second' Involves control of in the society which "sets so fine I an example for all to observe." citizen's groups, and, the third ,) w1ll be the actual assassination _ Rev. James F. McDermott, of 8.11 anti~communists'."· '

N.O.W.V. NEWS IERVIOE pastor, congratulated the men Church invaluable

for their interest and particlpa­ Col. Jose Cruz Salazar;' from NAIROBI, KENYA With tlon in the Holy Name Society Oautemala, said ilntl-Redmoves Itartllng suddenness the govern­ and said he was gratified by the ~Diocese there are, taking the form of "ed­ ment of the new nation of Sudan number of men parishioners who ucaimg the people In what com­ has declared that It is ta~ing ,recognized their duty to themBISHOP'S APPOINTMENTS monism Is, , ,and how ' , ­ it threatens over a large part of the IChool Belves and most of all to their thelll' democratic rightS, and lIft- Iystem-elementary and village fam1lies,' .lpril 18, Holy Thursday-10:00 A.M.-Bishop celebrant, Sol­ Ina theIr standard of living." IChools-created and maintained . Officers elected for the coming emn Pontifical Mass. Blesisnl of Chrism and HOly Oils. year were as follows: George Queried about religion's value there by Catholic mlssfonaries. 7:30 P.M.-Bishop ·celebrant. Solemn Pontifical Mass of all aD'ally In the fight, Col. Cruz In addition, the Sudanese Dutra, president; John Cash, Isf the Lord's Supper. ' 1aJa1lU" said: '~Of course, I'm Minister of Education has an- vice president·, William E. Flem­ , . April 19, Good Frlday~1I ~30 P.M.-Bishop presiding. Passion I)leaking only for my· govern­ lng, 2nd vice president; Edgar Dounced that all mission IChools, and Death of the Lord. ment when· I mention education Induding high schools, in south­ Standring, secretary; Manuel ~d economics as.titechief, fac- ern Sudan wlll be taken over by Pavao, treasurer; Michael Cu­ April 2-0, Holy 8aturday-10::30 P.M.-Bishop celebrant. Easter 'Vigil, followed by Midnight MailS. the government Within the next lick, marshal. Priests', Father D,ies, four' years. These are schools Arranlements for the Com­ April lll. Easter Sunday-Confirmation: which' were established by the ' munlon breakfast were made , ':00 P.M.-'St. Francis Xavier, Acushnet. Ions Officiate . Church at' tlle ,cost of- a great ' through a ,committee headed by 7:30 P.M. Our Lady of Pere'ptual Help, New Bedford. A IIOlemn high Mass of requiem dealo! money.inuchhard work Wllliam Mendoza. April 22, !londaY-Boston-Testimonlal to Archbishop Cush­ and even the'llves of missionaries. Wal offered for the repose ofth.. To Show Film ing bY the Knights of Columbus. lOui of Patrick o 'Nelll, fatl'ier of", ,Their value'is estimated at...more· , ' , than $3,000,000. ' A fllm on Palestine will be ~o priests, We~nes(S:ay' P1oni'~; , Faced wltlithe' 'ultlmattim of Ihown by Very Rev. Joseph E1d, IDa ill the Sacred He'art Ch\i:rch~ Education Mlrtister Ziada Arbab 'pastor of' St. Anthony of the Pall River. that Sudan's' government is tak­ Desert Church, in St. Roch's Hall, Rel1. CornelJus J. O'Nelll of ing"dlrect lind full charge" of Pall River, at 7:30 next Monday Holy Ghost Church, ~ttieboro, mission schoois, the country's night. W88 celebrant; the other son. Bishops have issued a protellt. The public is Invited to the, Bishop 'of Fall R~ver Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill of St. They made these points: meetiDlf, to be held under pa­ Thomas More Church, Bomer­ 1. Church property, cannot b' tronage of the parish conference BAN" FRANCISCO

y

Ca'tho.l.c Schools

S· d By New elze

Sudan, Regl.,m_e,

OFFICIAL of Fa II River

on

-

~~/~;;g:--

r:~Of~S~t~.~V~I~nc~e~n~t~de~p~·a~u~I~.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

let, was deacon. Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy of the Sacred Heart Church was liub-deacon. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.o., pl'eslded and bestowed the final absolution.

transferred. 2. The rights of the Church and parents cannot ,be Ignored. 3. Any transfer of the admln­ istratlon of ,Catholic schools shou,ld be' subject to conditions that can be aBproved by the Holy ' Mother of Priest Dies, See. , " New J~ove Afoot Sen Offers Mass Church authorities in Sudan The funeral ot M.rs. Louisa M. had been aware of the govern­ '(McCormick) ~Yd, was con­ men,t's I~tentions in regard to the ducted Tuesday morning rot 10 mission schools for some months o'clock· In the Sacred Heart and had arranged a conference Church, Taunton. to' discuss the matter with Su-, Rev. John E. BOYd, director of danese officials. On the day the The Catholic Welfare Bureau conference was scheduled, how­ and chaplain at St. Vincent's ever, the government unexpect­ Home, Fall River, was celebrant edly announced its plans to be'gin of the solemn high Mass of re­ taking over the schools. quiem for his mother. Most Rev. FOI; the time being, the govern­ James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop ment' move to requisition the of Fall River, presided ,and gave' mission schools' affects only those ijle final absolution. In ,the southern part' of the Other officers of the Mass were country. The maneuver was seen deacon. Rev. Howard A. Wal­ ,here as part of an overall plan dron; sub-deacon, 'Rev. James F. of Moslem leaders In Sudan's McDennott; master of ceremon­ capital at Khartoum to halt the ies, Rev., Francis B. Connors. progress being made ,by Christian Chaplalps to the Bishop were ,missionaries In' the south and to Very ltev.' John 1. Shay and Ipi'ead the influence of Islam Very Ii,ev. Hugh Gallagher. there.

Happy Easter

TO THE CLERGY and LAITY

of the

-

Fall River Diocese

'N~W -BEDFOBQ~S_ . ... . ~.

Jim and Frank Crosson

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Sage and Sand

USQ Provides For Spiritual Welfare \ Of Men in Armed forces

t~ode~~i f@st Pa~es Beside Austerii'~ce~ of the P@st

v

By Most Rev. Robert :J. Dwyer

Bishop

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Reno

Spare Fast, that oft with gods doth diet.

And hears the Muses in a ring,

Ay round about Joves Alt,ar sing,

So sang the great Milton in d.welt in the desert. And on pensive mood, In mood no less their coming to a certain aged pensive, though. hardly guaran­ . hermit, he welcomed them with teed to produce lines of equal great joy and, as the custolp is. set a little meat before them. For grace, do we pause to 'contem­ plate the decline of fasting in he saw that they were tired after their journey ,and so he made these degenerate times, Mother Church is indulgent of them eat before the n~nth, haUl', her modern progeny, The initi­ and whatever-he had m hIs cell gated discipline of fnst and ab­ he set down for them to eat, and stinence now in force (which mad~ much of them. And w~en only by a kind' of pious courtesy evenmg was come, they recIted can be called penance at aI\)' the customary prayers a~d certainly ,works no hardship ~sa'ln~s, and at night they dId worth mentioning on any of us. likeWise, Fasting as the moral equivalent "Better Table" of dining with the gods seems to "Now the old man was lying be going out of fashion. This in quiet by himself in a place apart, ltself might not be regarded as and he heard them talking an irreparable loss by crass souls among themselves and saying, 'These hermits keep a bett.er and who would quite cheerfully fore­ go the company of the Olympians more plentiful table than we who at table. Indeed, if heaven is a live iii monasteries.' And when feast, as it has been represented the old man heard it he held his not infrequently by poets and peace. And when day broke and mystics alike, and. for that mat­ they took the road to Yisit an­ tel', as Our Blessed Lord described other hermit who lived in the !t, though leaving the details to neighboi'hood, the old man said our imagination, most of us nor­ to them. 'Greet him from me and mally would prefer to sit down say to him. Be careful not to with company more 'congenial water the vegetables.' S6 when than such antique worthies as they came to the other old inan Jupiter and Apollo, with, their they gave him the message, And t'ndless wrallglings ove'r' 'golden he U11derstood the reason' of it, and kept the brothers with 'him apples and the fate of Troy, Fasting ilurt and gave them baskets to weave, 'himself sitting with them and Time was, nevertheless, when fasting' really. hm:t., 'T'ake the, working 'without a pause. Fathers of the Desert as a classi­ Bread and Salt cal instance in poillt. ' It is with "When evening was come, at admiration bor'n of our own all the lighting of the lamps he ad­ too intimate a\vareness of' our ded others to the wonted psalms, weakness in the matter of good and \\'hen the prayers \\'ere ended things to eat that we read, in he said to them, 'It is indeed not our custom to eat every day, but Helen Waddell's sparkling trans­ lation of their, writings, the au­ since you have come we must thentic record' of their austeri­ make a fea'st.' And he set dry ties. OUi' modern Lenten fare, bread before them, and salt, say­ by comparison, takes on the ing, 'On YOUl' account \\'e must characteristics of a Lucullan make better cheel:,' and he set banquet, and \\'e bhlSh ~or very out a little vinegar and salt and a trifle of oil; and when they shame. "At one time", we read in The had risen from the table. he again' Sayings of the Fathers, "the Ab­ began the psalter until it was bot Achilles came into the cell close on dawn, and he said to of the Abbot Isaiah, in Scete, and them, 'Since you are here we can­ foUnd him eating. For he had not sing the whole canon, because put salt and water in the pot. you must rest ll: little" being And seeing that he hid It behind w~,ary from y~ur Joul'11ey. . plaltoS of palm leaves he said to .When mormng was COIll~, they INSURANCE him, 'Tell me what thou wast fa.l.n would have left him at eating?' He answered, 'Forgive Pllme, bU~ the old, man, would REAL ESTATE e Father but I was cutting not suffel It, ,saymg, Rather ~al'm-leaves'and I grew hot: and must you order it to stay with us I dipped a morsel of bread In several days: I shall not let you ­ 7 No. Main ,St. Fall River, Masl. :~It and put it in my mouth: go today, but for love's sa~e keep and my mouth was parched and, you here another three, And the morsel did not go down that when. they heard that, they rose R. A. WILCOX CO.

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was compelled' to pou{' a little f~'OIll th~t pl,~ce before the day In Stock For Immediate Delivery water upon the salt, so that I \I ould bleak, • DESKS • CHAIRS could swallow it; but forgive me.' Back Biting And the Abbot Achilles used to In more sober vein, how per­ FILING CABINETS tinent to fasting is the remark say, 'Come and see Isaiah sup­ • FIRE FILES' • SAFES ping broth in Scete. If thou of the Abbot Evagrius, one of FOLDING TABLES would'st sup broth, go down Into the most celebrated of the asce­ Egypt'." tics of the Thebaid: "Certain of AND CHAIRS Will the like ever be said ,of us, 'the Fathers used to say that a dry

"00 down Into Nevada and se9 and even diet, joined together

them eating sage?" 'with laving kindness, shall speed-

22 BEDFORD ST. 1)1 t of Lentils Ily bring 1\' monk to invulner­ FALL RIVER 5-7838 . e ability." Or agam, "Where once came a ;~'~~;;;;;;~.;;;_;;;,;;;;;;;;;;.;;;_;;;;;;-;;-;;;;. ';;;';;;;;;-;;-;;-;;-;;-;;~~_;:_~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~_ certain old man to another old man. And he said to his disci­ DON'T DELAY -, SAVE TODA YI ple, 'Cook us some lentils.', And he did so, 'And steep some bread for us.' And he steeped It. And so they remained until the sixth hour of the day following, speak­ ing of the things of the spirit, And again the old man said to his disciple, 'Cook us some len­ • SAVE - BY - MAIL,". tils, my son.' He answered, 'It has been done since yesterday.' And so they arose and ate" their food." But the story, admittedly, could Illustrate either mortifica­ tion or extreme absent-minded­ ness. The monks of the desert, it is . pleasing to recall, were not de­ 'A N D LOAN ASSOCIATION void of a mild sense of humor, Open Fridav No. I Nor~h as the following anecdote testi­ ~WcA. Eveninl( till 8 Main Street fies: "At one time certain breth­ l'en went forth from the monas­ . A Modern Institution For Savings & Horne Loans tery to visit the Fathers who

WASHINGTON (NC) - "The USO provides an opportunity for the American people to demon­ strate their concern for the spir­ itual welfare a~ well as the social needs of men and women in the armed forces." This statement was made by Michael T. Kelleher, chairman of the National Catholic Com­ munit:y Service, in connection with the observance of April as usa Month. Mr. Kelleher Is a vice president of the USO. He said an example of the re­ ligious activities that public sup­ port of the usa makes possible Is the distribution by the NCCS, a usa member agency, of over a third of a ml11ion Catholic reli­ gious pamphlets and artl~les each

year to the armed forces mem­ bers. NCCS also supplements the work of Catholic 'military chap. lains by providing services and activities that contrlbu~ to the spiritual welfare of service per­ sonnel. Examples of this are Communion breakfasts. personal counseling, and transportation to Mass. Appointed by the bishop of a diocese Is a priest-mOderatOr for every NCCS-USO club. Established by the Bishops of the ,U. S. In 1940; NCCS Is an of­ ficial agency of the Church. HII Holiness Pope Plus xn has re: ferred to It as "an importan' apostolate, a real Catholic Action. whose principal scope Is the sal­ vation of souls."

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THE ANCHOR-:

4,875,200 Are- E'nroUed ,In Catholic Schools

Thurs., April 18, 1957

Right o'f School Rsligion Study C.ited By Pope

Stonehill College Students Prepare Hospital Patients For Confi rmation

Speak' to th~ average person van C.S.C., and have c.ontinued about college students and he under the direction of the pre· • WASHINGTON (NC) -'-With probably thinks at ,once ,of gold­ sent chapl,ain, Rev. William F. elementary schools leading the v.:~y,;the nation's ,Catl")oliq schools fish gulping. fraternity fr;volity Hogan C.S,C.' The work has been again have set an all-time high and' other activities equally light By FATHER JAMES I. TUCEK hearted and nonsensical. How­ , entirely, yohmtary. lind was even eni'ol1ment . mark, estiiJiate suggested ,by, the· students ,origin•. made here discloses. (X,C,W,C. XI';WS SI,:Il"Wlq e\;er, there are many college stu­ ally. The gr0l-lP comprises mem· ,About· 4,875,200 'students" are VATICAN CITY - His Holl;' . dents who are willing to take now enrolled in, all ,the educa­ bel'S of the College Crusader some of their time from the furi, ness Pope Pius XII. in an o'wiou.s tional institutions sponsored by which is any students right. to Club. ' CITY (NC) A VATICAN reference to recent deciSion of help someone less fortunate than the Church In this country. This The collegians 'who have be. Germany's Constitutional Court. themselves. 1s an :inci..ease of·698.5~7 since the great many of the· more stout­ come attached to some or their 'heai-ted tourists may be, dis-. said Catholic parents have a 1953-54 school year. . For a group of 40 Stonehill students have prepared many to right to have Echoo:s that cor­ Grade schools In the current appointed this ~ummer when ac­ Colle'ge students, their reward receive their first Holy Commu· respond to their religious con­ lichool year are enrolling an es­ nion but their project reached Its came when Bishop James L. Con­ cess to the ball on' top 01 the victions. ' timated 3.785,000 pupils, a jump nollyadministered the sacrament highest point with the conflrma. . dome of St,Peter's Basilica is The Pope made the comment of 549.749 since the 1953-54 'of Confirmation to a class of 56 tion class. during an audience granted the patients at the Myles Standish stopped. count of 3.325,25i~ Heading the work this' year High schools now have an es­ TIle ball -: lU"chitects prefer Young Christian D!2mocrat Union state Hospital.in the Theatre were Ann McGoidrick' of Hing. 0% West }3erlin. "At this time we hospital. The confinnation was ham. Katherine Knowles. Milton; timated 750,000 students on their "sphere" - surmounts Michael­ have good. reasons for emphasiz­ rolls as compared to· the 1953-54 the culmination· of three years' Leo Bottari, Boston; John Sulll· tally of 623,751. This represents angelo's famous dome which, 'ing this once more," he said. work by students'the:'college In \rap, Brockton and Jay Boyle, He referred, to the court ruling North Easton, who have driven to Vineyard Haven. an estimated Increase of 126.249. ~long .with the Capitoline wolf, . These figures Indicate that has become a, symbol of Rome. that the federal government Taunton to spend an hour and' The confirmation class In· Catholic grade and higll schools lt supports a cross, symbolically could not force individual states one-half· or more .each week to cluded 35 boys and 21 girls. Mu';' now eJ11'ollan estimateq, 12.5 per the highest point in Vatican City. to comply with educational pro­ give religious Instruction to the sic' for the service was supplied visions of Germany's concordat patients. cent' of"all -children attending by the choU' of Our Lady of Holy· " An idea of the size of the with the Hory See. • elementary and sec 0 n d a I' y m::.ssive· strueture"/beneath. the The ·students began th,elr work CrosS Seminary at Stonehlll Meariwhile, responsible Catho-. under the direction of FI". Sulll- . College. schools in the United States,' bail and cross is gained by their . This compares to an estimated measurements, Standing in st. lic quarters in Germany, al­

though favorablY" impressed by

11 per cent ten years ago. . Peter's Square one would nor­ the court's ruling on the overall

More Schools mally guess that together' they' validity of the 1933 concordat,

The estimated total number of measure about five feet in height. Our hearts welling over with Catholic schools In the United Actually, the ball has a diameter stro,ngly assert that such a valid

agreement cannot posl\ibly be thanks, In our Easter Masses we 8tates this year stands at 12,­ of eight feet and the· cross stands restricted by allOWing . states shall beg the Risen Saviour to 659. This Is an Increase of 481 over 16 feet. high. rights 'to interfere with the ap­ bless all our friends for your since 1953-54, accounted for al­ The ball has standing room in plicatioil of binding international wondrous charity to our Holy most entirely by 421 new' grade Its Interl!}( fQr' 16 people. And engagements. . Ichools. Father's Near East Missions. At thereiIi lies the reason for Its This rese.rvation, according to the Holy Sepulchre early Ea.ster . Thes.~ 12.559 schools are staffed being closed. . th~se Catholic spokesmen is apt by an estimated 147.210 persons morn His Beatitude, the Latin . Once a person has reached the .to make a sham of international as compared to the actual count roof by means of an elevator, a Patriach of Jerusalem, will offer of 131-:113 taken in the 1953-54 'series of eight'fllghts of' steps law. a Pontifical Mass; alid Immedi­ Observers in Bonn al:e con~ aClldemlc year. Once again. grade must' be climbed to. reach the ately afteJ:. ten 0; his mlsslonar. . ',schools. with a 12.617 eXjDimsion ball. 'From the spacious rooftop vinced that: the court's ruling . les will say Masses for you a,nd will have profound political re­ yours. Your gIfts (stringless and In the num~r. of teachers flC­ of St. peter's a flight of steps percussions bound to be felt in eounted for most of the 15.497 leads to the dome, then another special). memb~rship, offerin&s

the forthcoming election cam­

increase: . and Mass Intentions provide the flight takes one '- to the first paign. They fear state legisla­ As for enrollment In the coun­ means for the missionaries to gallery inside the dome. Here, ·ttu·es not filVo!"llblY inclined to­ ,try's 251 Catholic colleges and after one look. into the frighten-' carryon. ward the concordat as such will

universities, the estimated total Ing chasm of. the Basilica's In­ for this year Is 310.000 students. terior 238 feet below, the faint- ' interpret the ruling so as to

make it suit their o:-vn prefer­

'. This is an Increase of 21,907 HOMELESS oAND HELPLESS hearted turn back. ences. As a result, as Catho.lics IInce the 1953-54 total of 288­ FATHER KING has to worry about means to provide basic nt'ces­ Brave Go On 093. ' • .see it, the whole issue of educa­ slties-food, clothes. medical care, shelter. and other daily emer­ From there lmother staircase tion will be farther from a In the 118 major seminaries " gencieS-for the Arab Palestinians (now 900,0001 exiled from home.• this year, there are about 12.000 leads to the second gallery inside satisfactory solution than ever., in Israel. We,send a HOLY LAND ROSARY fl)r every.$IO gift. On (The Constitutional' Co. u r t

Itudents as compared to 11,623 the (lome. Then the real climb Easter thousands will look to him for help. ruled speCifiea!'ly that tIw state

in 1953-54. In the 180 minor, begins. Thel'e is first' a spiral staircase, then another which of Lower Saxony did not exceed

8em~narles, there' are about 18.­ THE CHURCH MARCHES'ON

100 stu.dents as against 17,955 In circles in'side between the inner its powers when it passed laws which restricted Catholic educa­ The &ood missionary bishop. vlsUed Kapplpa­

and outer shells of the dome it­ 1953-54. . , . ., .' ':'Milwaukee Conventllon self. After a short flight of som9 tion'in favor of secularized "in~ 'thaI. India; some months 8&0. 80 families '(about narrow wooden' steps, there is terdenominational" schools. The The NCWt departinent's an­ 218 persons) asked hIm to come to receive them DO\lncement 'sayS ,there are ·now • anoth~r series of steps and still federal' government claimed these Into Ihe Church. They were sehl.smatlc Jacobltes. -1.700 :elementary schools staffed another spiral staircase.' From laws contradicted the terms of He sent a mlsslonal'y wbo DOW bas 80· more by 89,QOO teachers. It also' says here one may go out onto a plat-, the Hi33 concordat' which safe­ fa;'iIIes labout, fSO persons) ready to reullite with guards existing state-supported . there, 'are 2,350 high schools form' where the most breathtak­ Rome. The bishop ,,'rites f.le must ,Ive them a

staffed by 35.000 ,teachers~ This 1ng~ panorama 'of . the. city of Catholic schools and guarantees chapel ($2,500) and the prIest I bumble borne ($1,5001. Please help.

represents an Increase of 54 high Rome can be seen. The Interior the establishment of new ories,) . The Holy Father toict,the Ger­

echools and 3.170 'secondary of the ball has, not· yet been man audience 'that "the state is

lehool Instructors since' 1953-54. reached.. . SPREADING 'HIS WORD These estimated figures are From the' panOl:amic platform ,not an absolute value." , We hope you are enrolled and sharing In the rich spiritual bene. .released each year In conjunction a lad~r takes the strong and the Ilts. Enrolled. botb living and deceased, .share In 15,000 Masse. Minstrel'Show with the annual convention of . brave 49 feet higher. The visitor yearly and lain many rich Indulgences. Perhaps you'll spread the

the National Catholic Education­ is now InsIde the ball. 432 feet St. Joseph's'Women's Guild of word to your friends. With· your lifts ,the Holy Father supportl

al Assocl.atlon, which this year above 'street level. If he should Fall River will present a· com­

many mission works. Membership for Individuals $1 yearly, $20 per· will meet In Mllkaukee, April 23 ask one of the other 15 people bined old time minstrel show and petua'l; families $5· and $100. to 26. . crowded In there with him. "Is It 1957 revue April' 29 and 30'ln the

safe?" he might tlnd little assur­ parish' hall, Brightman Street.

