North Attleboro Man Heads Catholic Charities Appeal Representative groups from each pa-rish in the Fall River Diocese will gather in the Jesus Marie Academy auditorium, Fall River, at 3 o'clock next Tuesday for the organizational meeting' of the 1957 Catholic Charities Appeal. The parish groups will be m,ade up of pastors, curates, parish chairmen and trustees. Speciallnvltations'havt been extended to the men who sei"ved as Diocesan Lay Chairmen in previous years. Followt,pg the custom of
The
ANCHOR
An Anchor
0/
the Sou,, Sure and Firm -
Fall River, Mass.
Vol. 1, No.3
past years,' His Excellency, Most Reverend James L. Connolly. 0.0.. and Diocesan Lay Chair man Robert V. McGowan will address the meeting. They will stress the needs met by the Ap peal and outline plans for this year's Charities Appeal. Enthusi asm generated at this meeting is the directing force for the con tinued success of ,the Charitie~
ST. PAUL
Thur.sday, April 25, 1957 APfl~~;'year's theme, "The Appeal
Application lor .oeond-elass mail privi 100" is pondino .t Fall Rivor, Mass.
PRICE, 10. $4.00 per Yr.
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Dighton War Veteran Ordination on May 3 . Rev. Donald McInnis, C.P., World War II veteran and son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McInnis, '300 Spring street, North Dig'hton, is one "f 12 Passionists who will be ,or dained priests by the Most Rev. Cuthbert. O'Gara; C.p.., Bishop of Yuanling, China, at a pontifical Mass on Fri day, May 3, at St. 'Michael's Monastery Church, Union ,City, New Jersey. Father McInnis will sing his
First Solemn Mass at 10 :30 Sun day. May 5. at st. Joseph's Church in North Dighton. Assist ing' will be the pastor, Rev. Fran cis McCartliy, archpriest; Rev. Timothy Fitzgerald, C.P.,· Our Lady of Sorrows Monastery, West Spl'ingfield, Mass., deacon and Rev. William O'Connell, assistant pastor, SS. Peter and Paul's Church, Fall River. subdeacon. The sermon will be preached by Rev. Joseph Patrick O'Neill, C.P., assistant retreat director. st. "'-
Turn To Page Fifteen
•
Nuclear Weapon Test,·ng
W
" REV. DONALD MciNNIS, C.P. '
Nantucket Parish Makes Quota For The Anchor Another parish has gone over
the top In its circulation drive
for The Anchor. Our LadY of the Isle on Nan tucket, where Rev. Edward F. Dowling is pastor. has met the quota establl&hed for It by the Circulation Department of The Anchor. And. in addition. the parish has subscribed to the paper for every young man who is In the Armed Forces..
Each day additional of the diocesan Faithful are subscribing to OUl' paper. We are gratified with the response we have received. . Many parishes throughout the diocese need only a few more subscriptions to reach their quo tas. Parish sodalities. societies and organizations can assist the· subscription campaign In many ways. We prefer home deliveries. It is easy to arrange to have The Anchor sent to your home every week. Merely write your name on any white envelope, put your subscription money Inside. print YOUI' name distinctly on thll . envelope, and write the words. The Anchor, under your name. Then, just drop the enve lope into the collection basket at YOUl' church on Sunday morning. Your pastor will forward yom' aubscription to us. Our goal is the delivery of The Anchor into every Catholic home 1n the diocese every week.
With a Heart." will receive spe
cial ellJ.phasis. It includes the
notion of d'onors who contribute 'with consistent generosity, in
'spired by love of neighbor. The
,dedicated devotion of the good
· religious who staff our Diocesan
- Institlltions, which ,receive their
: support from the Appeal. is in
cluded. It also envelopes thl! heartfelt gratitude of the thou sands who are the beneficiaries of these Homes and Hospitals.. NOl·th Attleboro Native BLESSING OF THE FIRE: Rev. Joseph A. Martineau Mr. McGowan and his .family Is shown blessing the, Fire at St, Joseph's Church, New are members of St. Mary's Parish Bedford, ,on Holy Saturday. Rev. Roland J. Bousquet fa In Nortl~ Attleboro. Mr. Mc at Father Martineau's right and Rev. Louis E. Prevost, Gowan is a life-long resident ot North Attleboro. Mrs. McGowan pastor, 18 behind the Paschal Candle. was formerly a member of St.' · Theresa's Parish, South Attle-" . c
· bora. Following the lead of their father, the McGowan children are former, present or prospec~rrles .~ tive students at St. Mary's Parish s<;hool. Claire is presently attendWkSHINGTON (NC)-The future of nuclear weaporis Ing the Dominican Academy in promises to be the number one topic for international Plainville. Robert is a Freshman thinking and discussion throughout the spring and at North Attleboro High School. summer. Both are graduates of St. Mary's. Both Mr. and Mrs. McGowan More and more people and heighten the Interest alreadT oreated. have devoted much of theii' time nations -are being encour With Increasing frequency in and talent to civic, parochial and diocesan interests in addition to - aged to give their attention dividuals and publications reter · their business and family-raising to the problems involved in to the Christmas messages ot Hia Hollness Pope Pius xn tor 1955 ,activities. For nine years Mr. the use of nuclear power tor wea ,McGowim was a member of the pons. and In the testing ot these and 1956. In the first, the Hob' North Attleboro School Com- weapons. Events thaf are SOOn to Father called for a renunciation mittee serving twa years as Sec- take place are. expected to Turn To Pare Fifteen . retary and' two as Chairman. Fl'Om 1940 to 1946 he was Town' · AuditOl~of North Attleboro. He Is: - a member of the A.O.H., Elks.
'.
All"'. · ' ' atlons
P ortu.guese. G'overnment
Turn To Page Fifteen
Honors Bishop
Con~olly
The Portuguese governrnen' has announced that It wlll con tel' the Order ot Christ on the Most Reverend James L. Connol ly, D.O., Bishop or Fall River. The Bishop was officially notified by Dr. Luis Esteves Fernandes. Portuguese Ambassador In Wash ington, through the Vice-Consul ,in Fall River, Dr. Manuel C. Pereira.
This Order Is granted for dJa tlnguished service to POI·tugal or to humanity. The Bishop will be made a Grand Official of the Order the second highest rank. The first rank Is reserved , for heads of state and royalty. Queen Elizabeth or England was presented with this Order on her recent state visit to Portugal. The Insignia at the Order la a red jeweled cross on which fa . superimposed a smaller white cross. It Is the cross often seen 10 history books decorating the salls ot the ships ot Portuguese plorers and navigators. On December 10, 1939, the late Bishop Cassidy was honored with this same decoration. and In 193a the King or Portugal conferred the Order ot' the Immaculate Conception on the late Bishop Feehan. - Bishop Connolly will recelv8 the decoration from the Portu ~ese Ambassador at a banquet to be held In Lincoln Park on Sunday. June 23.
ex
CHAIRMAN OF 1957 CATHOLIC CHARITIES APPEAL AND FAMILY: Robert V. McGowan,of North Attleboro, has been appointed to lead this year's Catholic Char ities Appeal, scheduled for next month; is shown with his family. Sitting, left to right, are Eileen, Mr. McGowan, his wife Evelyn G., holding the youngest member of the fam . ily, Joan; and Paul. Standing, Claire and Robert.
MOI!S ~
~
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OFFiCIAL
.~.
Diocese of Fall Rive'r
1
BISHOP'S APPOINTMENTS
"'~'"t. Ho"l'\
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April 25, Thurday-6:45 P.M.-llerra Club, North Attleboro, Brook Manor. April 28, Sunday-l :00 P.M.-llt. Theresa, New Bedford. Con-, firmation. 3:00 P.M.-St. Kilian, New Bedford. Confirmation. /l:00 P.M.-Our Lady of Purgatofy, New Bedford. Con- ' firmation. 7:00 P.M.-Daughters of Isabella, New Bedford. Fortieth Anniversary: • April 29, Monday-7:30 P.M.--Bt. John of Ood, Somerset. Con firmation. April 10, Tuesday-a :00 ·P.M.-Catholic Charities Appeal Meet ing, Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River.
Preface of Easter, 'In hoc potis'"
Mum," proper. Ite. III. est. 1I10N.-F'east of. St. lITark th& Evangelist (taken from April 25th(. Double of the first class. Red: Mass proper; Gloria; second collect St. Peter; Creed; Pref.ace of the Apostl es. 'I·UJo~S.-Double. 'Yhite. St. Cathe rln6 of Siena. Mass proper; Gloria; aecond coliect for Peace; Preface of Easter. WEIl.--'Double of the first clasB. White. ,Feast of Sf.. J.oseph, Con teesor, .Spouse of the B.V.M. and Worker. .M:ass. . propel'; . Gloria; Creed; Preface of St..Joseph. 'l'HlJRS.-St. Atnan!'1sins. Bishop,
g
OnfeSSor,
refuse ~ cooperate ,with
a
MaR-s
·~1"oper;
Bro~dcasts TODA Y - The Rosa]'}". W ATjJl T:16 p.m,: WSAH 9:15 l1.m. 'l'OM,ORROW - ~rhe R 0 ~ Ill' Y. WALE 7)5 p.m.; Sacred Heart PI·O. gram. W SAR 9 p.m.; The Rosary
WSAR 9:15 p.m,
SUNDAY - Sacr-ed Heart Pro ram. :15 1l.'.1I.; rlest WO,OS. Views 8.the News. Catholll'
WSAR, p.m.; 1Ilarlall Theatre. 'VOCB p.m.; Ave Maria Hour. 'YAL'Bl 'p.m.;WPEP 2:30 p,m.; St. Fran ols Hour, W A RA 6:15 p.m.; W ACE 6;30 p.m.; Ave Marla HOllr. WARA
f
.
~~oAft·mi/3~[0~rm~;f ~~~r~;u]~~:~i
to
congressional cOplmittee with crime," Fa.ther Michael' at St. Joseph'S College,
maintained here. "Any efforts to ,block the,
citizen should be to cooperate as much as possible with those who are carrying onlnvetigations for the welfare of the people," he elearly contrary to good moral- declared. Sty," he said in an address on "Actually, those whp have been the Fifth Amendment at a perfectly candid in dealing with luncheon' of th~ Philadelphia such committees have fared bet Serra Club. tel' than those who appealed to Dealing for the most part with the' Fifth Amendment. Such an the self-I.nerlminatlon clause of appeal, while it .may give one a the amendment, Father Smith' feeling of security against prose mid that the clause "I~ a subject 'cutlon, creates suspicion of guilt of tremendous scope" and that in .'in the popular mlnd,lI he added. the address he referred only to ita moral implications. Waste of Time The, basic principle I.nvolved, CINCINNATI (NC) ~ Seton he said, 18 that "s)lbjec~s owe High School girls' here have obedience to legltlmate,authority, labeled fan clubs, for 'TV stars, when authority interrogates athletes and 'other entertal.ners 'Within the limits of its compe "a waste of precious energy and tence." ablllty.:' Members of the Mother . There are exceptions however, Seton ~ague, the girls called' for which allow a person to with discussion in English and reli hold information, the Jesuit said. gion classes of "worthwhile, "When the penalty threatening charitable a.ctlvities" to take the the person who Is intelTogated , place of. fan clubs. Ia a 'gravisslmum malum,: that la, a _aen~nce to Ute imprison ment, death or the loss of all possessions, then the na w.raI law would probably exempt the person inten'ogated from the obligation of replying," he said. But even in this case, the Je . OIL BURNERS auit added, "when the common AIIO complete Boller-Burner er lood requires that the public Fllrnace Unitt., Ifficient low COlt authorities obtain the infomia heating. Bumer and fuel 011 11IIec tion which the person interro and "rvice, . lated possesses, then the natural law authors unanimously say that the right of the indiVidual 480 Mt. Plellunt Street must yield to the common good. New Bedford WY "Certainly the desire of every rooting out of evil or the prevention 0 f c rime are
ITam, WPEP 7 2::10 p.m.; Perpetual 'I'he ROB ry. 'YAl,E :15 p.m,; ovena, to St. Anthony. WALE ,:30 p.m,; The Rosary. "'SAR 9:15 p.m. W@DN~:SDAY The Rosan", WALE 7:15 p,m,; 'Sacred Heart, l'rogTam. WSAH 9 p.m.; The ROB ary, 'WSAH 9:15 lUll.
f
i-2'"
N:t~\'7
BEDFOBD!lS LEADING PDABltIAf;Y
over w h a t might be called a Mohammedan "rosary" are ~r. Alice 'Berg'hoff, a Holy Ghost missionary Sister, and a nurse
·5
West African towns in ·Ghana. She says they al'e "un usually Cathoilc in content:"-
Marks Anniversary
.f;
o
Education Gift
A '".-,
B
B S
Cen·tre Theatre
FALL RIVER,
Starting Wednesday, May Thll Summer - have your
Ion or daughter
,learn to type
. Mornings only, 8.30 to 10.30 Monday, July 8 to Aug. 16 TlJpewrltln~ helps
children to:
e
5·
Lo0 k'Ing
AFRICA :
WHITE, SPA
StanleyOU CO., Inc.