LAST SUPPER SCENE " Auto Workers Union ance In the fact that it has been 'Before the repository on Holy Thursday, twe perched there for 363 years "and ; Asks Education Aid It hasn't toppled yet". novices, both named SISTER MARY EUCHA­ COX ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-Call­ 'The round trip, from panoram­ RIST (one Lebonese, the otber Indian), pra~'ed Jng for "generous Immediate fed­ Ic platform to ball. not counting Home made tbelr I.onl -to Ond I "splrtual parent" to help eral aid" to education, the United time c:o stOp and breathe, takes eacb wltb tbe $150 8 year eacb needs for her tw. CANDIES Auto Workers Union has taken about 10 minutes. For safety rea- , ,ean tr81n1n" wblcb ber own parents can't rive. issue with the United States sons, and because the growing CHOCOLATES SISTER DOLOROSA In IndIa tent tbe slime Chamber of Commerce. 150 Varieaes, number of tourists ,wanting to· prayer to Our Sorrowful I\lothe~, as did SISTEB The UAW. in national conven­ ROUTE 6 Near make the ascent cannot be ac­ tIon, said It favors federal aid commodated. Vatican authorities EMILIANA In Sicily. Fairhaven Auto Theatre "to assist not only with the con­ have now closed Us access to the FAIRHAVEN, MASS. .tructlon of needed new class­ public. . ABDULLAH and lSSA, two seminarians of the Latin Pab'larch III room facilities. but also to subsi­ Jer~salem look to us for aSsurance.. We, need $100 yearly for eac" dize the operation 'of local school during his six years training. Any Installments Wlll do systems." n charged the Cham­

an'

Basilica.Tower Now C~osed To' Toudsts

RISEN

"

"

SAVIOR'~BLESSES

YOU

'Dorothy _

ber of Commerce proposed "all manner of short cuts and eva­ sions" and published dIstortions regardIng our educational needs. in ail effort to sacrifice education In order to relieve business of Its proper tax responsibilities to our nation's educational needs." ,The UAW asserted that "the short sIghu2dness with respect to education by some - though by no means fill - -members of the business community and of organlzatlol:lli such as the Natlon- , ai A6soclatlion of Manufacturers and the Chamber of Commerce 18 erImlnal." It said "U these groups Ilucc:eed In haVing their pol1cies adoPted, the consequen­ ces for the nation, Incl~dlng management. .will be eat.8lltro­ 1lb1e."

Cotnpliments To

o HAPPY DAY!

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FALL RIVER

DID YOU PUT GOD IN YOUJ;I WI,LL.

~'J2ear 5stOliS$ions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mlgr, Pet.r P. Tuohy, Nat" Sec'y 5erId all communications to: .

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the Yardstick

Men ·to Convene In Cincinnati Next Month

Moral and. Spiritual Crisis Facing Labor Movement By Msgr. George G. Higgins

Several years ago a distinguished Jewisl1 philosopher and labor economi,st, Will Herberg, in an article entitled "Some Aspects of the Labor Situation," stated that "the lack of a labor conscience is, in a sense, the basic problem· of American trade union­ Ism." The root or this prob­ accordlngli;. Neither group is a lem, he added, is that among sacred cow; neither can expect be immune from criticism, all groups-Catholics, Pro­ to Both an, subject to the same

testants and Jews-"ther8 has .}Doral law. Both are answerable been an almost total divorce be­ not only to their own constitu­ tween their re11gion and theil: la­ ents but the general public as bor activity," well, Both are living in glass In our opinion this appraisal houses; consequently, they ought of the rellglon-and-Iabor pI'Ob­ to stop' throwing stones at one lem In the anothel' in the form' of partisan United States propaganda. Is too pessi­ Or to put it another way, both mistic· . and shoufd start thinking more about vastiy 0 v e 1'­ their duties and less about their Ilmplified, We rights. For the surest way to are convinced forfeit the latter Is to neglect to that the fulfill the former, American la­ Not Labor Alone bor movement is basical­ As we have already indicated, ly sound from the pcincipal obstacle standinll the point of in ·the way of th,ese reforms', so view of Christian social ethlca far as the labor movement is con­ and, in spite of Its many short­ cerned,is not: the corruption or comings, a. tremendou!3 influence the ineptitude 01" the. limited vF· for good within the American slon of a miJ;lOrity o~uni(jn·of­ eommunity, ficlals; but rather the apathy Nevertheless there· is mOI'l and· indifference of a. .large seg­ than enough. tl'uth In Mr, Her­ ment of the rank-aliA-flie. . berg's criticism of the labor In all, faii'ness, .however, it movement, and In his Indict­ ment of the rank-an-file. to give should be addeci. that. this ~prob~ us serious pause and to wal'l'ant lem of railk-and-file apathy I.s a good examination of conscience not" confjped, exclusiv~lY . to the trade union-movement or-to--em­ all around. ployees' org'an!~ations, . It.· is· the " Serious Cdsh everlastihgproblerr( of 'every·or­ . . ' . '" , .... . . . ....,. The labor movement at· the ga.~iz~tiOil, ;"ttte e.v.~las,tlng . ;Il1'.9,.b:~ present moment is confronted lell).· of. den~ocra~:f .~ . how' to with a serious crisls-perpaps get free men voluntal'lly to as­ the most serious crisis In its en­ sume responsibllity, day in and tit:e history, It. Is basically a day out, for their own economlo moral and spiritual crisis and and political welfare and for the one that has its roots within the common good of society as a labor movement itself. whole. When we refel' to the moral and spiritual cdsis currently Final Analysis contfronting the labor moveDemocracy is based on a sense ment, we are not thinking ex- of the priceless dignity and elusively of the minority of un- worth of the Individual man, faithful 'servants In the labor coupled' with a sense of the de­ movement. who have been 01' wlll pendence of all men on one an­ be uncovered or exposed by the other-a sense of working to­ McClellan Committee or by the gether to make it succeed. It. is Ethical Practices coinmittee of a government of, by and for the the AFL-CIO. In the flnai ana- people-not as isolated or atom­ lysis, they are, merely surface ized individuals, but as brothel'S Iymptoms of a decline In mora.l llving ·and wor1{·lng· together, and spiritual values on t~]e part with a minimum. of external of the rank-and-file. This de- compulsion, for the common cHne shows itself principally in temporal ,good of all: . , a lack of interest in union affairs, It. speaks well for poor human . and in a failure to relate the nature that men should even try lJl'inciples of rel1glon and moral- to make such a system of gov­ tty to the everyday problems of ernment" work. For the demands the labor movement. which -the system makes upon it.s AdequateSoluUon citizens, one and 'all, are almost In this connection, it would superhuman. Indeed,· they are seem to be obvious that the moral superhuman in the final ·analy­ health of the entire iabor move- sis. For democrcay cannot long ment is forged in tne- workshop survive without the help of God of the local union, and that the or-to repeat a warning we have health of the uocal union Is already sounded .....;. ,unless the forged in the soul of the,indlvld- rank-and-fIle get down on their URI rank-and-file member. Con- knees with some regularity and 8T essional investigations, Ethical , humbly and fervently say theil' Practices Committees, Public Re- prayers, view Boards-these are all to the .r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj Iiood, but they can accompllsh ' . very little unless the rank-and­ tile are convinced that they have a moral obllgation to assume AND SON their full share of responslblllty for the conduct of union affairs, NEW BEDFORD In other words-and here we, ftlll'ee completely with Mr, Her­ Anthracite & Bituminoul I berg-the only adequate solution to the crisis currently confront­ inll the labor movement is a pro­ found renewal of moral and spir­ Au·tomatlc Co~1 Stoke"l.

itual values, The rank-and-fIle . Bag Coal - Wood·

wlll ha.ve· to deepen thelL' re11­ Charcoal

llious convictions and conscren­ tiously strive to nal'l'OW the gap between religion and life-more tlpeclflcally, between l'eligion and labor. Fortunately a great deal of progress Is being made in thl~ direction, but a great deal more remains to be done in other areas. '~:l

I

Bishop Hannon Asserts Americans Face New Kind of Barbarism

WASHINGTON (NC)-Deput.,. Undersecretary ·of state Robert D. Murphy and Archbishop Karl ;So Alter of Cincinnati will be featuI'ed speakers at the biennial convention of the National Coun­ cll of Catholic Men in Cincinnat.i, May 10 to 12. Archbishop Alter is Episcopal Chail'man of the Department of Lay Org-anizations, Nat. Ion a I Catholic Wei f a l' e Conference, which includes the NCCM, and is also host to the convention. The NCCM is a federation of more than 8,500 Catholic men', organizations. Martin Work, NCCM execu­ tive director, said that at the three-day. meeting there will be .0 workshops and three general sesSions with Catholic men from all sections of the country in at­ tendance. He said that the con­ vention chiefly will be devoted to leadership training W'orkshopa In Catholic Action 'and briefillll sessions by leading Cathollo authorities. Mr. Murphy bCgan his diplo­ matic service more than 35 yeare ago and is now the State· De­ partment's Deputy Undersecre­ ta~ for Political Affairs. His career has been marked by many assignments of high trust a.nd responsibility.

WASHINGTON (NC)-"Ther. than any preceding generatioll."Obviously." he declared, "we is a new kind of barbarism" tha\ flouts oonventlonal morauty, ihoul.d help our erring cltlzeu by every meana avanable, inolud­ Aux1l1ary Bishop Ph1l1p M. Han­ nan of Washington told Cathol1o ing psychiatry, but we must know employees of the Federal Bureau our goal - respect for the sano­ of Investigation .at their annual tity of thl law and its sanctioMo not their denial or disparall" Communion breakfast here, Bishop Hannan said: "We are ment." Thl Bishop also lashed out .., faced with a new kind of bar­ barism which essentially Is the the modern tendency of extend­ acceptance of one's caprice or inll sympathy to traitors to the the floutlnll of conventional U.8. "The worda 'traitor' and 'tre.... morality, This new barbarism, son' used to make one quiver by some, Is claimed as a refine­ ment . of self-expression. But with Ind~nation," he stated. basically it is barbarism,· the "But in recent cases of treuon denial of the law and' sanction, _the sympathy of the world w.. not ellcited for the people of of law." The crime rate was held up the country that had been be­ by the Bishop as "the index of tr~y~d ... (It) was· inflamed aNI directed allainst the sanotion im­ irresponsib1l1ty and denial of duties," "For the first time in our posed, apinat the penalty • history," he declared, "we have deserved· by traitors." "This is not simply misdireoted large areas of our cities that are unsafe at night for older people." ,ympathy," Bishop Hannan COil­ Bishop Hannan praised the eluded, '.'Thla 11 a well-direoted FBI for preservinll "the principl. assault on loyalty to our prinot­ of equality and responslb1l1ty of pIes. Thll assault denie, that younger people in the U, S, who there 1.s a fixed and unswe~ have reoeived more material prinoiple of loyalty to God anA benefits from the government country,"

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6

.®rhe ANCHOR

THI! ANCHOR­ thurs., April 18, 1957

WeeklyCalendar Of' Feast Days

· OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DiOCESE OF FAll RIVIR

TODAY Holy Thursday. GenerallY this date is the feast Published W.... ly bY The C.thollc Pr_ of the. DI_ of '''1 River of St. Apollonius, Martyr. He was 21 Bedford Street . beheaded' in If!6 after he had f.1I River, OSborne 1':1151

been accused as a Christian by PUBLISHER

one of his slaves and had refused Moat Rev. 1.m.. L. Connolly, D',D., Ph.D.

to deny his Faith. He won the GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGIR name of Apollonius the Apologis' Itev. Daniel F. Sh.lloo, M.A. Rev. 'ohn P. Drftcoll for his eloquent defense of hi. MANAGING EDITOR .Faith before the Roman Senate. Attorney HUlh ,. Colden, of which he was a member. His fellow Senators voted his death aentence. TOMORROW - Good Friday. Easter is a busy time of year for almost everyone. •GenerallY this date is the feast of St. Timon, Deacon-Martyr. Housewives turn out their home' and indulge in a regular He lived in the first century and cyclone of spring cleaning. Store windows and newspaper was one of 'the first seven deacons chosen by the Apostles. ads invite our. attentio'n to the new look in clothes, and There are coriflictlng traditions "My Fair Lady" s,tyles have made every woman's ward· concerning his life. The Roman Martyrology says he first preach. robe obsolete. There is m,uch concern about something ed in Beroes, then was madlt new for the Easter parade, 'and Christian Dior seems to Bishop of Corinth, where he was be the closest some .persons get to tl1e Christian idea of crucified by Jews and pagans. SATURDAY - Holy:Saturday. the Resurrection. The accent is upon newness--and per· GenerallY this date is the feas~ haps it is not a bad idea at all. of SS. Sulpicius and Sei'vilian.· If there is any I,esson that Easter bring. to us, it 18 Martyrs. They were Romans ..... whose conversions traditionally the idea of newness-newness of life.. By ~he faatsand are attributed to the prayers of aacrifices of Lent we have tried to die to. tlie faults and . St. Flavia Domitllla. They were fa1l1ngs in our lives,' we are "dead, and our Uvea are hid­ beheaded for the Faith about den away with Christ in God." 117 during the reign of Emperor Trajan. Monsignor' Ronald' Knox, in one of his ~ttle usays, SUNDAY Easter Sunday. laYs that he likes to think of the Christian soul u a fugi. By Joseph ~. Breig GenerallY this date is .the feasll , tive, a runaway slave, with the pursuers on his track. Com· , . of St. Anselm of Canterbury. ing to a cemetery, the slave hi,des himself in an open From· childhood, in all Ilkelihood, you have looked Bishop - Confessor. Doctor. He maUSOleum, so that when the seekers come they look upon Holy Communioi;l as a.priceless privilege. Fine and W.!'oS born of noble parents in around and say to oneanothelq "It's all right, there'~ Aosta, Italy. in 1033 and joined dan dy,' that is part of the story. But it is not the whole the Benedictines. He was named nothing here but dead bodies." ". . It is not even the most important part of the story. Archbishop of, Canterbury in Lent is supposed to make us dead to allaortl of evil, 1093 but was twice banished things, so that when temptation comes or sin draws near, Nor i s it th e ori gi naI stoI'Y. trom his See because of hI'S I'e• . Bht Christ ilnored that aspect we are -reminded that it is all right, we are dead to those' Have you ever thought of of the matter. What He did was listance to Kings William Rufus things. . , ' Communion as a ,necessity? to hammer away at our 'utter and Henry lover the question of And if we 'have died with Christ to sin, then rise In your mind, does it fall at need for the sacrament He was investitures of Bishops. He died with Him in a'newness of life. The life that we are called all into the same kind of cate- promising to establish. As related in 1109. His writings are numer· . ,ory as food, water. clothing or in St. John, the situation was as ous. upon to live is a new life, a 'Resurrected life. MONDAY - SS. Soter and 0 ' ,follows. SO it is not far wrong to associate Easter with new ..helter? ·Do you consider that·you must The people wanted to know Caius. Popes-Martyrs. St. Soter. things. The new clothes we' wear, the new styles'we see,' not be without, the Eucharist, what they were to do. "In, order an Italian, succeeded' Pope St. the newness·that people put on is a reflection of the new­ any more than . that we may perform, the works. Anicetus In 166, was noted for you may dis- of God." They said that their his charity to the poor and is ness of life that is the life of the soul. This newllfe Should . pense wIt' h . forefathers had eaten manna In. said to have beim martyred in be ours the year round. But since we are' weak humans ·a b rea t h·f n , the desert. What had Christ to 175. St. Caius was a Dalmatian yearly. Lent and Easter renew time and time again what ­ or with the offer? and a relative of Emperor Dio· we are called upon to live always. .', , beating of your His answer was that God, had cletian. He succeeded Pope St. . There is something good about a new beginning-it '~~~i!;.41~ heart? Do MaSl lent the true bread from Heaven Eutychian in 283. Though he ",a. and' Commun­ -the bread that would give. Ufe not put to death for the Faith. carries an enthusiasm and a resolution that gives strength ion seem as vi­ to the world. And what was this his many sufferings for religion to our hopes. This Easter brings a new beginning for all tal to your day bread? Christ replied: "I am the earned him the title of Martyr. of us. And stnce every Sunday of the year Is a "Little as getting· to bread pf life." He died in 296. ' Easter," this newness of life that we experience on Easter work? Necessity of Soul TUESDA¥, - St. George, Mar. souls. Sunday 'should be Tho u If h t s tyro The patron of England is . constantly renewed within our , such as these, It At this, the people murmured revered q,lghly In the East and leems to me, are forced upon us against Him. But Christ said West He was an officer under the moment we begin to look for again, "I am the Hvlng bread the Christian tormentor. Emper. the .rich ,meanings underlying that has come down fro m or Diocletian. He is said to have 'If God granted you seventy years of life,. statistics Pope Pius XII's~ revolutionary Heaven. It anyone eat of this rebuked the emperor for his per. wbuld divide it in this way. Thr~e years would be spent easing of the Communion fast. bread he .shall live .forever; and secutlon of Christians, refused to Immense Privilege the bread that I will give is My sacrifice to pagan gods and was in education; eight years in amusements; six years at the For.centuries, preachers and flesh tor the Ufe of the world." beheaded in 303. WEDNESDAY _ St. Fldelis ot dinner tab,le; five years in ~ransportation; 'four years in writers have exhausted language With all the emphasis that ' iIi rea d­ in futile efforts to find. words for repetition couldh prOVide, Christ Sigmarlngen, Martyr'. He wall eonversation; four t een' years in work" th ree years i . t d t H . the inexpressible wonderfulness nSlS e upon w a e was say­ Mark Rey, a native of Sigmarin. of the Blessed Sacrament. They ing. "Amen, amen, I say'to you. G h ti d 1 ing; twenty-four years. in slee.ping. ' ' unless"yoU eat the flesh of the ,eR' ermany. w 0 prac ce aw and became -'known as "the Ad· And how much time would be given to God? It you. have emphasized with -all their powers the immensity of the prl­ Son of Man, a~d drink His blood. vocate of the Poor." In 1612 he went to Mass every Sunday, and prayed for five minutes vlIege of Communion. Their ser­ you shall not. have life in you. joined the Capuchins and was ·,very' morning and' evening, you' would be giving a1;>out ,mons and books have bowed us He who eats My flesh and drinks ~ noted for his preachings against down in awe. My blood has ute everlasting and, the Calvinists in Switzerland. ,On nine months to G.od. Nine months out of seventy years As I said. that is one aspect of I will raise him up on- the last April 24, 1622, after one of his of life! the truth; But our present Holy day ... He-who ~ats this bread sermons, he was fatally stabbed

At the end of Lent, when we are all inclined to. give Father seems to 'me to be call1ng shall live forever.. . by fimaticswhO attacked him

ourselves a certain amount of credit for what w€ have our attention' forcefully to an­ Many of his dISCIples there­ . near Gruch.

other truth that is even more upon departed from Him. He done for God during these past ,several weeks, it,is a hum· important for us to realize. asked the Apostles whether they Catholic University

· bling thing to remember these statistics. What we give Pope Pius,. in making the' fast also wished to leave. Peter an­ to God in our lifetime is really quite small in amount and easy for everybody. is pointing to s'wered with his magnificent Wins taw Debate

our desperate need for Commlln­ sanity: "Lord, to whom shall we WASHINGTON ,(NC) A aha bby in calib,er. ion. He shortened the fast be- go ? Th ou h as t ward s 0 f ever­ team of law students from Of course, all of our activities of the day can and cause by so doing he would en­ lasting life, and' we have 'Come Catholic University' of America should be offered to God. That is what Christ meant when courage more people to receive to believe and to know that thou beat its counterpart from Yale he told us to "Pray always." Our work, recreation,' meals-- Communion oftener, and thus art the Christ, the. Son of God." University in a simulated trial at all these good things can be given to Goq. in the moining. advance in holiness. Peter knew what his successor the seventh annual Inter-law The Holy Father, I think, Plus knows-that Holy Commu­ · offering and' can thus be turned to our spiritual benefit wants us to recapture the orlgi­ 'nion is the central necessity for School Appellate Court Compet!· here. during the day~ But we are still obliged to tum our gaze nal truths which were set forth the life· of the soul "in order tlon The teams from the two lnst!. on God from· time to time in' our prayers, to reach out to In the first arid greatest sermon that we may perform the works tutions .met for final arguments .<Jod in this direct way" to pray, "which 18 the' highest ever preached about Holy Com­ of God." in the courtroom of the U. S. munion - the discourse given by (l\'Iay I repeatiny request 'for Court of Military Appeals. The spiritual activity of which we are capable. None of th\s can be done without the inspiration Christ .Himself In the synagogue contributions of Masses, Com­ contest was sponsored by, the at Capharnaum. munions; ,prayerll, sacrifices _ Catholic University School of and the help of God. He has assured us that He wlll not Sacramentid Need whatever you ehoose _ to a Law. l:?e wanting in IDs .goodness. It still remains for us to Christ's hearers marveled at second spiritual bouquet for Car­ The judges in the finals were find the time a.nd to make the effort to know about God. what He said. Jndeed, His state­ dinal Mindlizenty, who is in allY. Judge Wilbur K. M1lIer, U, S• and to pray to Him. And even the"best of us, at the end of ments seemed to some of His lum in the American legation In .Court: of' Appea,ls for the Dis· a long lifetime spent in this way, w1ll realize how much disciples far too astomshing to be Budapelit. Pie a, Il e Ilend your trict of Columbia; Judge Homer believed. They considered the Iplrltual offerings to me at 222' Ferguson; U. S. Court of Mll1tary we have occupied ourselves with many things arid hOW privllege He was offering down- Welltmlnster .Rd., _Cleveland 18. Appeals and Judge Alexander H.ttle we have given to God by way of prayer. Tiaht incredi~le. Ohio.) Holtzoff, U. S. District Court. . "

M....