REGISTERED
PHARMACISTS
FROM
VATICAN CI'IY (NC) - His OMAHA (NC) - A gift of Eminence Pietro Cardinal Fuma $1,000 has 'been granted to Knights in New York .oni BiondI. who for 10 years was Creighton University by the U.S. 'Start New Aid .Plan ApostQlic Delegate to the United Steel Foundation Inc. It is part ALBANY (NC) - By action of States, has celebrated the 60th °of the foundatiOll's program of the New York State Legislature, anniversary ,of his ordination aid-to-education, with grants here. From 1923 to 1933 he , payable In 1957 totaling nearly with the approval of Gov. Averlll .erved as Apostolic Delegate to $1.8 mlllion. Aid is being given to E. Harrimari, the former Knights the· U. S. returning to Rome in more than 600 privately-support of Columbus Hospital Association the latter. year to be made a ed liberal arts colleges, universi ties, technological institutes and 'of the State, of New York is·con-· Cardinal and pre 'ect of the con medical schools. tinued 'under the name. "New ITegation. York State Council, Knights' of Columbus Foundation." This was announced here by William E. Burke, president of the K. of C. foundation. The for mer coi'poration was Instituted in 1926 to assist K. of C. members :t~ :t~ afflicted with tuberculosis. The ,decrease in tuberculosis cases re . duced the number of. Knights • B"ANQUETS • WEDDINGS. PARTIES' availing themselves of this serv ice. One of tfieobjects of the • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS K. of C. fmindation is "to pro ,vide voluntary finanCial assist
ance for hospitalizatiml or in
FALL RIVER 1343 PLEASANT ST. firmary care, and for the fur
nishing of medical, or surgical
PHONE, OSborne 3-7780 care, to such persons as the cor
porath;m may determine."
~ss3>
.me'.
SOUVENIR
Frog-,'am, "VNBH 6:45 p.m.; Hour gf the Urueifled. 'WNSH 7 p.m.;, Mlssloll Program. WSAR 7:05 p,m. from 'St, Therese's Hospital, WaUkegan, Ill. Ninety-nine MONDAY-The Rosary. 'VATjE T:15 p,Ill.; Sacre,d Heart Prog;I'am,. beads make up the "rosary" which devout Mohammedans WSAR 9 p,m.; 1,he ROSH 1'.1', "SAR h d t ft ft d t· .:15 ~,1I1. praYt;laC ay wo a er a er sun own. A na Ive of Yaki 1~lJ,jSDAY-Fralleis"all, Fathers, rna, Wash.', Sl', All'Ce l'ecel'ved the beads whl'le wOl'kl'ng l'U WN BH 10 a,m.; Sacred H ea rt Pro-
Jesuit 'Stresses Obligation
To Recognize Auth~rity "
the intention of protecting evil or J. Smith, S.J., professor of ethics
Doctor.
loria: second eollect fot: 'Peace; I·ted; Pl'eface or East~I·. '
FORTY HOURS DEVOTION' AIWII IB-St. Michael, Ocean Grove. Immaculate Conception, Fall River. May I-St. Casimir, New Bedford. St. Mary, Hebronville. • May'II-Immaculate Conception, North East~n. St. Patrick, Falmouth.: May 19-5t. Matthew, Fall River. St. Kilian, New Bedford. , May I6-SS~ Peter and PaUl, Fall River. St. Mary, Mansfield. May liD-Convent of the Holy Union of the Saered Heartl, Fall River. Convent of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. Mt. St. Mary's Convent, Fall River.
PHILADELPHIA (NC)-"It is absolu~ly immoral
Oll'dlo
FR,lI•.!l-Wlthln the OctaVE of Eas. " tel'. Double. White. Mass properl GlorIa; Sequence; Creed; Preface Communicantes, et Hanc 19itur. propel': lte, 1\1.est, 811el. ,allel. IM'I'.-Within the OcUwe of Eas. tel'. Double. 'Vhite. Mass propen Gloria; Seq.; Creed; Preface, Com p1unlcantes. et Hallc Igitur. propel'! Ite. 111. est. aile I. allel. ' 8UN.-Sullday in "'hite (Dom. In Albls). Double of fh'st class. White. Mass prOpel'; Gloria; Creed,:
Cet Higher Crades e, CIt on School Publication Staff e Earn Money in Spare Time e Get Stllrted In a Career Enrollment lIS Limited Write, phone or vilit the achOClI for free Teen-aile Typing Bulletin
The Campbell
. SCIHIOOL
J:
H. ROBITAIl.LE Director 15 MorllllN ~1'efJt f1flClllc 5-707.4
Is~
"Jhe Grea.test Story 01 All Time/. ן.
.
.
DAY OF TRIUMPH
In Glorious Color
STARRING
LEE J. COBB - JOANNE DRU
See the-Persecution of Joh~ The Baptist ~CallinQ of the Twelve Apostles -lazarus Raised From The Dead -The Crucifi.xion ond -The lResulrredDolll
I
THI ANCHORThun" April 25. 1957
3
-the Qown of Your Dreams for the Day of Your Dreams
FALL RIVER
NEW BEDFORD
BEHOLD 'l'HE WOOD OF THE CROSS: These are the words sung' by the Reverend Geo.rge E. Sullivan in St. Dominic's Church, Swansea, as he unveils the Cross during Good Friday afternoon services.
Nationalism Growing Stronger, Says Irish Envoy Boland WASHINGTON (NC) - Na tionalism is growing stronger in the world. especially in Africa and Asia. Frederick H. Boland. Irish Ambassador to the United Nations. told the John Carroll Society here. Disputing widesprcad belief that nationalism is outdated. Ambassador Boland said today it is "one of the most powerful weapons in the arUlory of the free world. "We can't blow hot and cold about it." the Irish diplomat de clared. "We can't applaud it in Hungary and Poland and deplore it in Algeria and Cypress. The free world must make up - its mind to plump for freedom national as well as individual. If it did. it would check commlUlism and promote the disintegration 'of the Soviet empire."
Ambassador Boland predicted that many subject or dependent countries in Africa and Asia will seClll'e their freedom within the next few years. He said that one important result in the event of such a happening will be to in crease membership in the United Nations. Such an increase, he added. will make the UN General .Assem bly a still greatel' forum of world opinion.
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What's Pop Li.ke?
'Family Relations Experts Rise to Defend Fathers , By Joseph A: Breig Cleveland Universe Bulletin
One of the things that speakers get up at conventions and say, without fear of contradiction from the deleg'ates seated row on row, is that the mo<;lern Dad bas lost his rightful position as head' of his household and is now nothing more than a kind of amiable fool who pays the A father's responsibility is to act like a father-to. play and read bills and that's that. If there are any fathers in with his children-no~ mop floors. the convention ao\:ldience (which USllally there aren't, fathers be ing violenty al lergic to speech es) they know that what the honored guest on the platform is saying is for' the most part, eyewash. But they smile and let it go; after all, a speaker has got to speak hasn't he? Mere Nonsense Mothers' who are present like 'vise disagree with what is being alleged, but here again the fel low delivering the address goes unchallenged, because by the time a mother has reached con vention-going age, she has heard every' kind of nonsense there is, and is tired of it, and simply likes nothing better than staying out of arguments. . Dredging back in memory, I re call 'that this propaganda about the incompetence of Pop has been piling up for years, until today it forms one of those fashionable. topics which, when mad~the sub ject of a convention talk, is im. mediately picked up by the news papers and gets all kinds of pub licity-something to which most speakers ha ve only mild objec tions. I remember that one of the first fellows to hit upon the theme of the futility of Father was a professor in Canada, Her bert McLuhan by name, who roused me to righteous rage by writing what I considered a das tardly attack on my best beloved comic strip personality, Dagwood Bumstead, than whom there is no nobler character In all fiction. Entertainers Criticized The foolish talk about Father has been snow~alling ever since, but now I am happy to report that soine of the capped and gowned family relations expert.s apparently are beginning to see. thl'Ough it. ~ International News Service in forms us that the experts, at.tend ing the Child Study Association convention in New York,' criti- . cized movies, TV'and comic strips for too often picturing Dad as a "bumbling Idiot" and a "defense less 'male easily destroyed by women." Position Higher What chirks me uP. though, is the fact that the experts asserted that this portrayal of Pop is false; Dr. Ray L. Birdwhistell, Univer sity of. Buffalo professor of an thropology, denounced It as a "myth" at the New York meet ing. In fact, Dr. Birdwhistell (and I shake his hand) said: "Father's prestige' may have gone down, but his real position in the family Is higher than ever. Yet because he takes the more ma~culine p,ositlon of being a fat.her-companlon to his children, everybody's scared that he's be- ' coming a sissy." Not Mop Floors Similar magnificent common sense was talked by Dr. Gunnar Dybwad, director of the Child St.udy Association. I quote him: "Father used to be pictured as In 'control' of the family, but . actually he left all the real man- agement to mother and just be haved as a figurehead. Today, a father is a real part of the fam ily, but women haven't figured
out. just what his part should be. "Some wives expect a father's Jcsponsbil1ty to Include diapering the. baby. or washing the dishes.
for his' wife." , Well, I might take issue with Dr. Dybwad merely on a matter of emphasis. What's wrong with mopping a floor for your wife, if. she asks you real nice and it 'is understood that she is not mopping the floor with you? OUT OF GAS, TOO Temple, Okla. - Bill Bentley,filling station operator,- received a call to bring a can of gasoliI1e to a customer who had run out of gas some miles from town. Bill filled up~a 'can with gasoline and stal:ted off to find the motorist. On .the way, his car ran out of gas.
THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 25. 1957
4
. McCor~ack Honored With Papal Award WASHINGTON (N.C). ~ Rep. John McCorm9.ck of Massa chusetts and Eep. J 0 h'n J. Rooney of Ne'N York have. been' invested here. with the insignia of Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great with St.ar. The honor. bestowed· upon the two Congressmen by His Holiness Pope Pius XII,was conferred by . His Excellency fWehbishop Am-. Ieto Giovanni Ci'.:o3"nuni, Apos ,tolic Delegate to the Uni~ed States. , His E):cellency said' Pope Gre go"'y XVI, who e3tablished the honor. to give recognition to those who distingnish t.hemselves by "virtue, high responsibility or administrative ability, and who at the same time enjoy universal esteem." The insignia bears the motto "For Cod and Country." The Apostolic Delegate noted that -the two legislators are well kno,m as distinguished Catholics who have "discharged important duties" for their country.
W:
Candy Manufacturers Are Jubilant Mit~s Relaxing· With' .Lent Over I
PITTSBURGH (NC) - Lent is over. There Is a poignant little after . math that ought' to 'be noted. The candy Industry is jubilant. Mites and mite-boxes are the key to such a juhilation. A survey just completed Indi cates over three million children attendiilg parochial schools were largely responsible for the dras tic falling-off of sales of lolli pops; popsicles, icepops; butter fingers, nut and chocolate candy bars, bubble gum, tut.ti-frutt.i floats. sundaes, banana splits and jelly beans. . "Mite-boxes" were widely dis tributed among the parochial school children for personal de positories of pennies, nickels and dimes saved from the youngsters' weekly candy budg>et. The funds were to provide food and medical care in orphanages, hospitals and schools operated by missionaries in many areas of Africa, Asia, Alaska and South America. The survey was made by Father Augustus O. Reitan, Na tional Director of the HolyChild
hood Association, a Pontifical agency with headquarters here. It Was Terrible The Director firmly empha sized that unless accompanied by the Holy Childhood daily prayer fOl' "the poor little pagan chil dren." the mite-box, no matter' how bursting with coins, was not an acceptable sacrifice. Nor was It any good if the members had' solicited the pennies from their parents. Morris Zimmerman who con ducts a candy depal·tment in his shop In Manhattan, lying close to St. Jean Baptiste School. voiced pessimism. '~Business, it was terrible." . He approves of Lent generally. but he was relieved when Easter came, assured that he will recoup on chocolate bun n i e s, sugar chickens, and giant Easter eggs. "After all," he said, "Lent only comes 0I1ce .a year, and lasts only six weeks. I don't mind so much, if what I lose goes to help the poor little pagan babies. If Arilerican children won't take care of them, who will?"
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THI ANCHOR Thun.• April 25. ~951
5
Women to Conduct Retreat Sunday
DIOCESAN MEN PLANNING ACTIVE RETREAT LEAGUE: Organization of Our Lady of Good Counsel Re treat League for men of the Diocese of Fall River were made at a meeting with Rev. William J. McMahon of New Bedford at the Cathedral Camp. Part of the group which assembled before the start of t~8 meeting is shown here. The ultimate objective is participation by every man in the diocese in the retreat movement. The Family Clinyc
Parents Should Go Out Together Every Week
The Anchor Receives First Foreign Subscription and Job Application
The Anchor's first foreign subscriber is Rev. John Lawlor, M.M." native son of New Bedford and Maryknoll missionary stationed By Rev. John .L. Thomas, S.J. . at the pansh of St. Rose de Lima What db you think of a man who never wants to take In Lima, Peru. his wife out? We've been man'ied five years now, have In a letter to Rev. Daniel F. ,three wond~rful children, and I guess we'd be considered a Shalloo, general manager of The Anchor, Father Lawlor expresses happy married couple. Ed is a good provider. his pleasure that the Fall River I know he works hard, but . Diocese now has its own paper· when he comes home, he their world of the home, and men and with congratulations sends just wants to eat and sit are to be occupied with theirs. along his best wishes for success. around reading the paper or This definition of marriage "Enclosed find some coin of leaves little room for together the realm," Father writes, refer watching televiSion. He says he's ness and companionship as hus tired. So am I, but I feel it will band and wife. Briefly, 'it says: ring to his subscription. "If the Fall Rlverites don't appreciate do us both good This is a man's world, and wom to get out once en will be happiest if they learn ,the worth of our money, I'll send you a check in dollars!" In a while. How to accept it. The enclosure is cinco soles dtt do I get him out Mom Always on Job or this domestic ..ut we've fallen Now, Mary, 1 don't know whether your husband Is just E~voy Baptized Into? People are the thoughtless or whether he holds QUITO, Ecuador (NC)-Dr. a different view of marriage than Tzu Hsu, Minister of National queerest mon keys, Mar y. you do. If the latter, there prob ist China to Ecuador, was bap ably isn't much you can do to tized in the chapel of the apos Soine w I v e s £omplain that change him since' he may be fol tolic nunclature here by Arch lowing the pattern of his father bishop Opilio Rossi, Apostolla their husbands are never home before him and feels that this 18 Nuncio to Ecuador. After bap and some com the way it should be. tism, Dr. Tzu Hsu received hi. However, you might point out first Communion in the presence plain that theY'l'e home too much. It's possible that the rea that even his father more than of his daughters, who had be son is pretty much the same in likely devoted more time to his come Catholics some time previ both cases. wife and children since he ously. Just Thoughtlessness couldn't escape to the passivity The problem stems both from of watching television. thoughtlessness and the different Chances are, your husband is ways that men and women may merely thoughtless. Let him see define the meaning of marl'iage. that you really appreciate his EVERYTHING Perhaps it w111 help you meet hard work in behalf of the faml-' fOR THE HOME this problem if we consider its ly, but show him that you both sources. need to get out together as a '104 Allen St. First, there is thoughtlessness. couple. . Husbands sometimes forget Married people tend to take each New Bedford other for granted. Particularly that men have gained a 40-hour WYman 7-9354 once the children start coming, week, but moti1ers with children busbands and wives slip into must stl1l work seven days out fairly clearly defined roles more of seven. It may help toward this 01' less automatically. realization if you let him take SomebodY has to pay the bills, care of the children for a. good tlnd father goes at his job with stretch on Saturday while you drive and energy. Somebody has are away. to take care of the house, the Baby Sitting Helps Most men aren't e~perts at meals, the laundry, the shopping and the children, and mothe1' ap empathy-the ability to put them lilt'. a whale of a drink" plies he1' energy to this never selves in theil' wife's shoes and to realize hel' special feelings and finished dally routine. 17 DELICIOUS FLAVORS It is just at this point that a problems. A taste of baby-sitting BEST SINCE 1853 couple can fall into a fatal do may help.. Keep working On him, Mary. mestlc rut that eventually leaves WE DELIVER them far apart in a vocation Prudent couples make it a point CALL which was designed to bring to go .out together at least once WY 9-6264 them ever closer together, 'a week. They feel this draws l\1arl'iage Is Twosome them close1' together and gives and 9-6265 If a couple forgets that mar them better view 'of their mar riage is a life companionship riag"e. I might add that it 'also which grows by doing things to keeps them from forming the gether, he may lose himself in habit of seeking all their enter .1is job, and she may lose herself tainment separately. In her housekeeping 01' children. Marriage is for life. The com-. , Whether you are fully aware of it panionship of courtship should 45 SCHOOL ST. 01' not, Mary, you have sensed blossom into the intimate to": . this possibility. getherness of parenthood and old At So. First St. Marriage is a twosome.·It age. not into the mere usefulness NEW" BEDFORD .starts thayears t way,of and the p; uOf~p~al~·t~n~el~·s~h~iP~i~n~a~bu~s~i~ne~s~s~.;;;;, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ turbulent childonce bearing and child rearing are passed, it continues that way, YOll must grow together all through mar riage. This means you must enJoy playing together as well as working together. Unfortunately, some people don't think of marriage in that way. For them life is divided into Dial OS 6-8246 a man's world and a woman's Fall River, Mass. Citizen's Savings Bank Building world. Once they are married, women are suppose to retire into
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Rev. Lawrence Poetz, S.V'.D" will be retreat master for tha Day of Recollection ,to be spon sored by Fall River CathoUo Woman's Club at St. Vincent'. Home, Fall River, Sunday. Father Poetz, superior of the House of the Divine Word Mis sionaries, Boston, is noted for hls retreat and mission work. Mass at 9 will be followed by breakfast, a talk by Father Poetz, rosary, dinner, sermon and bene diction. All affiliates or the National Council or CathoUo Women hava been invited to send representa tives.
Pre-Cana Conference
Pre-Cana Conferences w1l1 bl oro; that's folding money issued held in Fall River and New Bed- . by the Central Reserve Bank of ford Sunday night. Conferences Peru. In Fall River are held at Sacred "And," Father concludes, "if Heart School. Linden and Pinl3 you need any foreign correspondent in the Latin American hemis- Street and in New Bedford, phere, put me In line for the Knights of COlumbus Hall, Pleas
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@rbeANCHOR
·PRESSI
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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
F~,eling
Religion is not based on feeling. A good. feeling can come from a satisfying meal or a new hair-do. Such things are too uncertain to build religion on. But the faCt is that Holy Week usually Jeaves most of us feeling pleased 'with ,the world in general and ourselves in particular. The. ef forts that most Catholics make to attend· Mass and serv ices and to go to confession and receive Communion these contribute to making us feel good. Such a feeling is not a bad thing. We should try to keep it as long as we can. It will make it easier for us and more pleasant for those who have to· put up with us. "
More
Participati~n
It was a heartening sight during Holy Week to see
Theology for, Laymen'
many persons with Missals and Holy Week booklets in their hands. It meant that Catholics are not ,content-to be at services-th~y are realizing that they must know what is going on and participate more actively in the Church's worship of God'. ' By F. J. Sheed ' That was precisely the Holy Father's motive in mak-' Mind, we saw last week, splits the atom and calculates ing the changes that he did in the hours of Masses and the light-years. But, you may remind me, in both these 8erv1ce~, the change~ in the Liturgy itself of; Holy Week. Greater partiCipation on the part of the laity is called for. operations it uses the body. And this is true. -' But observe 'that there is no question' which is the It is a call that has not fallen on deaf ears., user and which is the used.
The mind uses the body, not ing? Trying to make a fool of ' asking the body's consent. me? Speaker: No. I'm taking you at When -J. Edgar Hoover became Director of the F.B.I.. The mind is the principal, your word. What color ,is It? the body the' instrument. is the W~at shape? he stepped right into ·the criminal mob era of this country. instrument Must the Obvious Moral , The most distressing aspect of that age was not that there mind use itessential? to The discussion at this point were criminals - these Hoover expected- but that the cope with mat broke down, ·the materialist say criminals of the day were being glamorized 'and glorified ter? We ,have ing the Catholic was talking non by the man in the street. Killers and bank ,robbers were evidence In our sense. It is nonsense of course, , own experience receiving the sympathy of respected citizens' and were of mind affect to speak of a thought having hailed as modern Robin' Hoods. To combat that attitude ing matter di~ length or weight or color or shape. But'the materialist had Mr. Hoover in all his public speeches called these criminal~ rectly. We wlll saig that thought is material, exactly what they were-punks; cowards with guns, mur to raise our and the speaker was simply ask arm, for 'exam d~rers, cancers in the body of society.' . ple, and we raise it. The raising ing what -material attributes It It. is wise to call things what they are. Language can of the arm is a complicated ana had. In fact, it has none! and sometImes be used to make evil soundllke good; to pin tomical activity; but It is set in the materialist knew this perfeot respectability on what is wrong. Words have no built-in motion by a decision of the will. ly' well. Only he had not drawn the,obvious moral. If we are con defense. - They can be used or abused. They can be put And as we shall see, the direct tinuously producing things which human mind has over power the down in all their correct meaning and context or they can its own' body, 'mightier spirits have no attribute of matter, be distorted to give quite a different impression.. there must be in us some ele have over all matter. ment which is not mattei, ,to'pro This mingle of spirit and mat Take a news magazine-:.one that aims at being ob duce them. This element we call jective.Read' an article about a ,prominent personality. ter in human actions arises from spirit. a fact which distinguishes man's Underline with a red pencil every qualifying word or spirit Oddly enough. the materialist from all others. Ours is phrase. And you will see how'a set of facts can be colored the only spirit which is also a thinks of us as superstitious peo': pIe, who believe, in - a fantasy • or slanted to give almost any impression desired.. loul-that Is to say the life prin It makes quite a difference,. in a news story, wh,ether oiple in a body. God Is a spirit, called spirit, of himself as the plain blunt man who asserts a man spoke -or spat, whether he is a city leader or city but has no body; the angels are that Ideas are produced by a Ipirits, but have not body. Only boss, whether his wife is a lady or a "lady." See how a wodi in man spirit is united with a , bodily organ; the bl'ain.' What he can create an impression? body, animates the body, makes is asserting is that matter pro As Mr. Hoover saw.it is good to call things by their It to be a living ,body. Every duces offspring Which have not . attribute 'in common with right names. Words should convey a reality-not conceal living body-vegetable, lower an single' it, and what could be more fan human-has a life princi it. Lang.uage is meant to 'give ti'uth - not camouflage it Imal, ple, a soul. And just as ours is tastic than that? We 'are the or substitute for it. ' , ' . the only spirit which is a soul, so plain blunt men and we should In this age, when the giant economy size so often ours is the only soul which is' a insist on it. Tho.ught Most Powerful turns out to, be the small size (the large size Is, of course, spirit. Later we shall be dis the union of spirit and Occasionally a, materialist w1ll the super atomic package-there are larger sIzes, too), oussing matter In man to see what light argue that there are chan'ges in when the word "wonderful" is th~ most insulting of com It sheds upon ourselves. But for the brain when we think, grooves pliments, when descriptions, as the expression has it, have the present our interest is in or electrical discharges or what not. But these only accompany no actual c?unterpart to persons or things living or dead, spirit: the thought, they are not the Knows and Loves in this age It is good to have a respect for words. IIi read We have seen that In us spirit thought. WheI! we think of. jus'" ing or liste~ing it Is' wise to 'ask, "Is this the truth or am does a number of things: it tice, for instance, we are not I being sold a blll of goods?" And:in speaking or writing it knows and loves, and it animates thinking of' grooves in the brain, Is the, part of honesty to call things what they are. To do a body. But what, at the end of we are not even aware of them. Justice has a meaning, and It ' otherwise is to f.ool or be fooled. all this, is spirit?