The New Look

-

Eucharist As Necessary As' Beating' of Heart .

.tory.

we

_.1.......

-

Time For God

o


All Children Are Entitled To a Good Education By

Don~ld

J

McDonald

~

Need Redemption

·God Love You' 'By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen; D.D.

WASHINGTON lNC)-Clalms that another collection of "Say­ ings of Jesus" are "the lost Fifth Gospel" have been discounted by a biblical scholar at the Cathollo

University of America as an "In­

Ilult to Christians." Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan, head o( the Department of Semltlo and Egyptian Languages and Literature at the university, said to "label this work 'the lost Fifth Gospel' Is to falsify its place in history." The well-known biblical expert was referring to a 20-pag.. fourth-century manuscript writ­ ten in the Coptic language thd

was discovered In 1945 near Na, Hammadiin Egypt. The work was included in on. . of 13 volumes contained in an ancient jar unearthed by a group of Egyptian fellaha who weI" digging at the baSIl of a chalk cliff some 110 miles downstream from Luxor in Upper Egypt. Copied From Greeks These volumes had once been the library of a Gnostic aect. MagI'. Skehan described the Gnostlc's of tWa period as "pa­ gans whose main contact with Christianity waa a ly1nr propa· randa based on'documents fals.­ ly represented as Christian in origin." In 1955-511, Msgr. Skehan Wal the resident director of the American School ot Oriental Re. eearch at Jerusalem and super·

vised translation ot much of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The priest said that several of the quotations continued in the Coptio manuscripts have been . known to .sCholars in a fragment. ar)' form in their original Greell lince 1903. Professor Henri C. Puech of the Collere de France. Paris, whO 18 engaged in publlshinr the text ot the 2G-page manuscript. saleS the quotations were probab17 copied from Greek originals writ· ten about 135 A.D.

.ndeed for Catholics to recognize Are the children in' those rela­ the mind of the Church or dls- t1vely impoverished States en­ tntangle It from titled to as good an education as the quite dlverthe children In more prosperoul ,ent "minds" of States are receiving? lome Catholic I think a convincing "yes" can dltors and lecbe answered to the first question urers. It must and who w1ll have the callous­ t>e not a little.' ness to deny the "yes" to the secOonfusing for' ond question? •he Catholic The crux of the Chamber ot ""ho wants to Commerce's position Is not that keep his thlnkit questions the existence of the In g straight relatively Impoverished States; and 8 qua l' e d I t simply denies that the cltlzena ""Ith reality to i'ead Pope Plus of wealthier States have any kn: saying one thing and then moral obligation to help their hl"ar a Catholic lecturer '01' read less-favored fellow citizens. . a Catholic paper saying quite In the same week that the Loa anoOther. Angeles Chamber of Commerce I havEl come across two ex­ was preaching Its doctrine of sel­ ~mples of these contradictions flshness, and finding an 'outlet In recent weeks. for 1t8 doctrine in a Cathollo In the Ap.rllli issue of The Tid- newspaper, a message ·from Plul Ings, Los Angeles archdiocesan XII was being read at an Inter­ newspapel', there Is an arresting national Catholic Rural Lif. front-page headline. In big, Congress in Santiago, Chile, in black letters. the headline says: which the Holy Father,'speaklng "YOU PAY U. S. $2 TO GET of the natural right of man to BACK $1." own property, re-stated the Selfish Instincts share-the-wealth. Federal - aid What follows Is a statement principle which the C. of C. con­ from the Los Angeles Chamber ' tradlcts. Of Commel'ce attacking the idea State Obligation Of Federal aid to education. The In the Interest of the common 'tIdings offers no edltorlal·crlti­ good.. said the Papal statement. ~ism of the views contained in the State may Intervene where the story. As a matter of fact, personal property Is concentratthat newspaper has never been ed Into exaggeratedly large hold. overly receptive to the notion ings and may arrange for II. more that the Federal government has fitting disposition of property by any substantial responsibility in means of granting appropriate the area of education. compensation 'to the original In the context, then, of The owners. Also. In the Same week, Bishop 1ldings' historical position on the Angel Herrera of Malaga, Spain, matter, and In view of Its un­ ~rltical prominent display of a was writing this for the Ameri­ Chamber of Commerce statement can Catholic press. a statement lurrounded by more "orthodox" by all Spanish bishops: religious stories on its front page, "It workers and employees do It Is fair, I believe. to assume that not receive a sufficient salary by the newspaper Is not offering the adding to their.income a share in Chamber of Commerce's views as profits, It then becomes the obl1­ .n "object lesson" In how not to gaUon of the State. accordlnr to think about Federal aid to edu­ Its supplementary function, to (latioH. but rather as a statement correct abuses in this matter and, Of a position which Catholics by means of appropriate leglsla­ Uon, to grant part of the nation­ ~an. and presumably should, find tenable. al wealth to those classes and in­ The point of the Los Angeles dlvlduals most in need." Ohambel' of Commerce statement And, also in that same week. that under the Admlnlstra­ Vatican officials were expressin, on's present aid-to-educatlon grave concern over a recent de­ III. California tax-payers would clsion by a German high court pay $29 million In Federal taxes that Germany's concordat with tor aid to schools, but only $14 the Vatican was not binding, in million of· that would be spent on Ita provisions for Catholic edu­ Ichools In California. The bal­ cation, on the separate States In tonce, $15 million, would be spent the German Republic. for schools in other States. Here we have "States Rights" The Chamber of Commerce's with a vengeance, the same· 9Ppositlon to such a Federal aid "Slates' Rights" philosophy pro­ bill rests on the assumption that pounded by the Catholic lawyer, it Is foolish. It not vicious, for Clarence Manion, and certain oltlzens of one State to help the few, but highly vocal, organs of ~ltizens of another State. And the Catholic press In this coun­ the appeal of the Chamber of try. American Catholics. who have been readlnr In some ot Commerce, well put In The Tid­ tngs' headline, Is the selfish their Catholic newspapers all' tnstincts of the citizens of Los about the advantages of weak Angeles. Federal government and strong, Brother's Keepers' ultra-Independent State govern­ Now. what Is the principle at ments, are now told that "States' Itake here? What Is the prlncl-' R1ghts" In Germany ts bad and pIe which the Los Angeles Cham-' that the lawful Federal authority bel' of Commerce Is fundament­ of the Germany Republic has ally contradicting? It Is the prln­ been usurped. ciple which Pius xn, among oth­ Of .course. "States Rlghts~' in ~rs. has had to repeat oQ count­ Germany is bad. But It's bad not less occasions in the 18 years of because Catholic education is now _ his pontificate. It 18 the prlncl­ endangered by It; tt's bad be­ pIe that the rich have a respon­ cause It dimln,ishes 'the amount a IIlbllity to help the poor, that the of· Pederal authority needed to ,trong have a moral obligation protect and nourish the common good of a. nation-State anlt'1lom­ to belp the weak. It Is the princt­ pIe, if we want to carry It back munlty. ~ the Sacred Scriptures, that As·I say. It must be terribly confusing for the Catholic who "we are our brother's keepers," ObViously, before thls moral wants to think with "the mind principle (with social, politlcai of the Church" and who wants ~nd economIc applications) . can to be sure that the Ideas, con­ ~ applied only after a determl­ cepts and judgments In' his head nation of fact. Are there. in fact. corres,pon<l with 1"oo11I;.V.

t

7

Lost Fifth Gospel Claim Dismissed By Authorities

Davenport Cathollo Messenger

I think it is reasonably certain that most Am~rican Catholics want to think with "the mind of the Church" not only on religious and doctrinal matters, but also an social, political and economic matters insofar as these are af­ fected by 'principle!3 of mo­ rality. ' " some States In the Union which But in sOme areas of the are less aboundantly blessed than nation, it must be difficult other states with material goods?

THI ANCHOIt­

Thurs., April t I, 1t57

. ManF readers of Scripture are puzzled by the fact that be­

fore Cain bad kllIed Abel. and therefore sinned, God looked

favorabb on the gifts Abel offered Him and not the gifts that Cain offered. Why? The difference was not In theIr person­ aUtiM or ebaracter. but In their gifts. Cain offered fruits; Abel \ offered an animal. Herein WU, the difference. Since the Fall every man ill a sin­ ner and neec1a Redemption. Abel acknowledged his sinful state by pouring out the blood of an animal as a substitute for himself. Th. sheddinl' of the blood of the animal by Abel implied hi8 sin-state and tM need of Redemption by the Blood of Christ. The oUerlnr of fruita by Cain Involved no admission of guilt-in this he was very modem-and therefore no need' of redemption. Cain forrot even the earth wu ourBed; he came to God with some of his crop, acknowl­ edrin, God'. eJ:lltence, lolicitin, Divine favor, but not acknowledr­ inr h1maelf .. a linneI'. There Is no mention ot Cain', offerinr be­ in, the of Ita kind. as was Abel'll-he was maklilr no sacrifice I

be.,

ApN ib!l to all tbe appeals you hear and receive to "rive"

te tbll or tbat Institution or cause.. Contrast that with the HolF

Father'. 8oel.t, for tbe ProPa&'atlon of tbe FaIUl. Inasmuoh U tbll SCHlI_F II Pontifical and beloJ1&"s to tbe Vicar of Chrlat, w. must aid blm In Christ's way. Hence our pleu are built on .acrltleel not on "v1nr first fruIts of your profitt, but on ad­ mlUiq FOU need redemption because yOU are a &lnn~r. In otber word., If ,.OU help the Holy Father help 1311,000 mlsslonera lOU do'.o not Just because thel are needy, but because lOU aret Make a aacriflOl for Four sins not In Cain'. way but In Abel'. waF and Abel'l wa, lI'U the preflrurement of CalvarF.

GOD LOn YOU to ·C.W.H. for $100 for the love of God .•. to M.A.B. "This 11 my first earnings from baby sittinr <$1.16), I 11'&1 readin. about the Missions one day and thought that poor people in 'oreim landa GOuld use clothlnr more than I can-I am 11 ;yean old." ••• to J.C.W. "When my daughter left for the South Paciflo recently 1M .iv. UI a plrrY-bank in which to drop our penniea whenever w. thoulht of her; the same to besent-to you for the MI~ons-here'l tlw firs' 100 peanles $5." J.L. "God has been 80 good-here II $11. I am lam. and I have been very fortunate throu,h I'll the bad weather."

Th. God Love You Medal makes the perfeot Easter remem­

branc.. When FOU cboose to rive the Meul lOU remember not

oDlF u.. on. to wbom you rive the rift but also the Missions. We

wU1 .1D4 tbe Medal of your choIce when you send lUI four

nquN. and tb. correspondlnl offering:

Small sterlInr slIver medal Small 10k rold-fllled medal Larle starlinI' slIver medal $11

Lar,e 10k ,0Id-fllIed medal' '10

'0.

,a

,a

Cu' out th1I oolumn. pin your sacrifice to It and mall it to the Molt Rev. I'Ulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the ProP&iation of the Palth. 3611 Fifth Avenue, N.w York I, N. Y., or Jour DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV, RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 868 North !lain Street. Fall River. Mass.

A Happy·· Easter to Everyone in the Diocese From

Everyone at • • • \

\

SPEEDWELL FARMS It;E (;REAM LEO H. BlIUIt, Genera' Manager

951 SLADI ST., FALL RaViR - OS 5-7836

/


8

THE ANCHOR­ Thul'l., April 18, 1957

Feels Constitution Certain to Meet lime Changes

SpecialMass Easte.r For Trout' Fishermen WORCESTER .. (NC)-A special .' . Mass for. trout fishermen wlll be celebrated In st. Margaret Mary'a Church here at 4 a;m. on April 21. the first sundai iilthe. local' trout, fishing ·season. The Mass, offered aWlUally attracts hun­ dreds of fishermen. The church, 18 near ,Lake Qulnsigamond, a favorite Spot for trout fishermen. -

190 Mllli~n Russians Are Simple Slaves

.Vermont To Enact Law To Combat

CommulIIlnsm Repudiate

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Hun­ .arlan refugee who spent, 10 JeRrs in Russian prison camps told Senate Investigators here. he bel1eves'that 190 million per­ eons of Russia"s total population "are simple slaves." The witness, using .the assumed name of George BatOrl, told his Iltory through an Inwrpreter at a Senate Internal Security Sub­ committee hearing. He told Senate Investigators he was In 60 Russian prison camps during his Incarceration. In some of them, he said, men and women pal1t1cal prisoners were crowded together and lived like beasts. He said what he saw and heard in these camps convinced him that Russian economy would "face collapse" without· the use of slave labor and Imports from bon-communist areas. Bator! said he was released from a Russian camp In 1955, returned to Hungary, and fled from that country last Decem­ ber. He Is now quartered at Camp Kilmer, N.. J.

Obscene Books

MONTPELIER (NC) - Ver­ mont's lawmakers apparently want to make certain that. this state' has an 'effective statute NOTRE DAME (NC)-The ge­ against the distribution of Inde­

nius of the U. S. Constitution 11 Its "flexibility," Dr. Jerome G. cent literature.

- One b1l1, has been given the

Kerwin professor of political Legislature's final approval and

&clence at the University of Chi­

sent to Gov. Joseph Johnson for

ClagO, said here. Dr. Kerwin was

Publish Cl,1iriese' his signature and another meas­

one of eight speakers 'at a sym­ ure on the same subject has been

poslum' on "What America 'Gospel Commentary ~ands For," held on the Notre HONG KONG (NCr - What introduced In the State Senate.

]:)ame c a m p u s . " 11 probably the first complet6 Senator Fayete of Chittenden County explained that the' pend-. "The problems raised by mass Chinese language commentary on education, urbanism, science, au­ ing proposal In th~ Senate was Gospels has been ,published drafted so that Vermont would tomation and world-wide stabl11­ 'the the Franciscan 'Fathers' have a workable law on the books W seem staggering," Professor here by studies institute:' in case the previous bill' lihould lterwln sitld, adding:. "As the biblical The Fathers have just finished be challenged on constitutional Oonstltutlon has stood the rapid .. Chinese translation of the four , ,rounds. t!1anges of the past, I feel 8Ul'e with the commentary. The bill awaiting the Gover­ that it will be widely adapted to' Gospels Previously, they had published an nor's action Is somewhat s1m1­ fit the' changes of the future." volume' translation of the 1ar to a Michigan law that has The Interdependenoe of science eight Old Testament and the Gospels been declared unconstittulonal' and free government in the nu­ 11 the first section of the New by the United States Supreme, e1eat age were stressed In a talk Court. 'Provisions of the second , t.y Don K. Price, vice president Testament to be completed. The aim of the project is to measure would conform with the. el the Ford Foundation. offer a translation of the Bible Professor Kerwin .Bald 'the in modern Chinese, adhering as court's ruling which voided' the Michigan law, largely because it vend toward greater central gov­ closely as possible to the original reduced the level of literature ernmental control "has been .. texts. ""hlch could be sold legally to world-wide phenomenon for the

that which was fit only for JUVE­ past· 65 years In all countries."

CHICAGO (NC) - De Paul niles. It thus restricted the Nevertheless, he pointed out, "in University has been given a grant reading of adults to matter Ilult­ this country more local self-gov­

able for juv.eniles. .mment remalns-dy,namlc and of $32,500 and its law school has .trectlve-than in any other cl­ (N.C.W.C. NEWS. SERVICE) been given a separate gift of 1111zed power on the face of the CAMP KILMER, N. J.-Thll $5,000 In the annual contribu­ .lobe." Hungarian ref.ugee emergel;lcy tions to private institutions of , Talking of the U.s. Presidency, -has passed so this sprawling can­ higher education made by the the ,political scientist said the tonment :w111 be returned to the Chicago Title and Trust .Com­ FOR WAYNE (NC)-St. Fran­ Office has grown steadily In mothballs once again come pany Foundation. Loyola Univer­ ois College for women here has ,sity's May. 1. ~ength and stature since our law school likewise was The camp Is named for the been given full accreditatlon as riven a $5,000 grant. Constitution WM framed, and the power the President "may exer- , Catholic convert poet Joyce Kil­ a regular four-year liberal arts In addition, four other univer­ mer, who gave his life for his college by the' North Central As­ cdse by personality alone far ex­ sities and five other law schools teeds anything written 'In the country in France In the ranks Ilociation of Colleges and Second­ in the state shared in the founda-' • ." Professor Kerwin declared of .New York's famous Fighting ary Schools. tion's grants. which totaled tb1s "Influence ,of' personality," 69th during World War I. In Founded in 1890 in Lafayette $104,000. A grant of $31,500 was particularly tnrough the media ' the Hungarian emergency, the UNDJ, the school was relocated divided among 20 liberal arts of television and radio, threatens camp added new laurels to glories _ in Fort Wayne in 1944: It has colleges. to become a substitute for policy It -achieved In World' War Ix" been accredited by the Indiana Chester S. Davis, foundation when It was the east coast's bus­ In the presitlency. State Department of Education president, said in announcing the iest embarkation port for GIs. since its establishment, It is con:' gifts that "the privately sup­ Canisius Colleg8 Wins ,The camp was the first home ducted by the Poor 'Sisters of St. ported college and professional tD tne U. S. for 30,633 Hungar- Francis Seraph of Perpetual Ado­ schools are a fundamental part Basketball Award , Ian refugees, It reactivated last ration, with' motherhouse at of the free enterprise system. NEW YORK (NC) - Canislus November when the U. S. opened Mount 'AIverno" Mishawaka College of Buffalo was named for its doors to the vallant who tried (Ind''). Sister M. Evodine is the Business organizations must help to sustain these schools." the Sam Schoenfeld Memorial to overthrow their communist president. • ward at the eighth annual overlords, failed and then fled

aID1cheon here of the Collegiate their homeland for fear of re.... Air Society Hdqtrs.

Mo.·ray~s 'Basketball Officials Association. prisals. RIVERDALE (NC)-Manhat­ ~ , Mrs. Miriam Schoenfeld, widow Impressive Is the record of the tan College will serve as national CURTAINS of the basketball official .who Catholic participation In the headquarters of the Arnold Air DRAPES "-ed in 1955 and who had starred Hungarian' program. More than Society for the coming year. The at liaskl;ltball at Columbia, pre­ . half-16,911 to be exact-were '1QClety Is ,an honor service or­ RUGS' fIlnted the plaque to Father assisted In coming to- this· coun­ ranlzation of advanced students LINOLEUM "ward Glllen,·S.J., of Canlslus. try by Catholic Relief Services of the Air Force Reserve Officers 1636 Acushnet Avenue The annual award Is made to of the Ntalonal Catholic Welfare Training Corps. Manhattan Col­ New Bedford. Mass. • university or college serviced Conference. lege' is conducted by the' Chris­ WY 4-~861 b;v the officials association and Today things are virtually at a tian Brothers.', exemplifying the highest ideals atandst1l1 at Camp Kilmer. There of ethics, character and sports­ are less than 1,100 refugees st11l lIlanshlp In the conduct of bas­ In the camp awaiting resettle­ ketball games. ment.