Thoughts, Ideas, Love Are Products of the Spirit .
Respect for Words
I '
,The Baptismal Fonts of many ~hurches in Europe are decorated with flowers at this time of year. It is a strikIng way of calling attention to the Instrument of our union with Christ. As Christ lived and suffered and dIed to atone for the sIns of men and to regain the friendship of God for us, 80 it is through our Baptism that the fruits of Christ'. life and death are applied to our souls by unIting our lives with His. ' _ The Altar and the Baptismal Font-these are the focal points of our churches.
Weekly Calend'ar: Of Feast Days
In 304.
SO
The Baptismal Font,
THE ANCHOR
Thun., April 25, 1957
THURSDAY - St. Mark, the Evangel1st. He is said to have been converted by St. Peter.. whom he afterwards accompa nied to Rome as secretary and interpreter. Believed to have founded the Church in Alexan dria, 'he was arrested there be cause of his Faith and <tied in prison In 68. In the ninth century, his remains were moved to Venice, in which city he Is the' Patron Saint. FRIDAY - SS. Cletus and Marce1l1nus, Popes-Martyrs. A Roman patrician and also known as AnacIetus, St,' Cletus was the third Pope and ruled from 76 to 88. St. Marce1l1nus also was a Roman. He became Pope In 296 and was martyred for the Faith
Published Weekly by The Catholic' Presl of the Dl_ of F.II RIver
21 Bedford Street
Fan River, Ma... OSborne !.,.7151
PUBLISHER
Most Rev. James L. Co'~nolly, D.O., Ph.D.
GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER
Rev. John P. Drllcoll
Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. MANAGING EDITOR
, Attorney Hugh J. Golden
A Good
6
does not mean grooves.' When We can get at it by looking in to our own soul.. examining one in I say' mercy is kinder than jus particular of'the things it does. tice, I am not comparing mercy's It produces ideas. I remember a grooves with the stricter grooves dialogue one of our speakers had of justice. Our ideas are not material. ,with a materialist, who asserted that his idea of justice was the , They have no resemblance to our result'of a purely bodily activity, 'body. Their resemblance is to produced by man's material our spirit. They have no' shape, no size, no' color, no weight, no brain., Speaker: How many inches space. Neither has spirit whose offspring' they are, But no one long is it? Questioner: Don't be silly, can call it nothing; for it pro duces thought, and thought Is Ideas have no leng,th. Speaker: OK. How much does the most powerful thing in the 0 It weigh? . world-unless love Is, which spirIt also produces. Questioner: What are ;vou do
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SATURDAY -.St. Peter Cani sius, Confessor-Doctor. He was a· German and one of the first companions of St. Ignatius in the Society of Jesus. He was renowned for his work in Ger many and played a promlnenll part at the Councll of Trent. He died in Switzerland in 1597. SUNDAY - Low Sunday, firsG Sunday after Easter. Generally this date is the feast of St. Paul of the Cross, Confessor, An Ita Ian nobleman, he founded the Passionist Congregation under the guidance of Pope Benedict ,XIII. He died in 1775, MONDAY, - Commemoration of the feast of St, Mark, trans.. ferred from Easter Thursday, April 25. Generally this date i. the feast of St. Peter of Verona. Martyr. He was the son of here.. tical parents and received the habit of' the Dominicans from St. Dominic: He devoted his lifa " to the conversion of the Cathari, then swarming into the north of Italy. He was instrumental in converting thousands, and was slain while travelling from Como to Mllan in 1358 at the age of 46. TUESDAY -'St. Catherine ot Siena, Virgin. Born ill 1347 in Siena, Tuscany, she joined tha Dominican nuns"at the,age of 18, She was gifted with the stigmata. and was tireless in her work for the poor. By her visit to Avignon. she was instrumental in bringing about the return of Pope Gre· gory XI to Rome,' and served as counsellor to Pope Urban VI. She died in 1380, and was canonized in 1461. ' ~ WEDNESDAY - Feast of St. Joseph the Workman. This Feast was 'instituted by His Holinesi Pope Pius XII to'ratifY the statUi of St. Joseph as patron of work ingmen, and to offer them as a model the carpenter of Nazareth whose labor, by God's grace, was a means for the sanctification ot his life.
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ot Universals. (University ot Notre
Dame Press. 95c. paper). Paper. read at a, phllosophlca symposium. BROl\IAGE, M. C. DeValera and the March at a Nation. (Noonday Press. 4,95). A biography and hlsto rJ' ot modern Ireland. COLOIl1EH, LUIS. The Churcl\ and Creation, (St. Anthony Guild. $2,60). A translation tram Ihe Spanish. HEENAN, .T. .T" Tr, The Word of Salvation. (Bruce. $12,60). A com mentary on the Gospels ot lIIrttthe\9' ' and Mark translated trom the French. ' HELM-PIHGO. MAHIAN. Virgin Mary, Queen ot Poland. (Pollsll Institute of Arts and Sciences In America, 145 E. 63rd St.. New York City 22. $1.25. Paper). Commemo rates Ihe tercentenary of solem" 1~'r~5~,lade by King .Tean Casimir HUTATIO CHRISTI. Of the Iml til. tion of ChrIst, translatp-d by' Abbot Justin McCann. (New Amp-ri can,I.ibrary. 50c. Paper). A reprint edilion. LAVELI.E, ELISE. The Man Who Was Chosen. (Whittlesey HQus", $2,75). A biography at Pope Plu. Xl r for young readers. NE'WMAN, .T. H. Newman Pros. and Poetry. (Harvard University , Press. $6,00), A literary anthology selected by Geoffrey Tillotson. ONG, W. J. Frontiers In Ameri_ can Cathollclsm, (Macmillan. $2.60). Essays on Ideology and culture. TONNE, ARTHUR, O.F.M. Storlea for Sermons, Vol. ,7. (Dldde PrInt lng Company, Emporia, Kansas. $2.00. Paper). A collection of over 800 stories lJIustratlng sermon subjects. WEYMAR, PAUl•. Adena,,,,,,. hi. authorized ·Blography. (Dutton. $5.95). Complete biography of Ger mallY'S greut Catholic statesman.
THI ANCHOR
Thll,..• April 2'. 1957
At Our House
·7
Grail Worker Receives Degree :ngagement Announcement Somerset Woman 8,500 Miles Away Fr.om Hon1e PITrSBUROH (NC) - Mary Perplexes Column Author To Receive. Emma Kuhn, a graduate of St. tinent-to save all Africa. I must Mal'Y of the Mount Academy have caught a spark of his en By Mary Tinley Daly here, probably holds some kind of thusiasm because. when he of a record among her former class fered me a scholarship to the The scent of orange blossoms-to-come has been dis ,On Sundaymates for long-distance educa university, I was'dellghted to ac cernable around our hO.\lse for quite some time. Last Christmas, we found, it dominated the holly in the living I'oom, permeated the poinsettas on the piano and the rnistleto in the doorway. For Eileen, Christmas, arOse ~he question: "Should all 1956 meant far more than my sisters, and all of Tony's be in the wedding party?" We be just a vacation from college gan counting; and it required the
and the usual festivities with many dates. Tony Brennan was fingers of both hands. So, no de the date, as he has been for luxe production! months. Not exactly' guessing Seems strange that one can go what was in the offing, never . to so many weddings, notice that theless we were not particularly everything goes smoothly, with surprised when they told us the an almost monotonous repetition, news of their decision. yet when you"re planning one, No announcement at that time, especially if it's your first, you of course. They'd walt until puzzle over the minutest detall. Easter and "no- c' Technically speaking, of course, body but fam ~-~ when our Johnny married five 11y" would years ago, it was the "first" for know until 'thls famlly. However, all we had then. to do was submit a l1st of "to _be At 1 e a s t , invlteds," get ourselves dressed that's the way and go to a really lovely Wed it was suposed ding. Now, we're counting neav to be. But, as lly on Lady Lu (as Johnny calls we say in the her) for advice and m1ll10n-to newspaper business, "there was one Lady Lue wlll come through a leak" so that close friends for with the best ideas possible. the past several weeks have been Right now, the first step -is offering Eileen and Tony good wishes - and that's flne, just merely to mall the engagement notice to the newspapers. Ac fine! customed as we are to writing Simple Wedding for pubUcatlon, both the Head of July Is the month selected by the House and I wrote and re the young couple' for the wed wrote that short. routine piece ding, July 13th the day, and the three different times I Somehow, church Is reserved for 10 o'clock it's different when it's a person 1n the morning. Aside from that. al matter. "Could have had a few defll1lte plans have been feature story half done," the made. A simple wedding is Head of the House sighed. "Mat- planned, one that can be handled tel' of fact, the only part of a easlly and happlly, for we are newspapel' I never worked in Wa3 not geared temperamentally nor the women's section." He may financiallY for a de-luxe produc not- be "working in it" now, but tion. he is a contributor-of one Inch Planning Detail of space. Remember "Father of the Wind Up Copylnw Bride"? We loved the book Finally we finished it - by and the 'movle, but we're in no copying a simllar one in the mood to go through a like expe l·lence. The Head of the House morning paper and substituting names and dates, would have a nervOUS break down at the very thought I (If And so it goes: "Mr. and Mrs. John Jay Daly Elleell and I didn't beat him to announce the engagement of it.> With Eileen home for Easter their daughter Mary Elleen to vacation, we can get down to Mr. Anthony -B. Brennan, Jr., concrete planning of detalls that son of Mr. Anthony B. Bren have been only conversation nan 'and the late Mrs. Brennan. pieces In letters back and forth: Miss Daly is a graduate of celebrant of the Mass, bridal Georgetown Vis!tatlon Conven~ gown, what all the rest of us and Is at present attending Re w1ll wear, attendant (01' attend gis College, Weston, Massachu ants), ushers, music. flowers. setts. Her fiance Is a grauate of invitations, trousseau. . Georgetown University -and 11 Markle to .be mald-of-honor, employed by the American Tele that's settled. Elleen has writ phone and Telegraph Company. ten to her 16-month-younger A July 13 wedding is planned," sister and Markie gladly Il-ccept ed-after receiving permission EST. 1906 from the Supervisor of Student Nurses to get that day off. I'll prooablY smell 11ke dis infectants," Markie wrote Eileen, "so have plenty of Chanel No.6, or 6 01' 7 If you can get 'em!" Seems Strange
Inevitably, in Eileen's mind,
Complete
FALL RIVER
TRAVEL BUREAU
tion. This spring she wlll take her bachelor of arts degree at Plus XII University. Roma, Basu toland, Africa. which Is approxi mately 8,500 miles from Pitts burgh. In .this pioneer Catholic Insti tution of higher education In Africa, Miss Kuhn Is the flrst white woman and the first Amer ican CathoUo in the student body. She Is in Africa on a scho larship. . She started the long journey to Basutoland in 1952 when she enrolled for a year's training a3 a lay apostle at Grallv11le. Love land. Ohio. The Grall Is an in ternational lay apostolic move ment for young women. It forms centers of Ufe in missionary areas, providing an atmOsPhere where CathoUcism can be llved by young women and Integrated into the social structures and in stltutlons.of modern l1!e. When Miss Kuhn went to ~aUv1lle, she said: "Frlu~kly. Africa never entered my head," But whlle she was there she at tended a aeries of talks on the Church in Africa conducted by the rector of Pius XII University. Father Romeo Gullbeault, O.M.I. OV8neu Service "Father Guilbeault talked about the university as a bold experiment that will be a source of redemption -to all of Africa," Miss Kuhn said. "Its goal 1a nothing less than to save a con
Catdo11c Woman's Club of Somerset will receive corporate Communion at the 7 o'clock Mass Sunday morning in st. Patrick'3 Church, Somerset: Atty James W. Killoran will be principal speaker at the break fast to be held at Magolll's Ferry Landing. Miss Mae Lynch i. chalrmarf"of arrangements. _Plans for the annual banquet May 7 will be completed at a meeting of the club In old Town Hall tonight.