Catholic Schools

Share In Gifts

Refugee Program

Nearing End

Fort· Wayne College

Given Accreditatiolm

Little Known Facts for Catholics

By turin Workers TURlN, Italy (NC)-This old Industrial stronghold of commun­ Ism gave a sharp set back to Red. hopes when workers at the huge Fiat auto works gave 114 seats on the factory's internal labol' commission, to CISL, the Chris­ tian Democratic-inspired labot union. The communist-domi­ nated CGIL won only 34 seats. The CGIL polled a total of 21.1 per cent of the_factory vo~ In the election In which 60,20~ workers went to the polls. Back in 1948 the communist, labor con­ federation garnered 75.9 pel' cent of the vote. The Reds remained In control until two years ago. Italian press reactlon has fol­ lowed, the usual range all the way from communist attempts to ex­ plain away the defeat to a note of triumph on the part of the right wing socialist and other moderate factions. The Vatican Radio commen­ tary on the election portrayed It as a real conversion away from communism. It said" that the fact should not be forgotten that eight years ~ere required for the change to come about. "Workers do not easily switch banners," Vatican Radio re­ marked. "As a matter of fact. the communists lost votes not because the workers have lost in­ terest in protecting their rights. but because they have found the two democratic labor unions (the CSIL and the left wing Social Democratic Union) organizations fully capable _of protecing them without enslaving them."

·-------------~~~··-·_·I

DUMO:HJr'S

PHARMACY

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Tlltll ANCHOR­ Tllul'l.• April 18, J 957

Problem Has No Simple Answers Says Jesuit

Berlin Bishop Gratefllli For Use of Churches

By Rev. 10hn L. Thomas S.l.

BERLIN (NC)-Blshop Julius Doepfner of Berlin publlciy thanked Protestants who havtl opened their churches for thtl celebl'atlon of Mass In place. without. a Catholic Church. The recently installed Bishop expressed his gratitude In hls first radio address to the people of Bel'lin. "Brotherhood under the com­ mon fatherhood of God l.t the ~hristian goa}," he observed. Without God, man cannot ltv. In a human way." • Bishop Doepfner said that Christians must work together to fight the anti-ChrIstian force. of the world. We pray," he de­ clared. "for a greater unity of faith among us."

We're deeply concerned over what we hear about the evil of steady dating. We have two children in high school now. Sue is a freshman and Jim is a junior. Both have plenty of "dates," It seems, and we haven't paid much attention to them 'sInce we tain acta (of affection) are. or know the boys and girls they may become. sexually stlmulat­ are with and keep careful ing, and they must face this fact check on when they must honestly. come home. Are we being careful enough? What do people mean by "steady dating" at this early age? MaJ1Y serious parents are ask­ ing these Questions. and I may as well tell y,ou "-"',,,,' '-1 at 0 n c e t h a t t ' ; ' ! i + 1 the r e are no ,:vi simple answers. ' " The best I can do Is lay down· lome basic prin­ ciples and spell out a few defi­ nitions. You will have to make the applications in the case of Jim and Sue. First and fore­

most, you do have a serious obli­ gation to' supervise the friend­ ships of your children. Although ;you rightly desire them to de­ velop social sk1l1s and conf1den~ in dealing with others, you must guide and protect them durinr this process, for they lack ex­ perience and mature judgment. Parental Obligation Only sllly, lrresponsible:parentl Insist that their children are ma­ ture enough to manage such re­ lationships without guidance. Second, in our soCiety associa­ tion between boys and girls i. started at a relatively early age. Some parents like to pretend that their children are sexless. For­ tunately, or otherwise. nature Ignores such pretensions. Your children do have sex, Ilnd it is important to recor nize that because we tolerate such

early association between the

sexes, the sexual drive is called to their attentioil about the sami

time that they start the practlce

of dating.

Since the personal expression

of this drive Is still a new eX'J)er­ ience, they do not yet appreciate Its strength, nor have theT ac­ quired the inner controls needed for Its regulation. Thl}>d, it follows that thi. 1a an important period for instruo­

tion and guidance. On the on.

hand, young people are striving

to assert their independence; on the other, they are meeting new

problems with which they need belp.

Finally, the term "steady da~ ing" haa many meanings. Am0IlJ couples old enough to marry. n generally implies legitimate ex­ clusiveness of friendship leadi11' to possible engagement and mar­ riage. Convenient Agreement Among young people who can have no thought of immediate ~EAD GOOD CATHOLIC FAMILY: Tenth annual

marriage, it apparently include8 Get Ford Grant FamIly Life Conference at Xavier University, Cinc.innati &. variety of patterns extendiIlJ WINOOSKI (NC) - St. MI­ has chosen Mr. and Mrs. Edw!trd M. Seghers Amelia Ohio from the convenient agreement chael'. College here haa been that a given pair can safely re~ abov'e, and their six children as "Family of the Year':' They riven a $30,000 grant by the Ford on each other for dates to the were chosen for exemplification of Christian virtues .In Foundation for the HungarIan exclusive affectionate, and inti­ the home and for outstanding service to the community. refugee student program th. mate asso.ciation of a coupl. Two of their four daughters are teaching Sisters and one achoolis now conductlnr. which differs in no way from A college spokesman said the son is studying at st. Gregory's Seminary, Cincinnati. (NO rrant, steadY dating amoni marriage­ given through the Insti­ Photos) able couples.

tute of International Education.

Clearly, this latter form 2a covers part of the board. room

morally dangerous and unreaaon­ New Method Is Used Notre Dame Director and tuition of the 101 HUIlJa.r1­

able since there can be no imme­ studyinr English at SL.

To Erect School Commission Member ana diate prospect of marriage. Michael's. As parents, you must carefully FORT WAYNE (NC) - The BALTIMORE (NC) - Father

distinguish among these differ­ 'first Fort Wayne building to be John J. CavanaU&'h.. C.S.C., for­

ent forms of steady dating. Male. "He is Risen erected by the lift-slab method mer president of the UrifversitJ every effort to retain the confi­ .. $400,000 . of construction will be He is Ilot Her." of Notre Dame and now dIrector denc, of y.our children and be of the Notr. Dame Foundation.

frank in pointing out to them Ichool for St. Henry'. parish. Is a m.mber of the newly created

Three stories high. the build­ why you are opposed to all forma May His Choicest Blesslnp Be .If of steady datinr which reuresen' inr will include 18 classrooma. Commission on PubUo' Controll UPOIl You At This J010U1 Upon completion. however, the in Higher Education. a rroup to mol', than a convenient' agre.­ Easter Time. ment to go places together over first floor of the structure will .tudy rovernmental controll

,which U says art being increaa­

provide temporary church fa­ a '1imited period. Th. Ingly Imposed on colleret and

Explain to them that you trus' cllltie~ for the new parish. ­ Under the lift-slab method of universitie.. them but not human nature. U The Ill-member comm1llBion 2a

they are normal boys and lrirla. construction, concrete floor. are they cannot engage in Intimate poured on the ground, and then under the chairmanship of Dr. of ATTLEBORO and displays of affection without lifted into place as sid. wall. are Milton 8. Eisenhower. pres~den' SOUTH ATTLEBORO of John Hopkin. University. moral danger. If they deny th1l. completed. they are either fooUIlJ them­ Ilelves. or they are under-d.­ veloped. Supply Recreation Finally. you will be wise to 00­ LOS ANGELES (NC)-Amb8l­

operate with other l1keminded parents in supplying some meana ladors from 19 Latin AmericaD

of recreation and entertainment nations attended Mass in St. Vi­

for your maturing chllden. Thla biana'i Cathedral here, Palm

i. your surest way of knowin. Sunday. They came here on a

tour sponsored by the Organiza­

where and with whom they are. Over 3,5 Vears Satisfied Service tion of American States.

. YOUng people must have some­ After Mass the envoys were

·thing to do. You can throw them received in the Cathedral patio

back on their own limited re­ by His Eminence James Franola

~ources. or you can heLP them find entertainment which you Cardinal McIntyre. Archbishop

of Los Angeles. During their

can approve. .tay here the ambassadors visit­

806 NO. MAIN ST., FALL RIVER OS 5-7497 ed local movie studios. universi­ Bishop Urges Teen Ager. ties and other points of interest. To Avoid Steady Dating,

Many Meanhl&" If YOU have been careful to

give them the necessary instruc­ tions concerning the .nature and purpose of sex. you w1l1 now bave their confidence when they . meet new experiences. Briefly, they must be given some under­ 6tariding of how sexual stimula­ tion and arousal occurs in them­ selves and in others. Thus they wIH learn ,to conkol their own feelings and to avoid causing dlmcultles for others. Nothing is to be gained by be­ Ing shy in this matter. Younlt people must understan<tthat cer-

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ST. LOUIS (NC> - Steady dating by teen-agers with no thought of marriage is inconsist­ ent with the teaching of the Church. AuxlUary Bishop Leo C. Byrne of St. Louis told students of Notre Dame high school that "courtship i. for marriage. not for enter­ tainment." He advised the young people to resist the "modern fad which insists on steady dating." He added that "lawyers. engineers' and others spend lonr hours In study and preparation for their careers. but many of those em­ barking upon the most important vocation of all - marriage ­ make little or no preparation."

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Doctor at Calvoty :reUs" Most Impressiv~ Story' By ~aty Tinley Daly ' . .A paragraph caught by chance in one of the Catholic. papers stirs imagination: "No doubt this Is cowardice," writes Pierre Barbet, M:D., "but I hold that. one must either have heroic virtue or. else fail to Understand; that one must either be a sain't or· ' \. irresponsible, in order to,do nan as ·the only support; the the Way of the Cross. I no awful asphyxia creeping on, when longer can." . . I ~ the body is straightened out

()

This 18 an excerpt from "A Doctor of Calvary: the Passion of bur Lord K,~m,+' Jesus Christ as <',,,.. ,.... Described by a Surgeon.". Having joined ' o the r parlsh­ ione.rs in infor­ mal ,"Making the Stations," a aeven - to - ten minute bobbing up and down the two side aisles. of our church, and the more formal' "Way of the Cross" on F11day evenings during Lent, we decided to take a look at the book, After reading It, we find it a must for Holy Week, For Good Friday' If you haven't yet read this book-It's on ma.ny Lenten llsts -"ck it up for Good Friday. It was, read by the author of this column several weeks ahead of Good Friday-but that day W1l1· always have more slgnlflcance·to laid columnist. . f or the If you d on 't ha ve tlDle entire text on Good Friday, take up Chapter XII, a meditation. and read the r&t of the book later, certainly by next Lent. The author, Dr. Barbet, stud­ led the Holy Shroud of Turin, equally ready to find it an 'absurd fraud or to recognize its authen­ tlclty as the actual shroud in· which Our. Lord was wrapped after His crucifixion. Dr. Barbet •tates that "the authenticity of . the shroud, from the point· of View of anatomy and physiology. it 18 a scientific fact," though · making no claim to provide a complete and definite solution &8 ~~ ~~m of the H. Shroud. Tying In his stUdies of the ahroud with Intensive studies of the Gospels (read in the orlgl­ nals) , interpreting the findings , in ,the light of his scientific'

knOWledge, bringing to bear his

training as a liturgist, the author

reconstructs for us the Passion of

Christ. He throws a searchlight

on much we' have taken for

Iranted, explaining the "whys"lil

a logical way. opening our eyes

to the terrible sufferings, mental

and . physical, of the Passion.

When Dr. Barbet's conclusions,

i.e. how Christ had died SUffering from ·cramp In all his muscles and from asphyxia, were set forth years ago to a group of high church' dignitaries, one of them - the then Cardinal PacelIl '-­ went pale with grief and compas.,. · alon and said," "We did not know; nobody had ever told us that," Suffering Described Dr. Barbet describes, for ex­ . ample, the bloody sweat In the garden of olives as "ciots of bloo.d," Reading the text of St. Luke in the Greek, he finds it more accurate than the others, for St. Luke was himself a phYsi­ cian and a good one, mentioning thrombos, or clot. There 18 an ~n~lysls of the mental anguish, ·.the hemorrhage, the e n I UI n I weakness. As to the scourging. marks are found' on the' Holy Shroud of more than 100 made by thongs which had two balls of lead on them, each of which left a tiJeed­ 1ng wound. The ones leaving only severe bruises were not recorded. The .crowning with thorns, Dr, Barbetbelieves, was more severe and painful than we are accUB­ , tomed"to consider: and that the' thorns were over the entire head. The carrying of the cross; the Impaling, when the wrists rather than the hands, Dr. Barbet feels aure, were nailed; the feet crossed left over right and held with one

against that one supporting nan in' the feet; the wound on the rlght side of the heart , , : all this you wlll have to read for yourself as the details' of the crucifixion are reconstructed, . Serene Self-Control In _his' purely scientific re-,' search, Dr. Barbet resorts to lOme' experiments on amputated , WOMEN ORGANIZE DIOCESAN RETREAT LEAGUE: Plans for a spirited dio­ limbs which are a bit grisly to us cesan r'etreat league ~ere made ata meeting of the representatives of the vl:!-rious af­ of the llaty but surely substan­ tlate his theories. filiates of the Council of Catholic Women at Cathedral Camp. Rev. William J. McMa­ This, "A Doctor at Calvary" is an impressive book. As said hon is diocesan director. Shown with Father McMahon from left to right are Mrs. above, dip at least a. bit of Good Ge0l1ge Oliva, pi'esident of the National Lay Woman's Retreat movement; Mrs. Mary Friday into Chapter XII-then Almond, diocesan chairman of spIritual devotions of the CounciJ of Catholic Women on and read the rest. One finds sound theology com­ and Miss Margaret Lahey, president of theFall River Council of Catholic Women. blned with medical knowledge. I' iana Charity Hospital of New tal in 1894. They recently re­ should like to quote here: "It is t ceived a Distinguished Service Orleans since 1832. They also evident with what severe self­ Award, highest award of the U. S. are on'the staff of the Lafayette cotrol, with what supreme dig­ Department of Health, Education Charity Hospital In Lafayette. nlty He dominated this passion 5515 La. . Sisters of St. Joseph ar8 and Welfare, In Washington.. which was foreseen and willed by . Daughters of Charity have stationed at the Terrebone Gen­ Himself. He died beCause He ~MARRERO (NC) - The West been connected with the Louls~ eral Hospital in Houma, La. wllled it, when, He was able to say to Himself In a state· of full. Bank Ministerial Association here consciousness, 'It 18 consum­ mated.' (John 'XIX, 80), He died in Louisiana has voted unani­ ,in tlie way that He' wllled.moUsly against a proposal that "In that human body, suffer- an order of nuns be permitted ~ 1ng and dying, the Divinity dwelt, assist In operating public hos­ It remained In this corpse. And pltal to be built here through It

EST. that 18 why, unlike anything else bond Issue.

1916 in this world, the Face on the' The' connection of the nuns'

with the hospital, the ministers

Holy Shroud shows us such se­ rene and astounding and ador­ aald, would tend to· violate the

Henry J. Feitelberg,Treasurer able majesty." . association's Interpretation of the

I venture' to say that, after you first amendment to the U. S.

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RIVERDALE, N.. Y. (NC) _ Charles E. Wilson, former presi­ dent of' the General. Electric Corporation, will head a 86­ member council 'of industrial leaders .which will advise Man­ hattan College in the planned expansion of Its School of En­ Iineering: niis was annourtced by Brother Augustine Philip, president of the Christian Brothers' institution. He said the project wlll cost about four mtllion dOlllJrs. .The expansion will include, in addition to new physica,J faclll- , ties. the establishing of new departments in nuclear' and chemical engineering. Mr. Wilson' commented that this represents "a bold and dar­ ing step into the field of nuclear engineering,''' He praised the Ichool and sald'the councll wlll live "new and rich meaning to the partnership - in - planning concept," '

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THE ANCHOR­

Thun., April 18, 1957

11 New Bedford W omen Plan

Cautions Against Mediocrity In Spirituality ST. LOUIS (NC~-Wam­ ing that this is no time for "mediocrity in spirltuality," Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis called for deeper Ipirltual formation of Catholic women. ·Addressing the annual Con­ vention of' the Archdiocesan Councll of Catholic Women, he urged councll members to give aerlous consideration to spiritual formation as a councll project. "Action merely for action'. aake" Is not enough, he added. "The deeper the spiritual for­ mation of our women and men, the more effective their Cathollo Action wlll become," he said. He recommended they Increase their Iplrltual habits by adopting a rule of life patterned after the Third Order of St. Francis or the So­ dallty of the Blessed Mother. Broadcast Cancelled The Archbishop commented on the recent withdrawal of an offer for the editor of America, Father Thurston Davis, S.J., to appear on a CBS "Church of the All''' broadcast because his program "might awak~n controversy." The proposed program. dealt with such issues as birth control, Clensorshlp, parochial schools and divorce. "If these subjects create ten­ aions between Catholics and non­ Catholics it Is because the ·non­ Cathollcs do not know the full facts, which in turn Implles that Cathollcs aren't able to give an exposition of the Cathollc point of View," the Archbishop said. He noted that non-Cathollca are afraid Cathollcs want to Im­ pose their bellefs on them. Re-afflrm Position . "This Is wrong," he said. "If non-Cathollcs understood the Church's meaning on these sub­ Jects. they would welcome such a philosophy of llfe and many, no doubt, would accept it. "That Is your mission. You are In the arena of life where you ean win peo-ple for· the Church. All may not agree with you. but they wlll respect your exposition of the Faith." The prelate said informed Catholics could play a more im­ portant role than the Cathollc press In leading others to the Faith. Other speakers at the conven­ tion, Included Father James Kel­ ler, founder of the Chrlstopheni' movements, who ampllfled the theme that one person's action for good can have far~reachlng consequences, and Mrs. Robert B. Mahoney of Hartford, presi­ dent of the National Council of Catholic Women. Council resolutions reaffirmed Itands taken against right-to­ work bllls and "equahrights" for women bllls and asked women to playa bigger role In aiding Hun­ aarilUl refugees.

Missionary to China Relates Experience The graphic story of his im­ prisonment in Red China was re­ lated to StonehllI College stu­ dents by the Rev. Robert W. Greene, Maryknoll Missionary, at a meeting sponsored by the Crusader Club of the college. FInally reprieved from a sen­ tence of beheading and expelled from the country. Father Greene related his experiences as a pri­ lIOnel' In solltary confinement. Charged w.lth being a "false priest and spy, the Number one enemy of the people's govern­ ment in tile Kwangsi section of South China, and poisoning ba­ bies In' his mission dispensary." the missionary twice eCllJ]Jed death by a firing squad after publlc trials. Author of "Calvary in China," Father Greene had served III years In mission service in China priOlo to bis expulsion in 1952.

Communion Mass May 5 Very Rev. William Condon,

SS.CC., Provincial of the Congre­

aatlon 6f the Sacred Hearts

which includes United States,.

Ireland and Japan, gave an Inspiring talk on "The Sacred

Heart of the Wo'rld" before the Catholic Woman's Club of New

Miss Catherine C. Cleare, a Bedford. member of the graduating class Father Condon traced the de­ . at the Academy of the Sacred votion to the Sacred Heart back Hearts, Fall River, has· been no­ to the earliest days and spoke of tified that she is the winner of the four Papal Encycllcals which a four year tuition scholarship have been issued, establlshlng the to Albertus Magnus College. The feast of the Sacred Heart and decision of the admissions com­ outllning the doctrine of devo­ . mittee at the college was made tion and reparation to the Sacred on College Entrance Examination Heart. He urged the members to Board scores find high school be confident of God's love always ICholastic record. Miss Cleare is the daughter of and to offer up Masses and de-. votions in reparation to the MI'. and Mrs. William M. Cleare Sacred Jieart. The Provincial recalled the

start of an Irish Seminary. in

Paris. It was established in Paris

because of religious persecution .

in Ireland and it was here that

the founder of the Congregation

of the Sacred Hearts, Joseph

Coudrin, was ordained secretly

during the French Revolution.

Today, Pollsh students in exile

.tudy in this same Seminary.

The business meeting, conduct­

ed by Mrs. Luke J. Haran, presi­

dent, opened with prayers led by

the moderator, Rt. Rev. James

J. Gerrard, V.G. The annual

Mass at St. Lawrence Church at

9 Sunday morning May 5 will' be

followed by a Communion· break-·

fast at New Bedford Hotel. Re­

CATHERINE C. CLEARE servations for the breakfast must

be made by May 2, with Mrs. of 1455 President Avenue, Fall Thomas P. Barry, Mrs. James T. River. She is the top ranking Dunn, Mrs. Frank T. Francis, senior and has maintained a Miss Jean McGinnis.

highest honors scholastic rating Mrs.' Haran reminded the during her foui· years of high members that the annual meet­ school. As a graduate from ing will be held at 8 Thursday Sacred Heart parochial school night May 16, at New Bedford she was ·the winner of ·the Sally Hotel and announced the nomi­ Tucker Creamer four-year tui­ nating committee comprises Mrs. tion scholarship. to the Academy. Joseph Kelleher, chairman; Mrs.