Mansfield Women To Hear Priest Rev. Charles Roddy, St. Co lumban missionary to Japan, wlll be guest speaker at the Commun ion breakfast of Mansfield Cath o11c Women's Club at 8:30 Sun day morning. The club will conduct a food sale at the Taunton-Brockton Gas Company Friday, May 3. The annual banquet wlIl be held in St. Mary's Hall Thursday. May 9 with Rev. Joseph E. Manton, C. SS. R., as speaker. . New officers are Mrs. Mary Brogna LovelY, president; Mrs. Beatrice Jackson, vice president I Miss Rose Vasenell1,. secretary I Mrs. Allce Armstrong, treasurer. -Also Mrs. Helen Jackson and Miss Carmela Bruno, ladles' ald, Mrs. Mary Farrell, former presi dent, and Mrs. Gertrude Coyle, retiring president, e x e cut I v e board directors; Miss Louise Ga rofano, publ1city; Mrs. Ann Hal bing, Mrs. Made11ne Maddock. co-chairmen of program com mittee and Mrs. Marlon Ockert, hospltallty chairman.
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OVEN-FRESH DAILY
18
Madonna of Little Baker Recalls
Execution of Innocent Venetian
THE ANCHOR Thlllln., April 25, 1957
Cardinal 'Urges Aid For Poland
VENICE (NC) - If you are committed the crirpe and had one of the fortunate ones to visit contrived false evidence against this city' of the canals this sum- the baker. When he recovered, he CHICAGO - His Eminence was tried and executed In the Samuel Cardinal Strltch has ,mer, look for the small shrine of same' place the baker had died. urged Bishops to enlist the help a Byzantine Madonna, dimly lit For many years afterwards, it of Polish parishes in the U. S. in at night by two,flickering lamps. is said, solemn warning to set In a niche In the outside wall supporting a drive for religious of' massive St. Mark's Basilica. "remember the poor baker" was aid to Poland sponsored by the This Is the "Madonna of 'the 'read to the Venetian judges be Catholic League' for Religious Littfe Baker." It remains there fore they were to pass a death Assistance to Poland. sentence. Cardinal Stritch stated: "On As a token of reparation, of the
with its lamps always burning as May 5 the Polish Marian Year , an act of reparation for a judicial baker's execution it was decided
will close. On that day in every error committed over 400 years that two oil lamps should burn
parish in Polan'd the faithful ago. perpetually before the mosaic of with their clergy will renew their One morning in, the year 1507, the Holy Virgin, the object of consecration to Poland's queen, Pietro Faslol was returning from the baker's final act of devotion. Our Lady of Czestochowa. the bakery where h~ had been ' Quickly It came to be called the , "The Catholic League. for Re working all night. Along'the way '''Madonna of the Little Baker," ligious Assistance to POland'sug he found a dead man lying in , or in Italian, "La Madonna del gests that the annual collection the Iltreet with a dagger sticking Povero Fornaretto." in his chest. Beside him was-the
in parishelj' where there are Catholics of Polish origin be dagger's ornate scabbard, which
the baker picked up and carried
taken up on that day., It will appreciate deeply your making a to his home.
Some time later Baker Fasiol
special appeal for generous col showed the beautifully worked
lections In Pollsh parishes of MASS OF THE LORD'S SUPPER: Rev. Edward your Ilcabbard to his friends. This act,
diocese. Dowling of Our Lady of"the Isle Church,' Nantucket, pre Cardinal Primate Wyszynski of along with false testimony ar
ranged by the murderer. led to / CHAMPAIGN (NC)-If sOme pares to distribute Holy Communion at the Holy Thursday Poland in a letter to Cardinal Stritch said In part: "The chari the baker's arrest. He wall tried thing is not done to halt the Mass. table activity of the Catholio and sentenced to death tor fiood of objectionable literature,
League of America for Religious the situation "wlll get worse and
murder. ~ays worse," the director of the Na Reealls Final Ad Assistance to Poland, of which When he climbed the llCaffold tional Office for Decent Litera you are the eminent and illus t trious protector, proved quite that stood in the little piazza ture (NODL) has warned. _ Objectionable literature ~l is a beside the-cathedral, he looked' SIOUX CITY (NC) - "The PHILADELPHIA (NC)-A Yu- prOVidential to us. out' across the crowd at the growing danger to the welfare. status of the Catholic Church in goslav Bishop, the only one to "In all our parishes, on the Madonna in the niche. His last the ideals and the ideas of our Australia is very high and the have received the Tlto govern- occasion of pastoral visitations. liVing act before being hanged youngsters," Msgr. Thomas J. world should know about It." '-ment's permission to visit the I find the various gifts sent us by Fitzgerald told the Graduate 'was to utter a prayer for, the in Archbishop Romolo Carboni, U. S., attended a reunion here of the Catholic League. Our semi tercession of the Blessed Mother. Faculty Staff League of the New Apostolic Delegate, to Australia, priests with whom he had stud- naries are using manuals of The baker's execution was soon man Foundation at the Unlver New Zealand, and Oceania, made led in Rome, almost 17 years ago. dogmatic and moral theology, of tol'gotten. Years later the real , sity of nIinois. this comment while on a visit ' Bishop Bukatko. who is the exegesis and canon law, which He said the purpose of the here. murderer, a nobleman, tell grave only Byzantine Rite ordinary in have charitably beEm offered to Jy lll. Thinking that he was NODL is "to set in motion the "The Church in Australia is YugOslavia, said there are 46,000 them by the Catholic League." dying, he revealed that he had ~ral farces of the' ,entire coun well organized and there Is a Catholics and 56 churches in his Noon C:ommunions try against salacious literature." lItrgng and lively faith among the diocese. Their spiritual needs are
He denied that the NODL ever great,majority of Catholics," the served by about 70 priests. Gain in Worcester
urged boycotts or enlisted police ItaHan prelate noted. BIshop Gabr,iel Bukatko, AposWORCESTER (NC) - Noonaction in support of its aims, as Two factors have produced this tolic Administrator of Krizevci, day Communions in ·St. Paul's was maintained recently by John fine atmosphere for the Church, Yugoslavia, caine to the United Cathedral here have increased· FiScher, editor of Harper's Maga according to the Archbishop. States after a visit to Canada, nearly 15 times since the new zine. First, there, is the' fact that where he attended the installa- Eucharistic fast regulations went Msgr. Fitzgerald said that In a minorities are not discriminated tlon of Archbjshop Maxlme Her- into ~ffect, Msgr. David M. EI 'AUGUSTA (NC)-Mayor H. spot check of 15 Catholic high against, and second, between 70 maniuk, C,SS.R., as Metropolit~n wood, rector, has reported. Lloyd Carey has faile,d In his ef schools in the Chicago area the . and 80 per cent of all Catholic of the Byzantine Rite MetropoliHe also said that Sunday Com~ fort to have the Augusta city gov . .munions at Worcester City Hos ,ernment provide a new basis for NODL found nearly 3~ per cent children are educated in Catholic tan See of Winnipeg. ' While in Philadelphia, the pital had quadrupled because of a court test on the legality of of the girl students read expose 'schools. When eyeglasses first were Bishop attended a reunion with the new regulations. A priest using community funds for school or romance-type publications. Most of the girls reported tlley produced In the Middle Age's they 21 other priests who were his from the Cathedral staff offers bus 'transwrtatlon for Maine never read these magazines at often were regarded as products classmates at st. Josaphat's Masses at the Hospital each parochial school pupils. ' Sunday. Seminary in Rome. The Mayor, a supporter of pro- , hom e because .their parents of the devil. would not allow such publica viding the transportation, re in the house. The girls tions quested the city government to Ilaid they tead them while baby rescind an order which appro sittillg priated a token $100 to initiate shop. or while at the beauty the transportation. Msgr. Fitzgerald declared the He said a more definite order three principal ways to, combat was needed and contended that salacious literature are: 1) to the court would dismiss on a for self-regulation by the technicality any case base,d on work earlier legislation. ' publishers and distributers, 2) rid of the, worst of it by The Mayor stated that "in the get legislation and 3) make, use ot Interest of fairness" a new order the right of public protest. Ilhould be adopted. "Nothing wlll
be accomplished In the courts on
the basis of the present order." But this city's two - chamber such government, composed of Ii Board of Aldermen and a Common WASHINGTON (lic) - Presi ,Council, refused to consider his dent Eisenhower has urged young ·proposal. Opponents to his plan people "to contribute as students said the earlier order will provide In school until they have de
a case that will stand up in veloped their 'God-given capa
court. cities to the full."
Vote In Favor The Chief Executive's message The city granted the token ap was distributed in conjunction propriation, primarily to serve with the launching of a nation
. as the basis for a court test, after wide 'campaign to encourage
parents of pupils in Augusta'll completion of education, with
two parochial schools demanded particular emphasis on teen
the city provide schoolbus trans agers who drop out of high
portation for children living more schools.,
than a mile and, a half from the The drive is to be sponsored
'schools they attended. About 185 by the Department of Labor, and
of the 900 pupils in the parochial the Department of Health, Edu
schools would thus get transpor cation and Welfare, in. coopera
tation.
tion with the Defense Depart The parents threatened to ment. transfer their children into Stating that In 1956 only 60 Augusta's public schools, which with an enrollment' of about 2,350 of every 100 high school students received diplomas, Secretary of, were already overcrowded. How ever, they called off the mass Labor James P. Mitchell'said in ; statement that the campaign transfer when told the token ap will work to· correct this 8Itu~- '"' propriation would be made. fREE Bishop "Daniel J. Feeney of tion. OPEN CUSTOMER Portland, which covers all Maine, "America's complex and grow EVENINGS has made no statement relative Ing Industry," he said, "demands 'ARKING ,UNTIL 9 to the' issue. Local priests have alert, creative, Imaginative young 4 · ~~ not co,mmented either. &1141 o"\~ men and women who can take In December 1956, in' an "ad their places In an age of special NAME IN THE MANUfA(1URING Of f\"\ OJ vistorY vote" submitted in con nection with municlpaJ elections, . Ists. Such workers, educated In residents voted 'almost 2 to 1 In , the high school are our nation's New Bedf@~d favor of providing transportation greatest wealth and most critical need." for the parochial school pupils.