DUl'ing her. high school years. Alphege Landreville, Mrs. Ray­ Miss Cleare has taken an active mond G. Boyce, Miss Kathleen part in school life and has con­ Downey and Mrs. Louise Dumont. tributed to the success of the ac­ Miss Dorothy Ann Curry, tivities she joined. A debater, a .' chairman of ushers reported a violinist in the school orchestra, successful· party which her com­ a member of Glee Club, on the mittee arranged for the Cathollo llterary staff· of the yearbook, . Guild for the Bllnd. Mrs. Roland and a senior class officer she has Plon, chairman of ways and made an enviable record for her­ means, spoke of the Cotton Fro­ self. lic and style show to be held at Dartmouth Country Club at 8 Saturday night May· 4.

Sacred Hearts Senior Wins

Scholarship

AWARD FOR NCCW: PRESIDENT: Miss - Elaine Whitelaw; director of Women's Activities for the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, presents the Founda­ tion's first silver star award to Mrs. Robert H. Mahoney of Hartford president ot the National Council of Catholic Women, to; the contrlbution and assistance of NCCW in the fight against polio.

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Good Friday . Noon· 3 P. M. The Holiest Hours of the Year L Prepare to make these hou'rs a period of silence and meditation. 2. Encourage merchants to close during these hours. . 3. If you are working, respectyourempl~y­ er's' rights and dis,charge your duties .·si lently. 4. Suggest to all Catholic Action groups to participate in the proper observance of Good Friday. LEGION OF MARY DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

\


Hollywood

OIl1l IFO:Cl\.li!J

Forma'tioln of Moyie C'lubs

Proposed· By Prelate By William H. Mooring It comes (Deo Gratias) like an answer to ~y dally

. Bishop William A. Scully of Albany, as C.halrman of ,the Bishops' Committee on Motion Pietures,.proposes that 'movie clubs", be formed interest get Legion approval among. the laity ~ll over the sex for 'adults' while "Oklahoma", country. ,"These groups," for the most part, a delightful says His Excellency (Episco­ 'musical is declared ·morally ob­ p~ff.

Motion. Picl;',. forum in Rome' ROME (NC) ,- For the . second consecutive year a . Motton 'Picture Forum has bee n held at the Nor t h

Saints' Biographies

Now On Telephone

CHICAGO (NC) A new telephone service installed here enables Chicagoans to hear short biographies commem'orating the saints as their feast days are celebrated throughout tQe year, Known as "Lives of the saints," the service is under the direction of Robert W. Ward of Chicago. The . short biographies can be heard by phoning an automaU. recorded telephone number that 'can be dialed 24 hours ada" seven days a week.' I .... Separate service installatiorw are beini pla'nned for the con­ venience of people livini in suburban ,areas, Mr: Ward eaid.

THII Thu...., Apri. '18, 19!J7

De Pa!J1 To Awall'd Meany Degree

CHICAGO (NC>-George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, ,wlU American College in ~ome, con­ deliver the graduation address a' sisting of a study of fom flllllJl. DePaul University's nth annual two American, one Italian an'4 convocation to be held June &. one English: ~e university; conducted qy the Motivation for the forum wa.tJ Vlncentian Fathers, hu an­ inspired by the counsel of His Holiness Pope Pius XII: "The nounced. . world of the cinema cannot help The labor leader wUl be award­ but create in the world around ed an honorary doctorate of laws, it a deep field of influence, in along with Martin H. Kennelly. thought, manners and dl'ess of former Chicago mayor and John the people-even to the way in F. Mannion, senior vlcopresi­ which they live fueir lives. From dent of the Continental nUnol. this simple consideration there Bank and Trust Company. 'Mr. arises the clear necessity for' Kennelly and Mr. Mannion al'e studying this particular form of members of the university', art, that it too, like every other Board of La, Trustees. activity, might be directed to the TRIESTE, Italy (NC> ....:. The , • perfection of man and to the 18,000 Hungarian refugeea who Donovan FIrst to Get,

glory of God." fled to Yugoslavia during la8'~ Bishop Martin J. O'Connor, 'fall's anti - communist uprising Four Highest Medals

rector of the North, American the overwhelming majority of WASHINGTON (NO) - Witla College and president of the Pon­ whom are Catholics, are bellll the award of the National Se­ tifical Commission for Motion deprived of all spiritual «;:are. Pictures, Radio and TeleVision, Yugoslavia's communist regime curity Medal. Maj. Gen. WilliarD. added to the words of the Pope' has refused all requests by refu­ J. Donovan (ret); World War the particular motivation for the gees that priests be allowed' to n head of the Offioe of Strateglo students of the colloge as future visit the camps where they are Services, has become the onl, pliests. beini housed, according to re­ man in history to hold the na­ "As future priests," he said, ports reaching here. tion's four highest decorations. "they will be obliged to make Nearly half the refugees are President Eisenhower confer­ known, explain and defend the belng temporarily cared for in teaching authority of the Church areal of the country where there red the security medal upon him. in regard to motion pictures. In are priests with a sufficlen' but there was no presentation oeremony, at the request of the the concrete, this will mean up­ knowledge· of Hungarian to en­ holding the moral classification able them to hear confesslona Gen. Donovan. He already holds the Congres­ or' films by our'national centel'l and to preach. But the commun­ Iional Medal of Honor, theDiI­ and )n pal'j;icular that of the Le­ ist' troops guarding the refugee gion of Decency, the national campI have refused -toperml' tinguished Service Cross and the Distinguished Service Medal for center in the United States.... priests to enter, reports state. World War I actionl with the Dangers Noted In some cases camp cornman­ 42nd "Rainbow" Division and for In instituting a Motion PiC)­ del'l have reportedly made fun ture Forum for the North Amert: of the priests trying to help the other servicea. . Gen. Donovan's other award. can College, Bishop O'Connor, refugees, telling them that the, Include hil being honored aa a was including the American sem­ may enter the camp and then Cathollc layman by being named inarians in a program which the warning them that they w111 not by His Holiness Pope Pius XII & Pontifical Commission fpr Mo­ leave alive if they do. Camp au­ tion Pictures has encouraged thorities have even refused to Knight of Order of St. Sylvester. and In some places sponsored allow priests to attend the sicll He also has decorations frona seven European countries. throughout Italy and In pam of and dying, it is reported. Europe.: .' Two 'prlests from the Zagreb Generally referred to in 'Ital, diocese, however, have 'managed as "cinema cUlture,'~these studlee to give the refugees some spirit­ are attempting to/' give viewel'l ual aid despite the Red efforta more than a superficial knowl­ to stop them, l'eports say. The edge of motion pictures and their priests went to the barbed wire .problems. At the ,same time the, fence surrounding one of the ,II' WYman are designed to 'give the publio .camps where they heard the ~ 3-6592 an educated ,defense against the confessions of refugees kneelllll dangers contained In bad or on the other side. C:HARLES F. VARGAS mediocre films. ' 254 ROCKDALI AVENUI . The four films shown were Prayer. Booklet NEW BEDFORD, MASS. "The Mountaln,"'''The Prisoner," HUNTINGTON (NC) - The "II Tetto" (The 'Roof) and "Giant." The forum. followed the third issue of a booklet called simple pattern' of viewing the 'MY Daily Visitor haa been pub­ film, foliowed by discussion. A lished here by Our Sunday V1a1­ printed manual gave a synopsis tor· Press. The bookletcontaina of the plot,' a comment and .. , meditations for each day of the suggested topic. for discussion. month and the complete· text of Moderator of the discussions WILlJ the Mass for Sundays and hal, Professor Gian- Luigi Rondl, of daYI. Gregorian University, a 'film crt: tic for Italian. newspaperl and magazines.

pal head of the National Legion jectionable in part '",or all' be­ of Decency) "ought to be, formed cause· of .brle,f lapses into sugges­ among students in Catholic high tiveness?" These and simllar schoois and colleges and among questions may abo,:\nd. Resolve Differences adults who band together in their own parishes". A much needed guide to con­ The object"is to be "Intensive structive discussion of such par­ study of the artistic and moral ticulars must, it would appear, values embodied in the films they come from. or through, the and their children are asked to clergy. Yet we must face this. patronize at their neighborhood Not all priests have yet afforded theaters". If this idea gets off to the National Legion of Decency the right start these "movie the active' interest and support clubs" can become 'mighty inter­ it deserves and 'needs: Some ap­ esting as well as morally ben,efl- palling'instances of clerical in­ cia\. ' difference, even casual'mlslnfor­ For several years past, this mation have been brought to my writer-ooJ'tleWhat alone, and' notice by"people' such as exist in with cons~quent caution-has almost every parish. I am think-' ventured every now and then, to ing of zealous. film-wise Catho­ urge just such an idea. Last July. lics who appreciate the poweto In outlining a five point' plan, I movies and TV· exercise over us said I had begun to pray dally all and wish fo serve' God by for (1), an authorized Legion of trying to elevate and educate Decency comlllittee under lively -movie tastes. At first "movie club" discus­ spiritual guidance in every dio­ sions may appear in some in­ cese of the land; (2) active liai­ son a,nd discussion between such stances to create disputes be­ tween Cathollc and Cathollc as , committees and all parish organ­ Izations to set up a complete net- to what is or is ·not immoral in 'work of up-to-date information the movies. If experience hal taught me anything it is this. on films and TV. III this way na­ tional Catholic 'organizations however. Such differences of (Bishop Scully now mentions the opinion almost invariably resolve NCCM and the NCCW), on the themselves, under discussion, in-­ local level might bind together to questions of interpretation. organizations of youths and Nearly a-lways one finds that it is what an indiVidual has seen adults to support 'morally whole­ some entertainment as well al in the film that makes the dif­ with-hold Catholic support from ference. There is seldom any entertainment that is morally dispute as to moral principles. I have yet to hear two Catholios bad. argue that we are free to enjoy' Affirmative Approach and encourage evil that il pro­ Bishop Scully perceives that jected on the movie screen for "too often there has seemed to its own sake. be, no outlet in our parishes for The National Legion of Decen­ the immense l'esources'of zeal, cy might well deVise, in the Initiative and goodwill to be interests'of uniform and inform­ found among the laity". His Ex­ ed discussion, a course of stUdy cellency recogniz'es also that "In for the' prOpOsed "movie clubs" the case of immoral productions, which Bishop Scully with timeli­ the Legion's appraisal must nec- . ness suggests and for the success essarilybe condemnatory and of which I, with thanksgiving. negative". This has created e1"1'O­ ·begin '8 dally prayer.' neous impressions that the Le-' gion is a negative, censorious in­ Church Of The Air fluence when, in fact as Bishop NEW YORK (NC) - Father Scully explains, "its appraisal of James C,onroy, of Our Sunday the majority of films is affilma- Visitor, national Catholic news­ , tvle". "It is luminously clear that paper published in· Huntington. further affirmative work badly Ind., will speak on the "Church' o needs to be done", he says. The of the Air" on Easter Sunday. "movie club" idea, successful ,in' 9:39 to 10 a.m., EST, over CBS many othei' countries but sadiy radio network. His" toplo ii, lagging behind here in the USA, . "Youth and Easter." ­ may help to start that work and . Fine ~ecord so strengthen the position of the Anti. Bias Bill JERSEY CITY (NC) - FulNational Legion of Decency. MONTPELIER (NC) - A blll bright Awards for graduate study Where does the work begin? How do local "movie clubs" start crimination has been approved abroad in .1957-58 have been their discussions? Perhaps a first by the Senate and sent to the given to two seniors at St. Peter's step might be towards a more House of Repre~entatlves in the College here. Since the graduate complete understanding of the Vermont Legislature. The mel',s- scholarship department w a • Legion of Decency, how and by ure forbids owners or oPerators of >, founded In 1953, students at th~. public accommodations to refuse college have been awarded eight whom it was started, its person­ nel and the methods employed, to sei've any person because of ' 'F u 1b l' i g h t scholarships, two to classify films. How the Legion' race, color, creed or national Woodrow Wilson fellowships and one Rhodes scholarship. ratings are intended to apply and . origin. . with precisely what authority.

case of condemned or morally

objectionable pictures, could

come after. In any discussion of

mOVies, specifics' 'are' SUt'e to

arOUSe disparate opinions. . The "movie club" to be suc­

cessful and productive, needs the

guidance, of officers with some

know-hOW as well as witlCsym­

pathetic respect for .frankly di­

vergent views. At any such "club"

discussion I would expect ques­

tions like these. "Why was o an'

illicit affair presented in some

Surgical' AppUfi<IJl!1l(C(l Co. detail in 'The Man In the -Grey Flannel Suit' without· arousing PhalJ'macy , Legion objections while in "De­ HeclI'ol!1lg And Co• . signing Woman", the mere in­

trusion of 'suggestive situations' . Arrtl'rClfl" J. SflflaI, PtONJ• .gives cause for objection"? --~ Or, '''How doell a realistic . '1I'1El. O§ 5-1&129 202 and 206 IOC~< d.rama like "Written On, the Wind", with highly g,ccentu.ated

IJappy Easter ·TO 'ALL OF"yOU' .FROM~ALL OF US

n.

ANCHOR-I

Clhii«:agoGII1IS (Qn Hear

Spiritual Care Denied

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\ Conege Honor

Faithful Should Master Meaning 0f Spirit 7

By F. J. Sheed

When I was very new as a street corner speaker for the CathQlic Evidence Guild, a questioner asked me what I meant by spirit. I answered "A spirit has no shape, has no size, has no color, has no weight, does not occupy space." He said "That's the best de­ finition of nothing I ever But slow careful th1nklng here beard." Which was very rea­ wlll pay dividends later. This Is not planned as lit hand­ iOnable of him. I had !riven aeries iallop over the field of revela­

Miss Jean Caya of Fall River bas been elected vic.e'-president ot Sigma- Phi Sigma, honor so­ Illety, at Salve Regina College, Newport, R.. I. Purpose of the society is to provide a clear realization of the 'Sisters of Mercy ideal of educa­ tion and to bind Mercy colleges toaether in a closer union, Mem­ bers are chosen on the basis of Icholarshlp, fidelity and service to the college.

rs

him a list of thlJigs spirit not, tion. It ill an effort to teach the­ Fall River Boy Wins

without a hJnt as to what It is. ology. In theology spirit is not only a Speaking Contest

with our own spirit, key-word, it is the key-word. Our theWeonebeiin we know best. Spirit is John Franco of 782 Plymouth Lord said to Sa­ the element In us by which we Avenue; Fall River, a freshman maritan woman, know and love, by which there­ "God Is a spir­ fore we .decide. Our body know. at De LaSalle Academy,'Newport, it". Unless we nothing; it loves nothing (bodily won first place In the public know the mean­ pleasures are not enjoy'ed by the ipeaking contest at the 18th an­ Ing of the word . body; it reacts to them phYsical­ nual Rhode Island Model Con­ Ilplrlt, we dQ ly, with heightened pulse for in­ gress. The congress' was held at not know what lItance 'or acid stomach; but it 11 the University of Rhode Island, He said. It Is as the knowing mind that enjoys and more than 100 high school though He had the reactions or dislikes them); .tudents from 16 schools In Ilald "God Is a -". Which tellll it nothing (though our Rhode Island participated in the us nothing at all. The same Is wllldecides decide In favor of things event. John Is -an altar boy at true of every doctrine; they all thatmay give us bodily pleasure). SB. Peter and Paul Church. Include spirit. In theology we . SpIrit DIU! Power are studying spirit all the time. Spirit knows and loves. A And the mind with which we,are .lightly longer look oat ourselves rail River Parish School Iltudylng It Is a spirit too. reveals that spirit has power, too. Mothers To Meef Sunday Master Idea is the mind that splits the . Espirito Santo PTA of Fall We simply must know what it It atom; the atom cannot split the is. And I don't mean just a mind, It cannot even split Itself, , :RIver will meet at 7:30 Sunday definition. We must master the It does not know about its own night In the parish hall. Third , Grade' mothers will be in charge idea, make It our own, learn to electrons. of the social hour. It is import­ handle It comfortably and skU­ Here our Imagination inter­ fully. That 18 why 1 shall dwell venes rebelliously. Almost from ant that Eight Grade mothers upon it rather l~ngthlly here. the dawn of history men have mould attend In orderto pre­ Please do not lose patience. I known about the -planets, have pare for the June graduation know you lire longing to get on humbled themselves before the exercises. to the great doctrines. So am I. planets, have found all sorts of Ingenious ways of asserting the night sky's mastery over the human insect. But recent dis-' coverles have multiplied these' Funeral Home tendencies a thousandfold, We have found not only more and 886 Plymouth A\le. more planets,' but more and F~ River (N.C.W,C. NEWS SERVJCE) more solar systems. We' have WASHINGTON _ A commit­ learned about the vast spaces OS 3-2272 tee of 10 Catholic educators has and the light-years with Which been appointed here to bring we must measure them. Man about the adoption of a uniform 18 only a speck upon a speck: he code of social conduct for the is supposed even to be humble youth of Washington archdioce­ befo1;e the spaces, to bow down before emptiness simply be­ 1l8n schools. The principles of the code of cause taere Is so much of It. conduct for students were Il8t Gltt of Dominion FUNERAL HOME forth In an address at the ninth B~t the speck-the smaller annual teachers' Institute by speck, I mean, which Is man-:"':' 55.0 Locust St. FaU Rl~er, 110481$. Father D. Joseph Corbett, arch­ Is the superior all the same. He OS 2-2391 diocesan director of the Confra­ knows the stars and the spaces, temUy . of Chrisitan Doctrine. not they him; he calculates the ROie E. Sullivan His recommendations were en.. llght-years and knows of the Jeffrey E. Sullivan dorsed by Archbishop Patrick A. deaths of stars. He loves them, O'Boyle of Washington and not they him; the beauty of the Msgr. John 8. Spence, archdloce­ moon Is for spirit and not for / lIan director of education. matter. Indeed he uses them it In his address, Father Corbett only to steer his ships and meas­ discussed a number of the sources . ure his earth: but he Is planning " of the social problems of youth. beyond that, planning to extend Among them were dating, auto- the range of his' own movement, to go out among them: for the mobiles and movies. In regard to dating, he told the mind j has the gift of dominion, teachers: "We must beware of and only mind has it. There are being the unconscious creators greater minds than man's and of the boy friend and girl friend greater power; before these', man craze by pushing' early adoles- must bow; but not before mind­ cents Into situations for which less, Impotent masses and the they are not ready." spaces that llebetween them. Occasion of Sin My body is, conveniently, smallHe emphasized that dating, er than the planet Jupiter; but properly supervised by parents, my mind III not. Mindlessness 1s normal and healthy for high does not become greater than IIChool students, but he urged' mind simply by being multiplled. that "circulating dating" be the Most Unusual· Fleet norm among youth. Father Corbett said that "for Of Motor l'rucks' 1I0me teen-agers the car repre­ NASHVILLE (NC)-A busi­ Ilents their most serious' occasion of sin." When an automobile 18 nessman here who believes In used for a date, he stated, double putting God., first--;-always-has and triple dating should be the what is probably the most unu­ rule. He warned parents not to sual motor truck fleet in the allow their daughters to. ride to . and from school regularly with world. He Is Jack P. Wehby Sr., presi­ the same boy. In disc u s sin g the moral dent of the Webby System-MO­ dangers presented by movie thea­ hawk Motor. Unes, Inc., whOse ters, Father Corbett said that central facilities are located In drive-in movies snould be off­ Nashv11le. Each of the 64 trucks limits for all teen-agers. He also In his .fleet carries the Initials Ilald that many grade school "J.M.J." on' Its hood. pupils begin their "dating men­ Mr. Wehby gave this explana­ tality" with m o v i e s . · tion for the initials: "If you put Msgr. Spence announced that God 1'1rst, things wUl work out. to supplement the work of the I do It in several ways: My trucks educators' committee, another are dedicated to J .M.J.-Jesus, committee, composed' of parents Mary· and Jo'seph-and" .1 attend and educators, w11l be formed to Holy Mass every mo~ing. I've draw up a code of Instructions had a wonderful experience In for parents In directing the social business. For It, I' thank Our activities of their children. Lord."

c. P. HARRINGTON

Instruction Code For T.een A,ge.rs Being Planned

JEFFREY E:.

SULLIVAN

.

THE ANC:tiI0R­ Thun., ~pril 18, 1957

Construction Costs Up Over Last Year WASHINGTON (NC) -The estimated value of church and private school construct.ion com­ pleted in the U: 8. during the first three months of 1957 rep­ resents an Increase of 17 per cent over the same period last year, even' though both types of construction declined from rec­ ord highs in January. This Is reported in a set of pre­ liminary estimates on the value of new construction of all types prepared jointly by the Depart­ ments of Commerce and Labor. Church construction for the three-month period totalled $195 million this year as against $166 last year. Private school con­ Iltruction during the first three months of 1957 amounted to $124 million as compared to $120 mil­ lion last year, It was reported In the estImate. In JanuarY' the 'value of church: construction· was estimated at' $67 million. It declined to $63 million by March. Prlvate school construction for the first month of the year was $43 million and In March. was $40 million, the Federal departments estimated.

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572 Pl.EASANT STREET PRAYER OF SAINl FRANCIS OF ASSISI Lord, make me an Instru­ ment of Thy peace; w~re there Is hatred, let me sow love; where there Is Injury, pardon; where there I,s doubt, faith; where ther., Is despair, hope; where there Is darkness. light; a.nd where there Is sadness, joy, 0, Divine Master, grant that I may seek not eo much to be consoled, as to console: to be understood, o,s to understand; to be loved, liS to love: for It Is In g'lvlng that we ·recelve. It Is In pardoning that we are pardoned, and It Is In dying that we are born to eternal life. .

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14

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., April 18. 1957

Prelate Encourages Women to Continu6 Fight Against Obscene Literature

Bishops' Agency _ Ships Most F00d To Needy PeopIe

DETROIT (NC) - His Emi­ nenceEdward Cardinal Mooney has lauded the Detroit Archdlo­ cesan Council of Catholic Wom­ en for -their efforts against - ,(N.C.W.C.. NEWS SE,RVICFJ) indecent literature and urged . WASHINGTON - Agriculture them to continue their battle against obsc·ene publications, Secretary Ezra Taft Benson ·has CINCINNATI (NC) - To bulleS Jiven assurances that efforts will The Archbishop of Detrol* be made to streamline and stepspoke to more than 1.000 women Catholic elementary IiChooll 11 ,at the final sessloIt of the 19th the responslblllty of the Indivi­ IIp the program of distribution of .U. S. surplus foods by voluntary annual convention of the NCCW. dual parishes, but to buileS Catho­ agencies to millions of people in While commending the women lic high schools is the respon­ ne.ed overseas. for their drive against porno­ slbll1ty of the entire Catholl. The ·Secretary gave the assur­ graphy, Cardinal Mooney cau­ community. ~nces at a meeting of his offlc8 . ttoned that resultS in this sphere This thought was addressed to . \vlth representatives of .hal! a have to be' achieved by per'­ the Catholic. of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati by the head of Ute ~ozen of the major Catholic. Pro­ . SISTERS .. RECEIVE AWARDI Recipient. of the suasion. kstant and Jewish age11cles. The "The recent Supreme Court see. Al'chblshop Karl J. Alter, in meeting was called to discuss the Department of Health, Education and Welfare are the. decision shows that we cannot a pastoral which announced a vantages and benefits of ·the - t f Ch rit t St Vit d P ul h t ff rely on legal measures," the ioal of six mill10n dollars in a rogram and to study them for Daugh ers 0 a y 0 -;-' ncen e a , nuns W 0 s a Card1l1al said. He was referrlni _drive for expansion of reiional the leprosarium of the U. 8. Publio Health Bervice Hospi­ to a Supreme Court decision. . high schools In the greater Cin­ proving efficiency. Spokesmen ~or the agencies: tal at Carville, La. secretary Marion B. Folsom, is making handed down .in March of thl. cinnati area. told the Secretary that the pro­ year. It voided a Michigan law An estimated increase of about gram, built up:under the Agri­ the presentation to Sr. Alphonaa Aucion, at Carville, and which made it a crime toaell 6G' per cent In high· school en­ l(lUlture Act of 1949, has brought Sr. Teresa K,elly, right. Looking .on is .Leroy B. Buriney, books containlni obscene la~- rollment 'by 1964 led. the Arch­ ~bout a partnership between -the guage or descriptions "manifestly bishop to askCatholl08 to sup­ ~overnment and the voluntary V. S. Surgeon General.. (NO Photo) tending to' the corruption of port the drive. Three' more "gencles without parallel 111 the youth." regional high schools are sched­ uled to be buUt and. SUbstantial · ·Pounds .0 additions to three existing school. ". It was reported'that d.urlng the lite ture the Cardl'nal .will be made. There are now a scene ~ix months from last June 30 to takes • a very smart ­ ~eglonal high schools in the said: "It ra becember 31, some 22· agencies leglsiator to write a statute that archdiocese, 10 of them for girls. WASHINGTON (NC)--As the vOlvement )le1pa to make a tln- lawyers, who are well financed took part In the program and.. "Even now," said the Arch­ !shipped. 917,3_94,773 pound!' of world' observes the holy seasOn derbox of the Middle Eas~ and. by people who are thinking only bishop, "the registration of fresh­ free surplus U. 8; milk, cheese, of Easter, -this is the outlook for undoubtedlY will help to post­ of money and don't share our men classes for our high school. ,butter, oil, rice, wheat and other peace in the_ "capital of the pone a solution of that problem. Ideals, "can't _s 0 me how. get in - September far exceeds the commodities to the hungry In 75 world." around -capacity to care for them. Each nations. It was estimated the Competent authorities do not Elsewhere, Reef China'.· demands Cardinal Mooney told the year the pressure 'will become ",gencles will distribute s.ome 2-· expect World War TIl "In the for trade and admittance to the ­ women' not to be dlscouraged. greater. There can be no further · billion pounds of food this year. foreseeable future." At the same United lfatlons helps to disturb and recommended that parent. delay. We must take action now." . Catholic Relief Services J'Ja­ time they expect the "cold war" the atmosphere. Here, the mat­ 111 particular be enlisted 111 the The drive for funds which will tlonal Catholic Welfare Confer­ to continue, at least for the life- ~r is somewhat Involved by the fight against indecent literature. be known as "The Archbishop', flnce, the world-wide relief agen­ time of present day adults. determination of Great Britain High School. Fund Campaign." ~y maintained by_ the U. S. This Is not real peace. but it 1. and Japan to trad.e ·wlth the Pe­ will Involve 12,000 volunteer. ~ishops. is the largest participant better than real war. In fact, be-. king regime. . .OU whose task It will be to contac' In the program. cause modern warfare has beGreat Britain'. de olsl 0 n,..... each of the e·stlmateeS 63,000 Msgr. Aloysius J. Wyclslo. come so terrible, and Is becomlni prompted by econQmlo pressure. ' I~ext Catholio wag8 earners In the CRS-NCWC assistant executive more horrible day by. day, experta to reduce Its armed forces has its Msgr.' James V. Casey· of Du­ Cincinnati area for contributions. director who attended the meet- believe th&t It soon'may become repercussions In NATO, and all buque, Iowa, a former NaV7 lng. said that at the present time "too costly" for any nation to in- the ,nations belonilni to that 01'­ Chaplain, has been named·Auxil­ the agency of U. S. Bishops ships dulge In. -' ,gamzation. I&ry to Bishop Louts B. Kucera ANNUAL 62 per cent of all U. S. surplus There is an enormous ferment Moscow's truculent talk to of Lincoln, Neb. A graduate of toods that go to the needy In 51 going on' 11\ ·the w~rld; This II some European nations, warning Loras College. Dubuque and of countries overseas. due to· many things, Includlni them against the establishment the North American College in "Spokesmen for the· agencies _'the decline of old empires, the of guided missile bases within Rome, he was ordained in 1939. APPEAL told the Secretary that while the emergence of a large number of their borders might have been His consecration is scheduled for Jjrogram ':-vas pr9ceedlng satls­ new Independent nations. and. more fear-Inspirlni under other Wednesday, AprU 24, a double A MOST WORTHY CAUl. 1actorlly, it could be ...improved the struggles of "have not" peo­ circumstances. It 1& believed, ceremony with newly-named by streamlining. They pointed pIe for a greater share of the however, that thi.I country', Auxil1a.ry of Dubuque, Bishop­ '. GIVI. IT YOUR out that at the present time the world's goods. This unrest coulf.f near approach to the pr9d.uctlon elect George J. Biscup, the.' first FULLEST SUPPORT, authority in the program wal be good In itself and lead to real of a 1500-mlle range aulded bal­ 'such ceremony In the 120-year vested in a numb.er of sources­ world progress. ' However, manl­ listie missile (which might be history. of .the DUbuque Archd.1­ the Department of Agriculture. pulated by powers desirous of ~ade available to these coun­ .ocese. Bishop-elect casef hu the International Cooperation sustaining the "cold war," it can tries) has Moscow deeply wor­ -served as Official. of Dubu!lu, oi ·Attleboro and South Attteboro U. S. productive of much harm and . r i eReds d . are . said quite flat:1f Administration, and legations, U. 8. embassies overseas be never approach solution. .The missions and' Agriculture mis­ PanlUDa Canal terms by bulld.lDi up strength In The world picture is one of northern KOl'ea. We ape. not ·810ns. The agencies urged that a 0 single authority be set up to great complexity. Here are only to be vlolatini Ute armlsticl! administer the program and the some suggestions as to how in­ likely to complain. all it does not Secretal:y assured them that the volved it really Is: seem to presage war, but prob­ recommendation would be given Protests 'made in recent daYI ably we wlU iO on and build. up full conslderation.-­ . by Russia against what It called .outhern Korea. Promise Assistance "discrimination" against SOViet The UN is still defied In Hun­ At the suggestion of the ships In the Panama· Canal have ,ary. Russia, It is widely ag.reed. 8ll0kesmen, Secretary Benson opened up a sort of sub-front in has buUt' up -a huge submarine ian· here where' four -doUan work harder ant save assurance that a top level the "cold. war." It was thought . fleet and il uslni it to pry into earn MQRB for 70ul Conference of all participants In here, once the Suez Canal crls1l matters - in wld.elY scattered. the program will be called in the qeveloped, that· Russia would. try places round the globe. ne·ar future to studY. all phases' to make trouble for us in con­ There are other points of Irrl­ of the problems. nectloIi with the Panama Canal. tatlon and deeply.confllctlng in­ The spokesmail also asked that The protests may be one waf terest;s-:-allnost without num,ber.. additional types of surplus foods that they Intend to use to em­ But things which, only a few de­ -cades ago, would. have touched be made available from govern­ barrass us. .But this Is In the nature of a off wars between nations, seem ment storage bins so that better . Fall River Savings Bank balanced diets could be provlde~ sub-front, because communist now to be encountered and Ig­ intrigue has long been spread. nored almost every day. for the millions of undeniourlsh­ 141·'NO. MAIN 5T;· TEL. 5·7868 ed overseas. The Secretary said throughout Latin America. That is the "cold war." It is FALL RIVER that this problem will be given .Trade Problems a relatively new--~l.Dd very cost- . , At the same time, Soviet in­ Iy-Innovation. consideration and asserted that as long as there .were surpluses I 'they would be made available to the agencies. Besides CRS-- NCWC. other ·agencies represented ~nhe meet-" Ing Included Church World, Serv­ Ice (Protestant) , the American SALUTES Friends Service (Quaker), the ·Am,erlcan Jewish Committee and CARE.

Cincinnati Prelat.· Stresses Urgent School Needs

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"EXCIJUSIVE PRINTERS FOR . TODAY'S BRIDE"

Ja BRIDAL ROOM PRINTERS

WEDDING INVITATIONS

PRINTING -- NAPKINS

ACCESSORIES - MISSALS

Name printed free In Gold

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16:'1 Jeplion St. Fall Rlv<>r

OS 8--:'1:'130 -- OpeD 10 - '1 P.DI.

Mon - Wed. 'I'll B P.M.

DAVOl, STREET FALL RIVER·

JUSTLY FAMOUS

SINCI 1910

ST. MICHAEL'S COLLEGE

THE ANCHOR

and ·theD'oee•• of Fall Riyer

-m. W __

5'_._M...I_CH_A_E_l_'S_C_O_l_IL_IEG_I_ WINOOSKI PARK, VERMONT

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principal memorial of His pas­ THE ANCHOR­ ain to $he living cleanslIli Thl. is don. because the Baptism Thurs., April 18, 1957 a1on: "For .. 'often ~s Y.ou lIhall Baptism, and 'finally as the P&U- which thl. water will be used to OoIItinued From Pale One eat this bread . • . you proclaim age from Satanic starvation and administer' also algnlfles death In rendering the magnificent tbree o'clock. the tradltlonaJ ,the death of the Lord .. ,', The death to Christian plentitud. and lIf~eath to sin and a re­

hour of the Lord's death. Where­ Blessed Sacrament Is returned and life at the Eucharistic ban- lSurrectlon to life In Ood's grace. and stirring Easter trumpet-call

.er pastoral Interests dictate the without pomp from the altar of quet wherein we partake of the This il'eat sacrament of Chrls- of joy, praise and thanksgivlngl tlan Initiation Is "next conferred, 'Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia; Praise lIecell8lty of changing the time. reposition where it has remained Food of L1f~. ceremonies may be, held at since the Mass yesterday evening. Paschal' Candle • If there are any to be baptized. to Ood, Praise to God, Praise to 'At any rate. all present renew another hour between noon and All present recite the "Our the'presence of all the peo- their baptismal vows.-rejectlng Ood. Three times Is this gloriou. nine In the evening. Father" In Latin with the priest pIeInthe darkness Is dispelled by shout sent heavenward - eveJ7 and then receive their Savior. the kindling of a new fire, from Satan and professing their alle­ Pall8lon and Death Thus ends the stirring cel:emon­ which Is lit the Paschal Candle .Iance to Christ. The Litany of 'time on a higher note. The slmplJfled services com­ May the" spirit of joy and memorative of the Passion and les commemorative of Christ's -a symbol of the risen Christ, the Saints Is then conclUded. Death of the Lord fall Into four death and commences the great the Light of the World, Who illuThe third part of the Easter thanksgiving that fills our hearts distinct parts: 1) the reading of . period of mourning that will ex­ mines our hearts and minds. 'Vigil, and Its climax, Is the Mass as we chant these Alleluias on tend to the celebration of the There follows a joyful procession of the Resurrection. During the Easter' morning abide With us the lesrons and the passion ac­ count, 2) the solemn prayers, 8) Easter Vigil. behind the Light to the sanctu- past week we have shared intl­ . until the next Vigil of the Re­ "This Is the very night which ary, and the candles of all pre- mately In Christ's working out surrection, and may we at that the veneration of the cross, and delivers all who believe In Christ sent &re lighted from this one of" our redemption. We rejoiced time be found a little holier aa 4) the Communion serlvce. from worldly vice and from dark­ The first of these, the read­ Light. With the church aglow With Him as our King on Palm a result of our cooperating with Ings. commences with a lesson by ness of sin, which restores 'them from the candles of all the peo- Sunday, then we dwelt on His the many graces afforded us by

the Prophet Osee. He announces to grace and makes them co­ pIe, the ancient and beautiful passion. we sorrowed with Him our participation In the Holy a resurrection on the third day. sharers with saints,..'. 0 trul,y Exsultet, or Easter. Spng. Is suffering, dYing and buried, and Week services of this year. Christ's death must be viewed In blessed night. . ,I' Without a lung by the deacon or celebrant. now finally we have rejoiced In "Pour out the Spirit of Thy doubt the Easter Vigil Is the apex the light of His subsequent re­ The second part of the Easter His glorious resurrection from love Into our'hearts, 0 Lord, that turn to Ufe. By His passage from not only o~ Holy Week but in­ Vigil, the Bll4>tlamal service. Is the dead. It remains now for us those whom Thou hast nourished deed of the entire calendar of Introduced by the_reading of four to offer together the sacrifice of with the Easter sacraments may, death to life we have been en­ abled to pass from the death of the Church. No other ilturglcal lessons taken from the Old thanksgiVing In which Is renewed because of Thy love. dwell to-, celebration poses as a greater Testament. Each of them sign 1- Ivery time It Is offered all the gether In peace." lin to the llfe of grace. Then fol­ low. an account from .the Book: lource of grace than the Vigil of fies the "new life" which the events of that week. Could it ever Chrlsts Resurrection. Just as Christian recelvea In Baptism. ·have more meaning for us than of Exodus describing the prepar­ ation of the Paschal Lamb. The Christ by His Resurrection con­ Next the LltaIlly of the saints II on the morning of His Resurrec­ Ch08en People marked their quered darkness and death, so recited, ImplorlnM the Interces- tlon, The Jewish people annually doo11POsts with Its blQ9d. and the each year In the sacramental ce­ lion of all Ood's saints on be- celebrate their Passover from the Angel of Death passed over their lebration of this Victory at the half of those to be baptized and .Iavery of Egypt to the freedom homes. killing only the firstborn Easter V~~I1. the Church brings those already baptized. Herl of the Promised Land. We also' "mong the Egyptians during tho to all of us the light and life of again we find the people exercis- annually celebrate durtng Holy Tenth Plague. The terrified irace merlt;eq by the risen Christ. Ing their office of public wor- Week our Passover from the • Egyptians then liberated the ahlp, an office flowlni from their death oJ lin to the life of grace Holy Saturday captive Chosen People. In the Fonnerly conducted on Holy, ba.ptismal character. for to each effected by Christ. OUr Savior. third reading, we are presented Saturday morning, the- services Invocation everyone makes the This same Passover Is renewed lit St. John'a record of the suffer­ of the Vlill had come to iose their response. The Litany Is inter- every offering of the holy sacrt­ l'upted In order that there mliht !lee of the Mass. How appropri­ Ings and death of Christ. meanini by so drastic an antici­ be blessed the water used in the ately, therefore, do the Holy Just as by the death of the pation. Pope Plus XII has re­ Paschal Lamb the Chosen People tW'ned them to their proper place administration of the sacrament Week .ervlces terminate With the enjloyed a passover from the on the night before Easter morn­ of Baptism. Because of Its prime Masa-a summary of all that has a1avery of EiYPt to the freedom Ini. Now even the time at which role In Baptlam, It receives.. preceded In the week. of the Promised 1.and, 80 also by we llMIst adds meaning to the most solemn ble&sllll. Evil spirits Praise to God the death of the Lamb of God we inspiring' ceremonies. Through­ are cast out, It Is blessed and 206 SO. MAIN ST. even anointed with the sacred The Vigil Mass. the rtrst of .moJ & passover from the bond­ out Holy Saturday we should pre­ the Resurrection. again calls for oils. FALL'RIVER &ie of Satan to the Uberty of the pare ouraelvell for this great serv­ Alleaianee to Christ the partlcls>atlon of the entire IOn. of Ood. Ice by observ!ni the Lenten fast , OS 3-2661 congregation. EsPtlclaJ.1y are we All Participate and abstinence. and by main­ . Most significantly of all, theur "~i~e~d~to~J~o~ln~w~l~th~o~n~e~an~o~th~e~r;;;~:;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;=i taining an attitude of prayer and The IOlemn prayers. or "the Paschal Candle. which as we r prayer of the faithful," follow meditation. We sorrow and noted slgniflea Christ. Is lowered 'he passion. Christ died for all mourn for the burled Christ and Into' It and raised out again, and now the Church prays for repent and do penance for our lIymbolizlng Christ's descent to all classes and needs of the 11m that alew Him. but all the death and resurrection to life. church and mankInd. There are whue we preserve a' holy expec­ CHIROPODIST mne .eparate prayers. Before tation of His Resurrection. Tonight occurs Christ's il'eat J. A. NORRIS each the celebrant 'vested In a Passover from the depths of black cope announces the Inten­ SOMERSET 88 BRAYTON AVENUE, P~ii A. Ph. tion. all kneel and pray for It In death to the' heights of divine their own words, and finally life. He brings us with Him. OSborne 8-8081 whUe everyone stands the priest This passage with Christ Is pre­ r'~ . In the three parts of the aented alnis & "collect," collecting the' OUR TAUNTON OFFICE IS CLOSED Easter Vigil: first as the passage prayers of the entire congrega­ Patients are referred to office at 686 tion In one prayer. This striklni from the darkness of depalr to the ,above address. Pleasant St. participation by all 'present Is the light of hope with Christ the characteristic of the restored Light of' the World, then as the Opp. P.O., New Bedford Passage from the fatal filth of Holy Week ceremonies. The veneration of the Holy Croll8 comprises the third part of the GOOd FrIday serVice's. This rite originated In Jerusalem after. the finding of the True Cross by St. Helena and soon spread. to the Western Church. After being ,~WilAT WAS borne In solemnly, the' crucifix, THE EA~LlE9T covered since Passion Sunday, Is USc OF.. ' unveiled In three stages. Each time the celebrant, aided by his INTERNAL, ministers, sings: Behold the wood ." REVENUE! of the cross on which hung the I ,TAXES" BY THE Savior of the wOl·ld. After each , UNITED STATES exclamation, all humbly kneel to 6OVlRNM£NT vener&te the Cross of our salva­ tion, and respond: Come, let us adore. • Member Federal Reserve System After the celebrant and his assistants have venerated the Crosa. It Is brought ,to the altar MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT rail where all approach and adore, one by one, or. where good INSURANCE CORPORATION order demands, It may be held up for all to bow down and adore from their pews. During the veneration. the choir sings the ,tn act 01 March 8,1191 impoBed taxeB on di,tilled spirit. HBecause We Know Our Busines8 ·'Reproaches,"-In which Christ rmd carriageB, dlectlve July 1 01 that I/ear. reproaches us, His people, for our IT'S GOOD BUSINESS 1nil'a..t1tude to God for the num­ berless benefits He has conferred'" upon us, For You to Kiww U 8" Faithful Receive , The Good Friday sel'vices con­ clude with the newllY, restored Communion for all the faithful. For 'years only the priest received this day, but such 'was not the practice In the earlier ages of the Church. In keepln,g with the­ ..eneraJ theme of the restoration .-participation by all present­ OS 8-5286 the Communion Is now once aiam extended to eve}:yone. We have venerated the Cross and GRANITE BLOCK - FALL RIVER - OS 9-6418 now &l'fl prlvUeged to receive sac­ ramentally Him Who hung On It 'r.nk X. '.rl'Oll • HUllo D. Perl'Oll • ...... hdBnf fol' our salvation. FALL RIVER, MASS. Christ Himself cited this as a

Holy Week

the

Easter Greetings

.F. A.