a
Growing Danger In literature 'Again Noted
Archbishop Church Strong
Clossmates Meet Yug'loslav S:shop
Maine School Bus Dispute BeforeCou rt
only at'
ANDERSON-LITTLE
can you buy direct from the manufacturer
,President· Urges Full Education
HIGH
Q·UALITY . CLOTHES
• prIces
847 Pleasant St., Fall River '., Fairhaven· Bridge
'r
Tlltll ANCHOR ,",un., April 15, 1957
9
Governmental Give-Away Schemes By Archbishop Cushing Vi neola Planned Scored BOSTON-A glgantio "glve-' future by staggering assessments, At St. Vincent's away scheme" of the U. S. gov loss of personal responsiblltty
SClge and SClIl1l«:i
Jesus eli,ist Rejected, Easter Hope Still Lives By Most R'ev. Robert 1. Dwyer
BISHOP OF RENO
It is only by chance or rare exception .that there Is any correspondence between the liturgical cycle of the Church and the political cycl~ of the nations. Easter crowns the Christian year with its renewal ot the Resur rection; but in the political - ' - - - - - - - - -
calendar it is only another whether He lIs only a symbol day to be used or abused ac of hope. Eternal Truth · cording to the de t ermma We are confronted once again,
Plans are complete for the Vln cola to be held In the gymnasium at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River at 8 Saturday night May 4, John H. O'Brien, publicity direc tor, announces. CPO Henry "Red" Boucher, USN.. has Informed Rev. John E. Boyd, chaplain, and' William Butler, president of the sponsor Ing group, Alumni and Friends of St: Vincent's' that he will at tend the VIDcola, proceeds of which will be used for the Home. Books may be obtained from any member of the committee, headed by Mrs. Eleanor McLear, Mrs. Mary Webb and Mrs. Rita Nestor. <> Members Include Mrs. Dorothy Przskop, Irene Verville, Mrs. Diane Mendes, Barbara Kelfey, Pamelia Huard, Mrs. 'Gladys Barre, Mrs. Frank Coloner!. Mrs. Joseph Dudek, Mrs. Marie Mello. Mrs. William Butler, Mar garet M. Lahey, John Freitas, Edward Forgette, Everett Flynn, Charles Drabble, Jan..es Coyne. Frank Colonerl. Joseph Dudek, John Dudek, Edward St. John, William Butler, William O'Brien. John O'Brien, Mrs. Margaret Brooks, Kathleen Blood, Chris tine Turner, Rosemary Dussault. Ceramics made by the children of the Home under instruction of Mrs. Alvin Sullivan and Mrs. Margaret Brooks will be on dis play at the Vincola. , All persons Interested in help Ing St. Vincent's are Invited to' Join the Alumni and Frlendl group by contacting the secre tary, Mrs. Mary Webb.
ernment In relieving national distress may be phllanthroplo but It "outlaws charity," Arch bishop, Richard J. Cushing of Baston said here. "The public is becoming more convinced," the Archbishop stated, "that our rich uncle can and should with a fistful of dollars beat off poverty and all other afflictions that beset our less fortunate brothers. "This is a happiness pill with disastrous effects. Whenever there arises a social problem, w. would be well advised not to ex pect that Its solution lies in jn creasing still more the power, jnfluence and taxes of the federal government." "In a word," the Archbishop continued, "the government should stop doing for people the ~hlngs that people can do for themselves. A gigantic govern ment give-away scheme must be paid for dearly, now and In the
tion of the multiple wllls in volved. The City of God rejoices and more poignantly because ot In hope; the City of Man con the occasion, with what tha. tlnues Its passion. ,twisted genius, Blais. Pascal, We recall the Easters we have called "the grandeur and the celebrated In our time, each misery".of our human condition. dominated by the same eternal Its misery Is written large In the theme, yet. each marked by a whole sorry history of the race, particular mood or emphasis. the blasted hopes, the blighted Easter In time of peace Is not promises, the public and private quite the same as Eastel' In time tragedies that disfigure the of war. There have been tragic record, the' way that "all our Easters in our memory as well as yesterdays have lighted fooll those shining with triumph or theil' way to dusty death." It.. brightened by prosperity, The grandeur Is contained In the Res spiritual meaning Is the same, ul"l'ectlon of Jesus Christ. It I.s but the circumstances under the resplendent fact that lifts which that meaning Is made hope beyond a symbol to reality. clear to us may differ as night It Is the luminous assurance that and day. we are dealing not with myth but j<'resh Vindication with eternal truth. .' This Easter of 1957 was no But the world goes its way, exception. It dawned over a world oblivious of the fact, lrresPQ9slve like any other Spring morning, to the truth. It is' as capable of 10r it was only faith that singled starting a third world war as the It out as a day altogether apart, late Benito' Mussolinl was of unique and consecrated. For launching his attack on Albania (God forgive ltD on Good Friday. those to whom Christ Is God and Saviour It Is the fresh vindication It Is not only a question of two of His dlvl,nlty and His salvation. cycles turning' without mutual For those who have never known reference, or two calf,mdars.wlth Him, or having known Him have out common dates, but of faith I'ejected Him, It was only another and Its opposite, the rejection of day. They rolled Easter eggs on Christ. THE Substance of Hope the lawn, and the more Intellec After all, what should we ex tual among them talked about pect? Christ did not die 'on the the resurrection myth.. It dawned over the roofs of a Cross and rise from the dead to Funeral Home
thousand cities and the towns save the political 'order, or to and little towns beyond comput- jnsure economic prosperity, or to 127 CHESTNUT ST. Ing. Over Budapest, for example, Inaugurate a· reign of social NEW BEDFORD where hope, from any human justice. He did not even promise standpoint, Is burled In the. that the United Nations \vould WY 4·3942 graves of Its heroes. In the silent work for us in this second half churches of that city, on Its dese of the 20th century. All this talk crated altars, is It possible that I about the failure of Christianity hope can revived? Over New is no more than a, repetition ot York, where the sun's rays gild the complaint of the Pharisees the staring whiteness of the that Christ was not the kind of United Nations building, like Messlas they were looking for. Easter is the seed In the womb • some vast mausoleum entombing' Helen Aubertine ,Brough hope. Over Jerusalem, as it of the Church. It is the substance Owner and DIrector
'dawned two thousand years ago, of hope for ,every soul born into Spacious P~lrking Area
and found a city Just as deter this world. It is the day which mined to reject its God. the Lord hath made. "Outside," WY 2-2957 in Belloc's immortal phrase, Some Stili Undecided '129 AI"n St. New Bedford "Outside It is the night." C h l' 1st I a n s wel'e in their church this Easter, whether as ---::::~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::~~:;:;:;:;~ sembled for the full reality of r the Mass or for some Partial re mindel' of It that makes the heart ache for .Its povel"ty. They' were trying to recapture, if only for the moment, the wonder and loOe glory of that first Easter when the cerements let go and the Son of Man came forth from the sepulchre victorious over sin and death. The Gospel of St. Mark was read, the plain, un SACRED HEART varnished statement of the cen PROGRAM HOUR of the CRUCIFIED t'ral event of history. With soar ing eloquence or with fumbling MON.-WED.-FR.. SUNDAY phrases Its meaning Is explored ~:OO - 9:15 P.M. 6:30-7:00 P.M. and reiterated, that haply It may strike home In hearts deadened The Missio.n Program Sunday - 700 P.M. by the world's attrition. But Christians, even' yet, are only a minority of the world's two billion souls. And among DON'T them how many are there who and deliberately consciously (nol; to say successfully) live up to the full Implication of their name? After all this time, after tlwse innumerable Easters, the world has not made up Its mind • SAVE. BY· MARIL • conceming Jesus Christ,' wheth er He rose from the dead or We Pay Postage Botihl Ways
DANIEL F. DWYER
AUBERTINE
FUNERAL HOME
3
TO ALL
81
70 SAVERS
All Kinds Of Insurance
8~!i ~
$3
lJ»o!?satrn~IJ
$ervfce
E,THIOPIA
'l'oday th, .Holy Father se('kl help tor a poor Ethiopian priNt la Gulo Medekl, 'l'h. nam. meanl "I.asture, of Queen Medeka" (abe called Candaee In the Actl of ihe Ap. . Ues). Th. A.niel directed Si. Philip .. Gaza to convert' her treasurer. Father Uolde, a. a lad. luft'ered much qvercommr obstaolel to hll conversIon. For 2ll ,earl al prlesi h. h.. converted oib01"l. 1'81' hil ne" mlslaon he hal squeezed oui tWllbi + to buy land. Now h. needs '3,000 , .... chapel and Ichoolroom (wher. he'lI all«t sleep). Now, with a Iman (roup of .lr.. dedicated to God, h. Walkl flvo huun " the nurelt chapel to celebrate the lItur",. Won't you help? YOU SHOULD DECIDE YOURSELF HOW TO DISPOSE OJ' ¥OUR LIFE'S EARNINGS. YOU CAN, ONLY BY MAKING A WILL. REMEMBER GOD, WHEN YOU DO.
GRADUATION-GIFTS-WEDDINGS For frlendl Itutlnr an tmportant new ph... In lit. a SPIRITUAL GIFT, II Ideal. Our beautiful NEW GIFT CARD telIa them you remembertd 'hll da, with a MalS for them1 OR you enrolled them In our Iplrltual benefit. 115,000 Massel I year and rich yearl, Indul· l'enclel)1 OR In theIr name you rav. an aTtlel. to I Near East Mlsllon chapel.
ST. JOSEPH'S FEAST
w.
know two souls who will b. praying to blm with extra fervor OD Wednesday-Solemnity of St. Joseph. W. mean Joseph In Le~· anon and Devassy In India. Both need I friend to lend the $100 needed yearly durini six year. tralnlni for the prleslhood.
LIKE VERONICA'S VEIL
U~~~illl.!LJ
WhIch so cenUy enclosed the Holy Faoe and soothed the SavIor III His sufterlnl's, ,our kfnil gift of NEW COMl\1UNION OUTFIT ($18) wriU enclole the pure heart of I Near East child Ind brlnl precloUi comfort and jOJ 00 First CI>M' munlon Day. Glv. In thankl that 10ur chUlI doel not want.
THE PERFECT PRAYER Our Faith teachel U8 the Mass 11 just that. There'l no ,reater spIritual comfort tlian Mas. oft'ered for yourself or loved oncs. Your MASS OFFERINGS are likewise a noble charity to our deBUo tute missIonariel who often support themselves and their work m almost entirely from these gifts. Masses are laid In • few weeks,
ST.l\'IONICA'S PRAYER
After seventeen yeara converted her sinner-son Into the creat St. Augustine. SISTER lVIONICA In Ei'YPt (we have lInother In India) will work and pra)' to~ lhe 'conversion of her people, It we can sell ber through two years tralnlni. Can FDU help with U1:& $150 we need eacll year? Then there" Sister AUne In Lebanon and Sister Mar)' Nlnnala III India. If that'll too much, perhapil you calli /live 'l-A-MONTH to oW' M18ston Club to help novices. MARY'S BANK.
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr.l(d~nt
INSURANCE AGIEINCY DNAL WY
ON~
Plan, Dance An April Shower Frolic, wltb dancing from 8 to l:l will be hel~ Saturday night by the Children of Mary Sodality of Our'Lady 01 Mt. Carmel Church, In the partab auditorium, River and, Crapo Streets, New Bedford.
I
~~r5stOlissiollS~
DONAT BOISVERT 95 WILLIAl\'l S'lI'lItJEJE'])' NJEW BEDFORD, MASS.
EYES
and diminished Independence." He said "a system dealing with human welfare that outlaws charity becomes In time a pagan system under which you cannot have the brotherhood' of man, because It does admIt the b.th erhood of God." Such a system may be phUlI.Il thropy, the Archbishop added, but It·ls not charity. "Loyalty demands that we sup port the government but now It seems it has become the duty 01 the government to support the people," the Archbishop con cluded.