FOREST

COMPANY

Dr. FRAN/CIS 'H. BUCKLEY

" ~~~

l',+S

The BARNSTABLE COiUNTY NATIONAL, BANK of HYANNIS', MASSe Dennisport - HYANNIS':" Osterville

on

• FRANK X. PERRON' .

INSURANCE,

~RMS

.A- Qualm;.Ati1k


16 -

I

THI£ ANCHO~­ Thurs_, April 18, 1957

'94..Year Old Nun Has Never Had Ache' Or Pain During 80 Years In Convent

Mother Connelly­ .Story Published ';

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Moth­ While she was in ChIna, Moth­ er M. Geneviev~ Ryan Is a Sis­ 'er celebrated her golden jubllett' , , ter of St. Joseph from Baden, Pa. of her pronouncement of f1nQl , NEW· YORK (NG> ~ Th'e storr Like most Sisters, Mother 'vows August 15, 1880. or';.'ii:n . American-born woman, Genevieve begins her day with . And despij,e ail her dut!ell, mother of· five children and foundress of a teaching order of six o'clo'ck Mass In the convent Mother Genevieve" was able to nuns, has just been published. chapel. Besides assisting at all obtain her B.A. degree at Du­ here. It Is entitlM""The Case of community exercises, she spends quesne Unlversltiy, Pittsburgh la Cornelia Connelly," written bj 1912. . most of her mornings'and after­ Juliana Wadham. , ,The yeara now are Mother'lI noons before the Blessed Sacra­ Married to an Episcopal minis­ ment, interrupting her prayers "years of quiet prayer," wIth ter, Pierce Connelly, she- later 'of adoration several times a day special emphasis on prayers to embraced Catholicism' and con­ St. Joseph, patron of her com­ to make the Way of the Cross. sented to become a nun, to enable And whlle this may sound like munity and patron of a happy hei· convert husband fo become ' the schedule of many Sisters In death. a Catholic priest. many convents, there is ,one "I have never regretted becom­ , At the request of Pope Gregory inlJ a Rellglous, and I am glad point which makes Mother Gen­ XVI she founded Ii 'teaching evieve different-she Is 94 years that I gave the best years of m~ order in' England - the 'Society old. She is the oldest living life to God by becoming a Sister of the Holy Child of Jesl1s which' 80 YEARS A NUN: Oldest living Sister of st. Joseph member of her community and of St. Joseph in my youth," has since.' spread" to"'F,ranc~; i. Mother M. Genevieve Ryan, S.S.J.,kne~ling before ona has spent 80 years In the con­ Mother Genevieve said. Switzerland, Ireland, West 'Afri­ vent. of the few statute81ri' the U, S: portraying the death o! "From my 14th year until my ca and the;'Uhited States"when ,Mother Genevieve wal born 95th year' God ha3 put up with there are 23'convents established. st. Joseph., It is located at the entrance of the new mother­ October, :I0,i862 in Easterbrook! rile. He has been patient with Mother' Connelly;s cause for bi;la­ house of the Sisters of st. Joseph in Baden. (~C Photo.!) . Pa., a farming. vUlage near Ne,w me, with 'my failures and my tification, is under consideration. Castle. She was baptized 'Brigld poor efforts, and He has given UntiLher death In 1879:Mother tit St. Mary's Church, New 'Cas­ me time, much more than I de", knew no relief from I Connelly and Was one of a famlly: of serve, to spend with Him and tie, sacrifice an'd worry, and no 13 children. One sister, 114rs.De­ to try to make' amends." peace from controversy, much of

laney, now In her 90th year, live. the latter due' to the erratlo'

in Los Angeles, Calif. .0, , 'behavior of her husband, who' St. Mary's, parish, New, Castle, finally returned to the Eplscopa- • A program of rellgloUB educa­ try, cooperation with our Catho­ was the first missIon at which 1Ian faith. tkm for exceptional -children. 110 schools in special educatlOl1 the SIsters of st. J'oseph taught. , 'The story of Comella Connel­ It was there In 1875 that Brigld i ly's life is told In full· for the started in Fall River last year by' curricula for physically and Ryan.. then a girl of 12, met tha I first, time, after much research mentaUy ,handicapped and' 80­ Bishop Connolly, has been ex­ Sisters.. "As soon as I saw the ATTLEBO~Or MASS. ; by Mrs. Juliana Wadham, a tended to the New Bedford and clally maladjusted children. Sisters, I knew I wante,d to be I Catholic mother and former Dally Massesl 6130,' 7, "We' commend their foreslgM . one of them," Mother said.' Illtudent of one of thf.! schools run Attleboro distrlds. a A.M. and devotion In this work, whioh "If I had been asked then why Bishop Connolly recently ad­ ! by Mother Connelly's order in so practically and appropriately Confesslcins DailYI I wanted to be a Sister, perhaps ,I Engl~nd. " ministered First Holy Commu-, shares our Lord's concern for I could not have given the real 61~0 A.M. to 9:00 ,P.M. nion to a class of 10 children a. bringing our' children closer to answer, but as'I look back now I Devotions on SUNDAYS St. Lawrence Church, New Bed­ Him. . can see, the reason:" she ex­ begin. year round a't "The cause of these children 1.s plains. "Their life.' their work, ford. Preparation of a claM for 3:00 P.M. First Communion in Attleboro I. especially, moving because they. their ,habIt spelled two all-em­ are unable to help themselves." gracing words',for me-'God' and Perp.tualNovena to Our now in progress. Bishop Connolly says: ' 'love.' -Lady of LaSalette every For the first time in the hls­ Mother Cabrinl Circle, Daugh-. "May we all unlt~ to help these Mother Genevieve attribute. evening at 7~30 P.M. tel's of Isabella, will hold Its an- tory of the diocese, the Sacra­ children use the talents' given: her long life and good· health to . tmal Communion breakfast on ment of. Holy 'Eucharist was ad­ them for the ,honor 'and glo17 work. "Work never hurts' 'any­ Organizers of April' 28 at the Bouma Mlll in' mlnisered to these exceptional of Thy Holy Name." body," she remarked. She said Pilgrimages Buzzards Bay, follOWing 'the 9 children last May, whim a group she never has known a, physical o'clock Mass at st. Theresa of 10 received Holy Communion Please Contactt ache or pain. From the time,she Church, Sagamore. Fathet'Hen- from Bishop Connolly in Bishop's Worn'en Run Store for th~ Sisterhood on Octo­ joIned . h, S.S,C.. superior of St. Joseph Chapel in st. Mary's Cathedral., Exceptional Children ber 10, 1877, she has served In NOVitiate, Wareham, will be guest The second ,group, from th~ Fall FORT, WAYNE, '(N:C) - The almost every, capacity in ,the . "TEL. Attleboro '1-0008' speaker. Committee for the River' area recently received First Fort Wayne Diocesan Council ot community. ' , breakfast Mrs. Louise ',Cremoninl Communion In the ChapeL . Catholic Women wlll provld. of Sagamore, Mrs. Sally Galla': Besides preparation of classes volunteer {Ielp to staff a c1othtnl' ,gher, Wareham; Mrs. Tess Prete, for First Communion, a program ",- "Make Arrange.menf' Now. for Your Sagamore; Mrs. Theresa Busnen- . of religious education .for chll­ -shop designed to give exceptional go, Buzzards Bay and Mrs. Irene dren affllcted :wIth cerebral palsy chlldren experience In selectln&, Wilson, ISagamore. i. conducted at the TralnlnlJ appropriate cl~thing and' acces­ , PlanR for the breakfast were. sories. announced at the April business Center in Fall Rlver~ .

The shop will opera'te' four Religious education for the

meeting. Members'brought large or .Roland Gamache . -Phone Joll'n Collins' ... , cans of fruit juices which will be exceptional children in the dlo­ hours daily. DCCW menibera wl11 distributed to patients at the cese was prompted by' Bishop maintain. stock, size il,lld price ot Rose Hawthorne Latl'Jrop Hospi- Connoly'. concern 101' the i r artiCles in accordance with <;ur­ .. ;. rlmt sales. Aim of the program tal; Fall River. Bandages and spiritual needs:

surgical dressings have, been' "These are not problem chil­ 'Is to afford patients an oppo!'tu­ made. by the group during Lent i:lren, not clinical, cases, not prob~ nity to shop in a situation simu­ for use at the hospital. , l e m s In educatioIl-," he has fre- latlnga, community commercial Mrs. Doris Macorattl of Saga- ,ciuently said. "'They are chlldren enterprise. more has been named chairman slow to learn, but 5lulok to'lova to supply monthly birthday cakes 1~elr ~eighbor for lovi of God." ,to Sacred Heatt Seminary. Mrs. A poster depicting phases' of Annette Parece of Parkwood' the l'eligious education program In~.· Beach will cover the Wat:eham In this diocese, conducted by the , WAREHAMiS ONLY sec'tion. " , ~all River Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, received com­ " AUTHORIZED mendation at the annual conven­ CHEVIlOLET • OLDS SERVE CHRIST AS tion ',of 'the National Council of , DEALER Catholic Women in Chicago. MARION RD., WAREHAM ' ' . Parish Priest A resolution adopted at the FATIMA, Portugal (NC)-The WAREHAM 368 convention, recommendinlJ' co­ 40th anniversary of the first 08P- . operation with programs for spe­ • Priest-Teacher Contact

parition of Our Lady to the chil­ ARTHUR W. TAVEIRA

in part: oial education, reads dren of Fatima will be celebrat- , IKE ALPERTS

• For~ign Missionary "We commend to our N.C.C.W, ed here on May c13 by a Portu­ MANUEL MONIZ, Jilt.

affiliates throughout ~he c</uh­ guese national pilgrimage. • Home Missioner -:1 The date of the pilgrimage is also the 40th anniversary of the ··c· .... episcopal consecration of HlI Holiness Pope Pius XII.' Thl. -" ..('- .. anniversary wlll also be celebrat­ 'ed by the pilg'rims, " Led by His Eminence Manuel For r"formatlonr Cardinal Goncalve,s. Cerejelra, FROM' BROTHER'.KNIGHTS Patriarch of Lisbon, the pilgrims . about th., Hoi, '­ will come from all ovel' Portu­ FRANK M,~ MARTIN - GILBERT LORD , ' 'Cr_ Fethers or (ral to the, shrine.. CARL C. PAGE - nAYMOND CHAMPAGNE . ,'<'" . the La, Broth.,. " '

Program For Exceptional

Children" is': Extended

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S~rine

:Bourne Circle :Plans Events

Rev. Father DirectQr

PICNIC • CLAMBAKE. OUTING

LINCOLN PARK. : ,..WYman 9-6984

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HOLY CROSS FATHERS"

Motors.

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Portuguese Plan Visit to Fatima

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CONGRATULATIONS

'TO BISHOP CONNOLLY

, and ·"THE ANCHOR"

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Bridge Party ~

Members and friends of the White Sisters are invited 'to the , Queen's Daughters Spring Bridge at Hotel Mellen, Fall Rivel', Sat­ urday, April' 27. . President Mrs, John M, Welch heads' the general committee, which includes. Mrs, Francis Connors, Mrs. W. Arthur Leary"" Miss Mary Lysaght and Mrs. ;F,rank McDermott. . _ '"

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Scholarship

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Spotlighting Our Schools SACRED HEARTS, " FALL .R,IVER , 'Elizabeth Ng and Catherine Cleare, seniors at the Academy of the'Sacred Hearts, Fall River. have won certificates of honor for their achievements I~, the 31st annual UN examination. The quarter-finalists In the ping-pong ~urnament are Paul­ ine D'Ambrosio, Jane Acheson. Jo-Ann Caspar, Beverly Corey, Theresa Costa, Mary Gallagher. Judith :aunt, Roberta McPher­ son, Elizabeth Rego, Joan Sequin, and Virginia Waring. "The Heart; How, It Works" was presented to the biology class as a visual aid to their study of the human body. Fourteen sodal~ts of the ,f1cad':' tmy attended the first annual Catholic Student Council's Day of Recollection at St, Vincent's Home. Nancy Teves, Glee Club presi­ dent, was one of the four high school seniors who received high­ est rating for musicianship at the Fall River Junior Music Club auditions at the Women's Union. The only violinist In the Fall River area to be accepted for the Massachusetts All State Orches­ tra at the Golden Anniversary Festival held at Smith College was Eunice Edgett, concert mis­ tress of the orchestra and presi­ dent of the Orchestra Club. Daniel Grace. lectured to the students In connection with the showing of Christopher Films keyed to vocational guidance. The propect Is sponsored by the Knights of Columbus. Members of the Shacady News Itaff of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts will present an entire panel entitled; "Sjudent Journalism - Call to Catholic Action," at the Merrimack Col­ lege Publications Conference at Andover on Saturday, May 4. Carolyn Dzlok, edltor-In-chlef of the Academy's newspaper, will be chairman of the group. Sheila Hochu will present one phase ofthe discussion, "The Call -The' Journalist dedicates him­ lelf to serving the student. the lehool, the home, and the com­ munity." "The Truth - The Journalist 18 upright safeguarding the honor and reputation of everyone," a Iklt written by Leslie Salvo to contrast a gossip column and Shacady's personality COlUlllDS. ..111 be enacted by Lynne Collins. Elizabeth DeFusco. and Barbara Levesque with Miss Salvo acting as stage manaier. Fernanda Correira will ilve the final point of the discussion, "The Action..,... The Journalist is apostolic. inspiring hiB reader to assume his responsibilities in the Christian plan of Life." Sr. Mary Hortense. S.U.S.C.• advlser of Shacady News will be moderator of the panel. . Representing Janua, the acad­ emy's yearbook, Leonora Mc!Cabe will act as chairman and panelist on the subject of Yearbook Pho­ 'tography. Members of Shacady. Janua and the Journalism class will alBo attend the Catholic Publications ·Conference.

Ice. Tpere was food for thouaht and meditation in this Inspiring conference. The Civic Music Association of New Bedford: spOnsored an essay contest in which the four high schools of the city ·took part. Jane Constant. senior, won the grand prize for the best paper submitted. Science Club members visited the SCience Fair presented by the Department Of Education of th Archdiocese of Boston at Boston College. Mimy new ideas for fu­ ture use were born as the bud­ ding scientists viewed the pro­ Jects. MT. ST. MARY, FALL RIVER Sister M. Carmela. R.S.M.• A.M., principal of Mount SlI.int Mary Academy, Fall River, will attend the NCEA convention and the Sisters of Mercy Conference in Milwaukee next week. Sister 1& national secretary of the Sec­ ondary School Division. Mount Saint Mary Academy Glee Club, trained and directed EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN. MAKING FIRST HOLY COMMUNION: Bishop Con­ by Sister M. Gabriella, R.B.M.• F.T.C.L.. wUl present its tenth nolly admini~tered the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist to a district clus at St. Mary's annual Sprini concert· in St. Cathedral chapel. Shown assisting Bishop Connolly are Father Arthul" W. Tansey, Anne's AUditorluPl, Fall River. rector; Father Alfred J. Gendreau and Father Humberto S. Medeiros, chancellor. at 8 Thursday night, May 2. Sis­ ter M. Fidells, R.S.M., A.B.. is the past 10 yearl of movements U.S.A.," will show why the. moderator. A special perform­ luchas the Farony Life Con- Catholic acts ail he does in regard ance for the Religious Sisters of ferences and the Cana Confer- to family Ufe. the realism of hill' the diocese will be given at 3: 30 ences. beliefs and practices, his contrlThursday, May 2. The LaSalle Msgr. Irvil1i A. DeBlanc. di- butlons to American society and Concert Band of Providence will WASHINGTON (NC) - Evl­ be the guest artists. Arthur Pa­ rector of the Family Lite Bureau hlB probleIDI In that society be­ Quette, B. MUS., director of the .dence of Increased interest by of the National Catholic Welfare cause of hill principles," Mr. band, will also be the guest con­ the laity in a fuller understand­ Conference. helped the NCCM Work aaJ.d. ductor of the Mount' girls at the ing of the Church's princlplel prepare the proll'ams. Television He said IIlm recordings of the concert. All priestS and reli­ playwright Bob Crean. formerly five progr&IDI WIll be made avail­ haa' for Christian family living Iious brothers are cordially In­ with the NCWC Newi' Bervice. able by the NCCM to study cluo., prompted the- National Council wrote the eeriptl. vited to attend. schoolll and parish groups shortly Sodallsts of Mount'Salnt Mary of Catholic Men to devote a series "The series, entitled "I'amlly- after comple~ion of the series. Academy are collecting toys for of !Ive television programs to the an Easter basket for St. Vincent's lubject. This was announced by Martin Home. Fall River. . Anne Marie Doolan. senior. has H. Work. executive director, who laid the programs will be tele­ been elected secretary of the dio­ ceIIan union of student sodalities cast at 1-:30 each Sunday after­ at the Joint meeting of directors. noon. April 28 to ,May 26, on "The Catholic Hour on Tele­ moderators and stUdent dele­ ,ates. Slater M. Mercy. R.S.M.• vision" over the NBC network. Mr. Work said 'the series was. and Sister M. Denlsita. R.B.M., were present with Anne Marie inspired by the rapid irowth In' Doolan. Mary Silva. Mary Lo­ max, Viriinia Howarth, Sylvla ciel~, ·Sandra. Brlckhlll and Vir­ Houle, Barbara Peckham, Loret­ ginia Howarth. ta Manchester. Thirty-five Mount Saint Mary' . ' The 19118 editor-In-chief of Academy students participated in Mercycrest, yearbook of Mount a pilgrimage to the Mission saint Mary Academy, 1&' Carole Church, Roxbury, which Includ­ Funerals • Weddings •. Corsages • HospitClI Mattimore. Co-editors are Anne ed a tour of the churches. serv­ Marie Poisson, Carolyn Lenaghan ices and benediction of the Most and Sylvia Houle. The 1958 edi­ Blessed Sacrament. The girls 2082 ROBESON ST. TELEPH~N~

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,'Books of the Hour

18

\The Towers of Trebizond iResembles Srideshead

'TIliE ANCI!iOR·- •

Thurs., April 18, 1957

Education Basis For Integration

-_.... Th II 0 S B By Rev.D. Be....IAJlu 'ea, ..• ., ' It is probably· over-simplification to say that' RoB. f ~acaulay's new novel, The Towers of Treblzond (Farrar , Btrausand Cudahy, $3.75) reads.likean Anglican version . ' . , of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, but that is at 1. e a stone of the r es e m­ blances I. see in .thls very vocabulary a bit less polite when

COLLEGEVILLE, Ind., (NC),The chief tool of the integra,• t10n movement should be educa· ~~~~tl~~~~~=~e~~~nhe~~:nhuman A definite relationship exists between the amount of education a person receives and his attitude toward racial segregation, Father

Joseph Fichter; S.J., of Loyola

.' they apeak of Catholicism. Bu' . University of' the South, New

Orleans said. readable \ind very clever 'In general they are g'entlemanl, . 'The Jesuit priest, now doing .work, which is at one and controverslalista, even if the, . don't always state the Cathol1o research 'at the University of the same time a novel with a position properly, as when it 11' Notre Dame, said: tlie "g;'eate~t ~Jllritu~l.mes~a~~. and good sald tha.t, nowadays :!Ie believe opposition to integration comes " UNIVERSITY PRESENTS HONOR: Receiving the trom' those. e d u cat e d only ece of travel-wTltlng about a the. Adam and Eve episode to be art of the world t~at not very entirely allegorical. There are 1957 Christian-Culture Award is Robert Speaight, author through grade school, while the greatest support for the' move­ any of us know. other such errors. All ari example, . , Trebizond is ll' city in Turkey, though. of a determination to do of "The .Llfe of Hilaire Belloc," center, in ceremonies at inent comes from college gradu­ j'lreatly important at one time as fram another religious pOint of the Assumption University of Windsor; Ontario. Clarence aies." The- conference was held at (I n 8 0 f the view what haa been done b1 Hightower, DirectOl~ of the, DePorres Chorus, is at the left, i g h tie s t Evelyn Waugh, Graham Oreene, and Father ,J,• Stanlpy MurphY,C.S.B.,' founder of the St. Joseph's College, conducted oSts of the an4. say" Ante>nia White. the 'l; by the Society of the Precious novel 13 noteworthy.· nor ia U. university's Christian 'Culture Seri~s. (NC Photos) . • yzantine em­ Blood. It was sponsoreil by the TIl is without value beautifully ob college division of the Catholic "'e ' u. ovel• is the servan~ travel-writing. ' ­ ..., Interracial Council of Chicago. ~tOI'y of the " ' Father Fitcher told the 110 ' ~ravels in TurR~mantlCl Faet.. ~ngeles students attending the confer~ Almost as romantic as a novel Itey of Doro­ , _ . ence that much opposition to is the story told In the factUal LOB ANGELES (NC) - Mass thea ffoulkes integration stems from' the fail­ ,(sic) - Corbett. C-ase of Curnella Connelly, b;r and Communion have become a Students at Stonehill ure of "otherwise Intelligent whites" to identify race problems called Au n t Juliana Wadham (Pantheon, $3.. dally noon hour routine to 'twlce A' • • D' • with' those moral. principles 'pot, her niece,

'715> Cornelia Connelly' <1S08­ clive' .n ,ramatlcs . F' Of . d as many downtown workers here J..aurle, and

18'7'7) was born Cornelia Peacock ,- lve· ocesan residents ha which are. the essence of Chris- . ~ h e elderly.

in Philadelphia, into a moderate­ shiv€ , p~rts in'the prese~tlition tianity. alnce issu~n~e of the new' Eu­ ··J\.nglican clergylp.an, Fat hill iy weaithy, family. In lS3'.1·libe charistic fast laws. of "Boom Tow'n Sunday," Stone­ Another speaker, Dr. Paul.. . Downt{)wn pastors' report· I!. was 'married to. younil minister )IUgh Chantry-Plgg. ' • Mund" of Loyola Unlvei'sity of ' . ' h. ill College's entry in the. inter­ ~ said the, drive for self-. . , . i Aunt Dot has come to· Turkey. of the Episcopalian ChurCh, the marked" increase in the number Chicago »ecause she, wishes to spread the faith to.whICh'she,,~oo,belonced. . of coinmunlcants at the .~thre6 .. collegla~·, speech arts . competl-. esteem is oftell'responsible for f\nglican· faith as a member of B~fore very long, hOl:Vever..churches here having noon Mass. tlon. &:t:~ewton CoiJege of the prejudice and discrimination~' ' ne of ,.its missionary societies. both Comella and 'Pierce felt ate', Our Lady Chapel, In the heart, Sacred.:He.art: . ~'Some people need the crutches ,ather Hugh has this desire. too, trae<ted'to Catholicism. The at· of the hotel imd department,store' "Direct¢d' by Carol Braga, Fall of 'prejudice because they fear :, \it he Is eSpecially a~xlous to _ tra«;tlo~·. 'beciune ~tr~rger alter. -district, had 2,000 Cominimions RiVer/president of Stonehlll's themselves and their' own inade­ 11mb Mount Ararat" on .which they ,VIsIted Rome.,~~dcam',·lD : last week Insteaq. o~ the usual Speech~ Arts Society, the 'cast in.... quacy;' they are fearful of : ~lie 'Ark' rested ~fter ltsyoyage. .contact with sonie',o{·the': 'lreat :::'700, according to Father John Cluded- David·B. ' Pomfret, "Jr.,'- change, which·to them' is a tonh ~d Laurie has come along. to 'Catholic minds of :the day. But ·I!herldan.. ,Some.rset; 'Robert Byrne, ,'I'aun- of, terror and they are afraid of )ee the Orient, ·and. ~recov.er;. ':fierce .ConnellY,wS;S·!': man>wIio'... At, St. 'Josep_l~s, serving the ton; Dave Connell, Fall. River, ,- others because of the competition travel can help her' do thi~. felL things,., very. Intensely, and. (Jarment Industry area; Father . 'lnd James Lanagan, Fairhaven. they ,pose," he said. rom a ten-year ~nfa:tuation,Wlth"wl!o'hadaflalrf6f:the'dfamiii1ci Oliver Lynch, O.F:M.,· 'pasto,r, ~~~~.~'~.~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i'i '., ere, a"married man; with whom .,-so that conversion '.to Catholi- said there had been ,an Increase r Ilh~ has been having' an 1llicit re-.. cl8l1l was not enough: He must· of one-third. . ',' latlOnshlp. also co on to the Catholic priestPriests at St. Vlblana oS Ca­ '( Before the book 'ends, Aunt hood, which meant, of cour.., thedral near Civic Center, report t and Father" ChantrY-Pig,g that Comella, too, would have to a 30 to 40 per cent., increase at . ave maiurged to break through wlthdraw'from the world. two noon hour Masses. Qur on, the ~ape, Cod Trai' he Iron Curtain, Laurie has seen Det : t~ :. f C en . Lady .Queen of Angels Church, ~ great deal' of TUrkey and the ec on ~ onv across from the' Old Plaza, re-' DIRECTLY ON ROUTES 6 J.'ND 1,40 \!£, urkish and Armenian peOples, Thl.s . withdrawal .' ultimately ports a similar Increase. ,nd the problem of tlle Laurie- . ,took the form of the foundation Northward, In the, city of San­ EQUIPPED JOLLY WHALER . "Vei'e relation 11 solved by the .of new order of teaching_and t& Barbara, Father Felix Aquls­ With T.V. and Radio and latter's sudden death: ' missionary Sisters-the Rel1giOu. ' tapace, 8.J., pastor, said Com­ Ailglican Theology . SPOUT-ER INN of the Holy Child Jesus, a c.on-:-munlon had doubled at the noon NEW-MODERN

. ' Ilregatlon which is today repre­ Mass' in Our Lady of. Sorrows FIRE PROOF

The resemblance to Brideshead ented throughout the world.' All Church. IDEAL BANQUET.

ftevisiied occurs to me because of this was dnunatlo enough, bu" FACILITIES

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dwells upon the necessity that !Jelly soon tired of the lifl of & In St. Louis 200 ROOMS

the soul find God and the fact priest and of the Catholic faith that sin is an obstacle to thil which he felt fettered his rest~ ST. LOUIS (NC) Dally 725 PLEASANT ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.. Oommunicants. at ,noon-time search. Miss Macaulay's novel, less 8~lrit !too 'much. Having abducted, then legally Masses itr this archdiocese have as I urlderstand it, ends much 6-8521

less happily, because Laurie gained custody of their children, more than doubled since Hla t>eems,. at the end, to have lost he sued in. the British courts. af­ Holiness Pope Plus XII an­ - her faIth, so that heaven is no ter 'llipOstatl~ngfrom the faith. nounced the new Eucharistlo more real to her than the towers to force his wile's return. At first fasting regulations, the st. Louis of the now-vanished gl?riousclty the decision favored him, but a Review, archdiocesan newspaper, of Trebizond. subsequent ·reversal insured the __reported. The paper checked with all permanence of Mother Cornelia', Throughout the book Miss Ma­ downtown and suburban parlsh­ -, caulay is Interested In making a religloWl life. This is an essentially mela­ strong case for the Anglican es where the noon M-asses are th!!ological position, as ,being su­ dranIatlc story, told, in aeneral. offered. The inquiry showed .perior bot?· to other forms of with ablllty and good taste; MR. that in all cases dally Communi­ Pr9te&,tantIsm and to Catholi­ Wadham has not hesitated to call Clants had doubled at least and­ clsm. Aunt Dot's faith is what is attention to human failings abe In the case of the st, Louis Ca­ popularly referred to as 'High believes her subject to have had.. thedral-has tripled. . At the same time she 11 Quite Church' Anglicanism (or Epis­ Commullions distributed at sure that Mother, Comella' Con­ morning Masses remained ap­ copalianism) Father Hugh be­ lieves firmly that his religious nelly haa a wood chance of even­ proximately the same as before service 'Is the Mass, and he· hears tually being formally canonized. the decree. Confessions. On Corpus, Christi he carries the' host til prOcession. The Perfect'Gift for Your Loved Ones , But how, he does this is nofqulte " "',,..,. . , ' a ". clear, since the book tells us that he set off carrYing his portable altar, to demonstrate 'thus his . Perpetual. ~emembrance I~ Daily Mass .' talth' to the Turks. THE LIVING AND DECEASED MAY BE ENROLLED I know of no other rece·ntnovel . by so eminent a writer that 15 so Illuminated' Cert~ficate for Each Member Enrolled· deeply theological from the Pro­ Enrollment $5.00 testant point of view. To the Write to: Rev. Father RectOr, O.F,M. Catholic reader, the' book will Our Lady'. Chapel, Franciscan Fathers have the advantage of revealing at least one facet 'of the modern. 572 Pleasant St~,New Bedford, Mass. Protestant mind. But his final I'eactlon must be one of sorrow over the total lack, of a founda­ tion for the deep faith which A Solemn Novena of Masses Will Begin, Ol} Easter Aunt Dot and Father Chantry­ Sunday At Our Lady's Chapel for Your Relatives and Pigg manifest, and which Laurie Friends. Send Them a Novena Mass Card. They May attempts to explain to 'her un­ MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT Be Obtained at Our Lady's Chapel. believing friends, Catholic as well INSURANCE ,CORPORATION • .s Protestant. Or- Write to: Rev. Father Rector, Our Lady". 'Occasionally the characters'. :Chapel, 572 Pleasant' St., New Bedford, Mass. :voices got a bit strident and their

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!pom Chatter

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Be and

GlUJesfs at Banquet

Red Sox Benefit By Switch to Heigl1ts By Jack Kineavy Tom Yawkey's ban on football at Fenway Park was

e, blessing in disguise for the displa.ced· Boston College

Eagles. And for the Red Sox and the rest of the AmerIcan Leagl).e Clubs, also. , Plans were quickly formu-' record. Tebbetts doesn't expect lated for a fund raisIng cam­ his club to equal that mark this paign to build a new 23,000 time around, having traded off capacity stadium at the Ray Jablonski during the winter. Heights. The drive, under the chairmanship of Joe McKenney, director of physical education In Boston and one of the all time 'B.C. IU'eats, brought such tre­ mendous response from alumni groups that the stadium will be a real1ty In the Fall. Through the efforts of' Bill Sull1van, former B.C. "tub-thumper," the NaVY will be the Eagles' inaugural op­ ponent on Sept. 21. Better Playing Surface The ball players' boon will be no less equa), if not as imme­ diate. With football no longer a threat, the Sox are going to resod the entire field this Fall. The infield will undergo a face lowering in the process, being .haved 11 inches. It is expected that the new arrangement will afford box seat patrons a better action view, to say nothing of the dugout habitues. Sod for the field is now being grown in North Button, N. H. Remember when the old Braves grew their own grass back of the left field pavi­ lion? The Red Sox may be con­ .Igned to fith by the experts but their ball park will be up among the best. Not too many years ago, Bill Veeck was staging all sorts of extravaganzas to promote base­ ball out in Cleveland. Baseball men, fenerally, looked with di.­ favor upon his methods; but they proved most effective at the turnstiles. Veeck, subl?equently, left baseball. He now operates a publ1c relations orlianization, and, ironically, it's his firm whom the Indians have engaged to rekindle fandom interest. That might take a bit of doing what "lith the legendary Bob Feller and Al Rosen missing from the cast. Feller is touring the coun­ tJ.'y' conducting baseball clinics under the auspices of Motorola's radio-TV program; Rosen is with Bache and Co., a Cleveland in­ vestment bi'okerage firm. Smart Baseball It used to be that the National League was a strong exponent of strategic baseball. Low scoring ball games were commonplace; one run was often the difference: No longer is this true. Birdie Tebbetts, Providence College:s gift to Cincinnati, says that the home run is now smart baseball. He should know. His Redlegs belted out 221 roundtrippers last year to tie the Giant's 1947

"Jabbo," the eratlc third base­ man contributed III circuit clouts last II e m e s t'e r. Neither Alex Grammas nor Don Hoak, likely replacements, will come even close to that mark. Incidentally, Birdie didn't play his regulars in a Florida series with the Yanks recently so as not to give New' York an inside line on their next World Series opponents! . Little wonder ·that there are few ball players from this part of the country in the majors today. The high schoolers in the South begin competition as early as Februa!"Y. On the West Coast the scholastic season gets under­ way about a month later. Don Lee, rookie hurle'r up with De­ troit, observed that his Univer­ Illty of Arizona played 60 games a season. Hereabouts, a collegiate l1ate of 24 games is Just about tops. No Morc Golf There'll be no more golf for the golfini Yankees dudng the' baseball Ileason acc'ordlng to the latest directive on the subJeet from the office of Casey Stengel. The oft-quoted Ted Wllliams leconds the move with gusto, but why Ted should applaud a move designed to strengthen the Yanks 11 puzzling. Williams no doubt is merely registering approval on the of the thing. He that everything about the feels principle ,ame - the club, the. ball, the .wing - Is different, therefor d.etrimental. As for its being good tor the legs, Ted concludes that a man can get more exercise running around the outfield a couple of times than he can by playing 18 holes of golf. How 'bout that? Warren Spahn. for one, has ione on record against Don Lar­ len's no Wind-Up delivery. The Braves' stylish southpaw needs all the leverage he can get, he Ilays. Which brings to mind the question of how well the cele­ brated Yankees no-hit star will ttare in the coming campaign, The big fellow was treated rather roughly on the Citrus Circuit, though that in itself is hardly conclusive. Many iood pitchers have been late starters, Ned Garver for 'one. One thing is certain. If Larsen comes up with a banner year, it won't be be­ cause of any unusual windup ­ or lack of one. It'll be that big Don has found himself.

Continued From Page One

Ila, patron saint of the parish. Bishop Connolly will officiate at the solemn pontifical high mass at 7 in the evening. It is expected to be attended by a number' of clergy guests, local officials and parishioners. The new church is easily reached from Fall River by driv­ ing north on Route 6 and turning Continued From Pag:e One right onto Route I-A. Progress Made has been designated treas­ Rev, Joseph Larue, present River urer. pastor of Sacred Heart Church, The membership committee North Attleboro, celebrated the will be headed by Arnold Wea'ver first catholic mass In South At­ tleboro some 27 years ago in a of New Bedford. Women of the diocese met with &mall hall at, the rear of a ,Father McMahon recently to Washington Street diner. make plans for the launching of The late beloved Rev. Patrick .the retreat league movement in S. McGee celebrated the first the diocese. mas 8 in Old St. Theresa'. C h u l' C h. Pioneer pastor and founder of St. Stephen's Church, EASTER 'Dodgeville, St. Rose de Lima GREETINGS Church in' Hebronvllle for the English speaking parishioners of FLSOHWOpER St. Stephen's (now dismantled) and St. Mary's Church of He­ bronville, Father McGee also .486 PLEASANT STREET celebrated the first Mass at Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro .tnd NEW BEDFORD Our Lady of ;Mt. Carmel Church, WYman 3-0157

'Men's Retreat

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Trinity College Plans Library Euilding WASHINGTON (NC) - The formation of a 300-member committee to raise $1,690,000 for a new library. art and musio center at Trinity College here has been announced by Sister Mary Patrick, college president. The new structure will be 45,417 square feet in size, consist of two levels and wlll be com­ pletely air' conditioned. It will provide reading space for 350 students and a shelf area for 150,000 books.

Wheel Chair Corps CHICAGO mC) - A Cathol1o "wheel-chair corps" is doing out­ standing work to make life easier for patients at the Oak Forest Institution, Cook County's gen­ eral hospital for the chl:onically 1ll.

For the past 30 years members of the St. Vincent de Paul So­ ciety, fi'om 30 parish conferences on the south side of Chicago and the suburbs, have been wheeling patients to Sunday Mass in the hospital chapel. Miler retmning patients to their wards, the Vincentlans turn into newsboys. They visit the wards and distribute Cathol1c newspapers and periodicals.

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NEW YORK. (NC) - Private rohool construction expenditures of about $550 million in the U. S. this year will jump slightly more tharl 45 per cent in the next 10 years to a total of about $800 million In 1966, according to Ar- . chitecural Forum magazine. Expenditures in 1956 of about $750 million for church construc­ tion will increase by 20 per cent to $900 million' In 1966, the magazine estimated. It also said current expenditures -of about $2.5 bUlion for public schools will rise to about $3.9 billion per year In 1966. ' The Forum's projections are based on a 1966 population esti­ mate of 197 million- people and a forecast that the U. S. gross national product in that year will reach $575 billion. The study was made by Washington econo­ mist Miles L. Colean.

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Expect Church BUllilding Increase for 10 Years

Santo Christo, Fall River, CYO basketball team, will be honored at a testimonial banquet next Thusrday in recognition of its wJnning the P.awtucket Boys Club junior amateur tournament. Dr. Gilbert Vincent, former Banto Christo CYO-er; will be principal speaker. Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, parish CYO director, will be master of ceremonies. Tourney trophy will 'be pre-, cented'to Rev. Francisco C. Bet­ tencourt, pastoi·. Individual tro­ phies wlll be presented 'to play­ . ers by Assistant Coach James Mendonca.

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Three Fall River Academies 20 Award Five Scholarships' , Three: Fall River' academies have announced. the' . , award of five full scholarships based. on recen~ comPetitive ,examinations: . . " . Jesus':Mary Academy'reported it'has given a,fuUschol:' arship to Miss Lorraine Mathieu, daughter of Mr. pa1'tsb and,attends its elementa17 school. -, anc~ Mrs. Leo Mathieu,of Miss McAlldrew. da~hter of H90 GAR HighwaY,',Somer.. 'Mr. and Mrs. John P .. McAndrew set. Miss Mathieu now attends 'St. Louis ,of France School, Swansea. Mount Saint Mary· Academy awarded' one fun'scholarship, to Miss Carolyn J. Howarth. daugh­

ter of Mr. and Mrs. John"How­

arth of 30 Lafayette street, Fall '

River.

A second full four-year schol­ a'rship, given by Mother McAuley

'PTA o~ Mount Saint Mary

'Academ\Y, has been presented to

Miss Mary Ann Christensen, ,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray­

II\ond Christensen of 498 Tower

Street, Fall River.

Miss Howarth. ·who attends the,

Samuel Watson School, Fall

River, Is a member of the Imma­

culate Conception parish. Miss

Christensen, a member of St.

William's parish. Fall River. at­

tends SS. Peter and Paul's paro­ chial school. ,

The Academy of the Sacred

Hearts awarded the SallY Tucker

Creamer Memorial four-year full

tuition scholarship to Miss Cath­

,erine Dannemann, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dannemann.

Miss Dannemann. a member of

the graduating class of Josephine

Wilbur School of Little Compton,

R.I., is a member of st. Cather­

ine's 'parish, Little 'Com·pton. A second four-year full tuition

scholarsl)ip of the Sacred Hearts,

Academy. the Marla Doud Foley

Memorial ,Scholarshi:P. has been

won by Miss Mary E. Sullivan.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mat­

thew D. Sullivan of 564 Mont­

gomery Street. Fall River. Miss

Sullivan,' a member of the Holy

Name ,parish, Fall River, is a

pupil at the Academy of the

Sacred Hearts elementary school.

Jesus Marie' Academy 'Recipients of Jesus Mary

Academy partial 'scholarships

were: ,

Miss Pauline Gaulin. daughter

of Mr. and Mrs: Eugene GaUlin.

56 St. Joseph street, Fall River,

, who attends St. Joseph's School. Miss Jeanne Roy, daughter of

lI.{r. and Mrs. Roland A. Roy of

353 Barnes Street, Fall River,

Notre Dame School.

Miss Diane OUimet. daughter

of ~r. and Mrs. George C. OuI­

met of ,2075 Pleasant Street,

JeSUS-Mary Academy.

Mount Saint Mary

Four year partial scholarshIps

at Mount Saint Mary Academy

were won by the following:

Miss Comella Harrington,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James

J. Harrington of 863 Plymouth Avenue. Fall River, who attends SS. Peter and Paul's parochial school. Miss Joyce Cote, daughter of

MI'. and Mrs. David Cote of 1266

South Main Street, Fall River,

St. Patrick's parochial school.

. Miss Mary Lou Galvin, daugh­

ter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L.

Galvin of 227 Wan-en Street. Fall

River, won the Bishop Cassidy

Memoial Scholarship. She at­

tends her parish school, SS. Pe­ ter and Paul's. _

Three Fall River

Miss Anne Jewell, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Timothy F. Jewell

of 135 Peckham, Street. Fall

River. won the Mother McAuley

Guild PTA scholarship. She is a

member of St. Patrick's parish

and attends its parochial school.

Sacred Hearts

TWo one-half tuition scholar­

ships' provided by the Mary P.

Mahoney Memortal S~holarship

Fund of the Sacred Hearts Acad­

emy were awarded Miss Michael­ ine Ruttle and Miss Rose Ann McAndrew. Miss Ruttle. is the daughter of Joseph F. Ruttle of 872 Plymouth Avent!.e, Fall River. She is a . member of S8. Peter and Paul',

of 1G27 President ·Avenue. Fall River, Is a member of the' Holy Name 'parish and attends the Sacred Heart' parish school.

THI ANCHOR­ Thun., April

.

ra, -1957

Honorable mention for credit­ able achievement in', the Sacred Hearts Academy examination went to six contestants: Miss Judith Campbell, Sacred Hearts eiementary school, Our LadY of Grace' parish: North' WestpOlt.' ' , 'Miss'Mary Burgmeyer. Sacred Heart parish school and parish. Miss Maurie Deslauriers, Sac­ red Hearts e~ementary,St. Pe­ ter's parish, Dighton. Maureen Clement, St. Anne's School. Holy Name parish. Miss Patricia Nobrega, John'

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SHA Concert

Morley Meredith. baritone. wm be guest soloist at the Sacred Hearts Academy, - Fall River, spring concert. Friday. May 3. Miss Margaret Mullaney and Miss EdwIna ' Petrone. Alumnae' Association president, are co-' 'chairmen of the 'Patron· Drive sponsoring the muslcale.Ahimqae Family Day wlll be . observed:lI,t the convent April 28 ~

Spelling Award

Miss Ma.rilyn Venice' of FaU River was one of seven ·students of Holy Union Juniorate. Tiver­ ton, R. I. who were triple winners In the Southeastern Massachu­ setts Chapter, of the National Office Management A85oclatlon business spelling tests. • J. , McDonough' school; . santo _ Winners received certificates lLIld were dinner' guests of Christo partsh.' . NOMA. Miss Venice was also a. Miss Joan Ann KonarskI. Mc­ Donough,,' school. st. StanIslaus panelist on the Education Night program. Parish.

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