'
I1'IlQ. i Nort!1l Mar" S't~ A Modern Q
O!i»cm Fridav
8
For Sa.vinys &: [[olna Loans Evefl[Et/l' g.l[I
[n$titl~tion
Msgr. Peler'. Tuohy, Nat'Uell"
hnil all eommunlcatlona tOl
CATHOUC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASsOaAnON 480 l0xfin9~OB'll Ave:a9 46ih S~. NGW V~)&'k W7,N. ~~
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10·
Fo.rmer Prison Chaplain Agai·nst Death Penalty
Lutheran Bishop Latest Target Of Red Drive
. SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-As California legislators de .bated a possible six-year moratorium on the death penalty,. ' a priest said Catholics are free to take either. side on the controversy-but he thinks the best arguments all weigh against capital punishment. "It's apracticalpr()blem, ecution, "Most. lifers are self not a moral one," said Fath supporting, that is to say they repay the cost of their keep and er Daniel McAlister, former more. by filling key prison jobs
Caholic' chaplain at San Quen for which the state ~otherwise tin prison. . would have to pay salaries." "Revelation and theological Father McAlister also advised • writings substantiate \the State's Catholics they would do well to power to execute culprits. Cath leave settlement of the capital Olics should apply the test of punishment question up to their whether they think It 'Is in the legislators, and not demand a, lltate's best Interest to Invoke popular vote. "After· all" they that power," are much better informed on all Father McAlister is now. ad the practical points to be con ministrator of St. Raphael's par sidered-and this is a practical ish In San Rafael, near the pris question." on where·he waS chaplain for 10 years. He still lends his services Notre Danie to Honor to men on death row. occasion ally. Holy Cross Fathers Reasons For 'Positlon . NOTRE DAME (NC)-Thous Recently he testified against ands of alumni and friends wlll capital punishment at a hearing observe the 34th annual Univer PRIVILEGE FROM VATICAN: Rt. Rev. Ambrose L. of an Assembly Judiciary sub sal Notre Dame Night In more Ondrak,-O.S.B., in the vestments'of his rank of archiman .committee In Saol'amento. Later than 100 cities during the next drite, is the first American Abbot to receive that position the full Judiciary committee re two weeks. , and privilege from the Holy See. With his consel}t, all ported out a bill that would sus This was announced by James priests of .Saint Procopius' Bene~ictineAbbey, Lisle, Ill., pend the 'death penalty in C~ll E. Armstrong,' executive secre tornia for six years, as a trial. tary of the Notre Dame Alumni are able to celebrate the Holy Sacrifice of the Massaccord The proposal Is now before the Association. The theme of this ing to the ~yzantine Rite as. well as the Latin Rite. Assembly. year's observance Is· "The Holy In an interview, Father McAl Cross Fathers," the congregation ister listed these major argu of priests who conduct' the Uni ments against capital punish versity of Notre Dame. ment. Aniong the speakers who will 1) Its deterrent effect on cap address alumni gatherings are C~non Ital crime is Questionable. Law' Father Theodore Hesburgh. ei1J'orcement officials generally C.S.C., Notre Dame president;; ROME (NC) - French Presi WASHINGTON, (NC) A believe it does affect the crime Sen. John F: Kennedy CD-Mass.> rate; criminologists, sociologists, who will speak in Washington. Georgetown University professor dent Rene Coty will make use of a -thr.ee and a half century old of Government has- been ap and clergymen do not: Father ·D.C., and Father John 'J, Cava McAlister sides with the latter, naugh, C.S.C., former Notr~, pointed visiting professor in' the . privilege vihen he is here. In May o noting there are no statistics' to Dame president. to be solemnly installed as an Chester W. Nimitz· Chair :of So IIUPport the former. cial. and Political Philosophy at honorary canon of the Basilica He agrees with Dr. Douglas M. Plan to, Change of St. John Lateran. the" Naval War College. Kelley, University of California professor of criminology, who has Religion Cour~e On M.ay 14, the day after his Dr. John Brown Mason will Baid that since most crimes are ·ST. LOUIS (NC) - A sharlt hold the post at Newport school audience with His Holiness .Pope committed under extreme emo break In the methods of teaching for the 1957-58 academic year. Pius XII, President Coty will go tional pressure. "all capital pun parochial school children religion He has been granted leave of a'b to St. John Lateran and will be ishment does is to prevent a per will be made by all St.. Louis sence from Georgetown for that· received there by the basilica lIOn who ·would not commit a archdlocesan elementary schools pel:iod. , chapter. With solemn ceremonies orime from commlting one." ·this fall. The chair at the Naval War he will take his place in choir, College; the highest e'ducation The new approach will see the· IneqiJltable R~sults thus becoming the first French Institution' of the Navy, has been head of state to make use of the 2) A man tried under one set· familiar "penny catachism" rele of circumstances may get the gated to the background and occupied' on an annual basis by privilege in person. children taught Church doctrine distinguished scholars in the death penalty. Another, equal Since the time of King E:enry field of international relations . ly guilty, will not because of a . In terms of the liturgical seasons. IV 0553-1619) all the kings and This was announced by Msgr. SeniOl' naval officers and sen more lenient Jury or better legal presidents of France have been James H. Hoflich, superintendent Ior rel1resentatives of the Army. honorary canons of St.' John counsel. of elementary schools. who said Air Force, M"arine Corps, Coast Lateran, which is the "Head and On this point. Father McAlis ter sees an imbalance between that the catechism was originally Guard and the State Department Mother of all the churches of well-trained district attorneys' intended to be'a guide for priest attend the college. the City and the world." Dr. MaSOn has taught at the .taffs, specialists at .their Job, and teacher and not a textbook universities of Florida, Illinois and the comparative handful of ·for pupils. Oklahoma Ordinary The handbook to be substituted and Wisconsin, at Oberlin Col ,ood criminal lawyers. . In' the program is entitled "The lege, Stanford University, and Notes CCD Need "Criminal law gets less atten tion in law' schools than other Good News." It was prepared by F1:esno State College. He has OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) , IIUbjects," he asserted. "And the Sister Rose Therese. a Sister of been the U.S. cultural attache at ."Our project from now to etern St. Joseph of Carondelet, a' pri Bangkok, Thailand, chief of the ity Is the CCD," Bishop Eug~ne ~oung attorney ordinarily can't mary grade teacher at SS. Mary Cultural Affairs Branch for the J. McGuinness of Oklahoma City afford to enter this field." U. S. High Commission at Berlin, 3) Months and years spent on and Joseph parish school here. and Tulsa told diocesan clergy Germany, and served in a similar gathered here for the first priests' death row, while their appeals Award for Producer capacity at Frankfurt, Gelmany. institute of the Confraternity of drag through the courts, leave condemned men In a· state of - NEW BRUNSWICK (NC) Christian Doctrine. Could Be Better. IIplritual arid mental de.teriora- John Farrow, Hollywood 'motion He said it Is his desire and tion "thllt isn't pleasant to .see picture producer and director' PR;:NCETON (NC)-A Gallup the Pope's command that the -and I've seen It happen." and author of the book.."Damien poll has reported .that 76 'per cCD be established in every par Extra State Cost The Leper," has been named for . cent of the Catholics and 44 per· Ish. He explained that on',) of the' .. "Demanding that a culprit pay the 1957 Damien-Dutton Award cent of the Protestants in this chief functions of the CCD Is the with his life for a crime Is one by the organization's board of country ine SundaY churchgoers. instruction of CatholicchiJdren thing. Inflicting thIS additlon- governors. . The overall purpose of the poll In public schools, but he said its al punishment Is something else," The award Is' made annually was a comparison of the ,church scope reaches far' beyond that. Father McAlister maintained. to a person who 'has contributed going habits of people in the It Is the total religious educa 4) Death row also ~eans con- through scientific, educational. U. S. and in Great Britain. It was ,tlon of the parl&h of those outside II1derable 'extra expense for the or humanitarian means toward repOrted that ,the check disclosed the Catholic school. Iltate. LIke Ii prison within a the conquest of Hansen's disease 51 per cent of Americans are prison, it involves extra man- or eradication of fear and mis churchgoers while. only 14 per power and provisions for speCial" Understanding connected with cent of the British attend serv lIecurity. medical, psychiatric, the disease. ices. and sociological care. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5) It is not true "that it would ... cost the state more to keep life prisoners.,!! they were spared ex-
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FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATION
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AIR~CONII)ITIONING FRAN(:IS J. DEVUNE
363 SECOND ST.
THE ~NCHOR Thurs., April 25, '957
ARTHUR J. DOUICEY
fALL RIVER,·MASS.
Head of' France To Be Inshill.ed Ho'norary'
BERLIN (NC) Lutheran Bishop Otto Dibellus of Berun is the latest target of the Reds in their stepped-up war on religion in the Soviet 'Zone of eastern ·Germany. . In a recent sermon Germany's ranking Lutheran prelate report edly r~emphasized that Chris tians must reject communist ideology. Red reaction, voiced In a radio broadcast by Guenther Wirth, secretary of East Ger many'S communist - controlled Christian Democratic ,Union, labeled the Bishop a pro-nazi. Neues Deutschland. official or gan, 'of the East Germa'n com ,munists, also attacked Bishop Dibelius. Iil addition the news paper noted that Luthe)'an chap lains are serving with the new West German Army and charged the Lutheran Church with join ing the Catholic Church in promoting West .German mili tarism. supported by U. S. imperialism. A statement· signed by Lu theran representatives on the Military .Chaplains' Committee sharply attacked Red anti-reli gious propaganda, saying that it is right of West Germans to protect themselves against the interference of totalitarian na tions, and charging the Reds with agitating for war.
Establishes Center For ,Puerto Ricans BOSTON (NC) - Archbishop Richard. J. Cushing of Boston announced the foundation of a. Center for Puerto Ricans. with headquartel'S at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross. Established to provide for the needs of the growing permanent and migra tory Spanish-speaking popula tion. the center will combine spiritual and social functions. There are reported to be about 200 Spanish-speaking Catholics living permanently in the Ca thedral parish, with smaller but significant numbers reported in other parishes. Last year, an es timated 2,100 Puerto Rican work ers came to MassaChusetts for temporary enlPloyment on farms. To aid in reaching. migrants .Archbishop Cushing plans to equip a mobile chapel with faci. lities for Mass and confession. The Archbishop also an·' nounced establishment of a spe cial program of Spanish stUdies at ··St. John's SeminarY.
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Perpetual Adoration
God Love You By Mosi Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. A hundred Communists arrested an Archbishop In China. Twenty Catholic youn~ men and women protested against the urest. Five hours after the Archbishop was jailed the 20 youths were thrown Into an adjoining cell. Each morning, a four year old child brought them tiny loaves' of bread. Inside each loaf was a small'linen cloth' which contained Sacred Hosts. After communicating the youths ·kept one Host In the corner of their cell and night and day had perpetual adoration before Our Lord In the Jllessed Sacrament.
MARK GOLDEN JUBILEE WEDDING ANNIVERSARY: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Chabot of North Attleboro will observe their 50th wedding anniversary Sunday. They are shown with three sons, Rev. Luke M. Chabot, O.F.M., Mrs. Chabot, Rev. Ger· a~d J. Chabot of st. Theresa's Church, Attlebpro; Rev. Bertrand R. Chabot of St. An thony's Church, New Bedford, and Mr. Ch a1?Ot. .
Catholics in Africa Now 20-Million ROME (NC) - The CathoUc population for the whole of Afri ca h~s passed the 20-mllllon mark. Figures released by t~e Sacr~d Congregation for the Propaga tion of the Faith show a gain ,of 1,050,000 Catholics under the congregation's jurisdiction In the year ended last June 30. The congregation said that counting the faithful under the Sacred .Congregatlon for the Oriental Church and the Sacred Congre gation for' Extraordinary Eccle Iliastlcal Affairs, the new totals Ilhow 20,018,531 baptized Catho lics and 3,081,469 catechumens. There are 10,818 priests minis tering to the 16,598,000 baptized and 2,812,000 catechumens In the African territories under the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. The congregation let it be known that 57 per" cent of its Increase of a million In a year was In: the central strip of Africa running from the Atlantic to the Indian 'Oceans, and Including Cameroun, French Equatorial Africa, the Belgian Congo and Ruanda-Urundl; Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyika and Nyasaland'. The number of priests In the mission territories Increased by 436.
Fund Leader OMAHA (NC) - Stephen Mit chell, Chicago attorney and for mer national chairman of the Democratic National Committee, has been named national chair man of the million-dollar Alum ni Library Fund of Creighton University. He will head a na tionwide fund campaign among Creighton's 15,000 alumni, ac-, cording to Father Carl M. Rein ert, S. J., university president.
The Perfect Gift. for Your Loved Ones
Three Sons to Officiate At Anniversary Mass Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Chabot,O 67 Eddy Strllet, ;North Attleboro, parents of three priests and a Sister, will observe their 60th wedding anniversary at a Solemn High Mass In Sacred Heart Church, North Attleboro at 11 Sunday morning. . Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa's Church, South Attleboro, will be celebrant. Rev. Luke M. Chabot, O.F.M., superior of St. Anthony's Retreat House, Pittsfield, N. H., and Rev. Ber trand Chabot, asslsta,nt pastor of St. Anthony's Church, New Bedford, wlll assist him. . Sister Armand-Marie of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts Is a daughter of the jubllarlans. FollOWing Mass, dinner wlll be Ilerved to the family and guests In the parish hall. Mr. and Mrs. Chabot settled In North Attleboro In 1897. They had lived In Westport and Fall River previously. They were married In the auditorium of the old Wamsutta House which then served the newly established Sacred Heart Parish in North Attleboro. Active In Church Besides three sons In the priesthood and a daughter In·the religious life, Mr. and Mrs. Cha bot are parents of Mrs. Claire Deschenes and Mrs. Theresa L'Homme of North Attleboro and Mrs. Yvette Hamel of Taunton. They have 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild. . Mr. Chabot, one of North Attleboro's better known 'tool makers, with more than four registered patents to his credit,
has long been active In the jewelry industry. He Is presently In charge of the tooi room at H. F. Barrows Company where he has been employed for the past 21 years. Both Mr. and Mrs. Chabot have been exceptionally active In North Attleboro's Sacred Heart Parish affairs since Its establish ment In 1904, holding Important offices In various organizations. Mr. Chabot is presently a parish trustee.
Mass at Holy land Being Arranged WASHINGTON (NC) A pilgrimage leaving the United States June 29 for the Holy Land may witness the first public "'" Mass In centuries to be offered In the place said by tradition to be the site of the Last Supper. A Catholic travel office has announced that a pilgrimage under the spiritual direction of Father Bartholomew Bengisser. O.F.M., has been negotiating with the Israeli government for per mission for <the Mass. "Every Indication seems to be that the permission will be given," the spokesman said. The Mass would be offered by lary Bishop Francis J. Green of Father Bartholomew or by Auxll Tuscon who will accompany the pilgrimage. There is a possibility both'"may be allowed to ·celebrate Mass.
HTliy Light is come, And the GkJry of The Lord is Risen"
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Some sound spiritual advice is given In the statement: "Think when you say the rosary." We would add to that advice -"think of Our Lady Queen of the Missions when you say the WORLD MISSION ROSARY." As you finger the multlcolor decades you cannot help but pray for the continents represented by the five different colors. For your request and a $2 offering we will send the rosary to you. ADDRESS: The Society For the Propagation of the Faith, ORDER DEPT., 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York. Cut. out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and mall It to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y .. or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.
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GOD LOVE YOU to the M. brothers "We are njne and ten years old. We got this $1.45 from the lady next door for taking In the garbage cans." • • • to M.A.T. "I have a hobby that Is now a pro fession and I am putting aside for each appointment that I have. one l1t~le dime which I call the Missions' Commission. Here's $7." .•• '. to H.F. '''Thls week before pay day my single dollar will leave a scar, next week It will be pay day and wouldn't leave a scratch. I feel It would be better to send $1 ,this week. • • • to V.E.O. "A little bit, just $3.25 - If more of us got down on our knees, reaching Into our pockets would be less of a strain."
Collgralfllal{ons
The LiVing and Deceased May Be Enrolled. Illuminated Certificate for Each Member Enrolled Enrollment $5.00 Rev. Father Rector, O.F.M.
It Is easy to keep armor bright which Is used dally, but )langing it on the wall makes it rusty. If an Instrument is played daily it is easy to keep it In tune, but by beln~ neglected the strings break. Persecution keeps the Faithful In China In tune with their Faith. Little sacrifices and self-denials in our unper secuted land do the same for our soul. Each day make an act of self-denial and at the end of the month send the cross offering to the Holy Father through his Society for the propa gation of the Faith and be one with your persecuted brothers and sisters in China.
IS. 60:1
Perpetual Remembrance In Dally Mass
Write To:
This four year old child· would occasionally be locked In a cell where she would distribute Communion which she brought in each morning; then she would cry until the soldiers ' released .her· to go Into another cell where, unbeknown to them, she would distribute' Communion to other Faithful. She decided that If the Communists ever discovered her bringing Communion, hidden In 'the bread, that she could give herself First Communion. Her reasoning was: "They are not baptized and hence cannot receive Our Lord; but I am baptized and therefore I can 'receive Our Lord." The prisoners underwent terrible suf fering and risks loving Our Lord and acknow ledging His representative, The Archbishop. One woman asked for 10 years hard labor just to be able to pass the cell of the Arch bishop and receive his blessing.
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planninr .ths annual corPG!'90f'.e Communion breakfal!t to be serv ed parish women's guilds May 28. New officers of the Holy Name Society are Alfred Metell. Oak Bluffs, president; John Santos, Edgartown, vice president; Rob-' ert Yapp, Vineyard Haven, secre tary; Jam.es Ferreira, Oak Bluff., treasurer.
Post-Lenten AdYvities
.The Parish Parade ST. MARY'S, TAUNTON. St. Paul's Catholic Women's Guild, Taunton, will conduct a whist party Monday night. Rev. Thomas J. Shanley, O.P.,.
of Providence College, will be
speaker at the guild's annual Communion breakfast in the church basement Sunday, May 5. Miss Flor~nce McClellan is chair- . man. Miss Helen Shove heads the committee for guest night sched uled Thursday, May g' when St. Paul's will be host to other guilds in the Taunton area. Mrs. Kathleen Williams has been named St: Paul's. Guild spiritual development chairman
of the National Council of Catho lic Women. SACRED HEART.' 'NORTH ATTLEBORO . Broadening of the parish Fed eral Credit Union progl:am to include the school children now places all parishioners in a posi tion to take advantage. of many Credit Union benefits available to them. . First returns from a recently begu\il. school savings pIaI'! among 150 children indicate a large majority are now possessors of new bank books. President Ed
mond 'V. Dery Jr., reports. ST,. PATRICK'S, FALL RIVER Newly elected officers of the Holy Name Society will be in stalle.d. at a Communion break fast in the school hall Sunday, May 5 Atty. James W. Killoran will be principal speaker. Rt. Rev. Bdmund J. Ward, pastor, will· present jackets donated by' the sociey to the parish CYO basketball team. New officers ani George Curry Sr., president; Frank Quinp, vice president; Robert.Sears, sec retary; Joseph Coady, treasurer. ST. JOHN THE BAPTiST, NEW BEDFORD Mrs. Hilda Pacheco is chair ri'lan of the committee in charge of the Ladies Guild cake sale to be held in the chmch hall Sun day. She is being assisted by Mrs. Charles Duponte, Mrs. Joseph Flores and Mrs. Frank Manha. The guild is also planning a rummage sale in the church basement Friday and Satwday. May 3 and 4. Mrs. Frank Manha, chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Arthur Carreiro. Mrs. Ga briel Quadros, Mrs. EdWard Fin ni, Mrs. Robert Clark, Mrs. Charlcs Duponte and Miss Isabel Teixeira. Communion breakfast will be
held in the church hlill follOWing
the 9 o'clock Mass Sunday, June 2. Mrs. Robert Clark. chairman and Mrs. Edward Finni, co chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Manu~l Tavares and Mrs. '- Edward Rose. Proceeds from the Guild's activities are for the benefit of the parish school and the Sisters, Mrs. Chm'les W. Duponte, publi city chairman, reports.
I
ST. MICHAEL'S, FALL RIVER Seventh and eighth grade pu-
pils of the parish SC!1001, with
Sisters of the Holy Union of Sa cred Hearts as escorts, will see "Cinerama" and "The Ten Com mandments" in' Boston next week. Miss Irene. Pereira, youth chairman of the Women's Guild. is making the arrangements. ' ~Guild officers will be elected at 'a meeting, Wednesday, May 15, in the parish hall, President ¥rs. Rose Saudade announces.
First Communion class will be
guests of the Guild at breakfast Thursday, May 30: Mrs. Mary Cupolo, spiritual ~halrman, Is In charge. I OUR LADY OF ,PERPETUAL HELP, NEW BEDJI1'({J)IRD· Blossom-tIme dance, spon sO~'ed by the St. Ceciiie, Choir, will be held Sa.tuld.9,Y 'nig't;t at Woodrow Wilson, aUdi.torJ.u.m,
Miss Lorraine F. Gacek. chair
man, assisted by the choir pres
ident Miss Cecelia Majocka, as
co-chairman, heads a la'rge com~ mittee pialining the affair.
OUR LADY OF GRACE, NORTH WESTPORT The Women's Guild will elect officers at ita monthly meetinr Tuesday, May 7 in the church. hall. Colored' slides of Europe wili be shown by James W. Pel-. letier. Mrs. Winifred Lawton head. ' the hospitality committee. She 'will be assisted by Mrs. Rita Paquette, Mrs. Rose Vandal, Mrs. Emile Poutre and Mrs. Marion Poirier.
ST. JOHN'S, CENTRAL VILLAGE Ladies Guild will hold a rum mage sale il~ the parish hall from 9:30 to 5 Saturday. Members will attend' Cominun" ' ion breakfast at '8:15 Sunday~ May 5 in the hall. . 'Next monthly whist party will be held Satur,day, May 11. l\:IT. ST. MARY,
FALL inVER
A whist party will be held at Mt. st. Mary' Convent, Fall River,at 8 Monday night. The committee comprises Mrs. James Pappas, Mrs. Rene Perreault, Mrs. John Pacheco, Mrs. James McKane, Mrs. Stephen Moore. Mrs. John Sullivan, Mrs. James Sullivan and Mrs. Margaret Pow ers. ' A rummage sale will be held Thursday, May 16, Mrs. John Pacheco is' chahman. Plans for> I the annual lawn party on' the convent grounds in June will be completed at the next Auxiliary meeting. NOTRE DAME,
l"ALI, RIVER
A fashion show will be pre sented at a meeting of the Wom en's Guild in Jesus-Mary audi-, , torium at 8 next Monday night. Mrs. Robert Phenix and Mrs. Oscar Levesque are co-chairmen. The organization will conduct a Maybasket-whist party in the school hall at 8 Saturday night. . May 4. Mrs. Edmond Martinville and Mrs. Euclide Boyer are chairman and co-chairman, res pectively. Committee members include the following: Tickets, Mrs. Wil fred Garand, Mrs. David Patry; Gifts, Mrs. Raymond Roy; Pub licity, Mrs. Albert Petit.
ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER A tribute to past presidents, directed by Mrs. Leo 'A. Mar tin, will- be presented by the dra. matic group of the Women's Guild at the meeting Monday, May 6, at the Catholic Commun ity Center. A cake sale. from 7 to 8, with Mrs. Edward F. Doo· Ian and Mrs. Jerome D. Foley as co-chairmen, will precede the regular meeting at which Presi dent Mrs. Ja·mes A. O'Brien, Jr., will preside. The Guild wiiI act as one of the hostess groups for the Na tional Council of Catholic Wom en discussion meeting ill st. Louis hall next MondaY night. The 18th install~tion banquet. will be held JWle 3 at Catholic
12
nil ANtllfO&
~
Jimmie
Thu~,Aprill', 19'7
CommunIty C~nter, Mrs. Georp p, Boitano, publicity ehalrma4, announces. 0
ST. BONIFACE,
NEW BEDFORD
The annual Day of Recolleo lection will be held Friday. May 3, for all members In greater New Bedford of Night Adoration In the Home, Thll Blessed Sao rament will be exposed all day. .A holy hour servicll wlll bll con ducted at 7:30 p.m. by Rev, Da mien Veary, S8., ce. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION FALL RIVER A sale of Keepga,ke T1Iea in commemoration of the 75th an niversary of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Pariah. Fall River. is being sPOnsored by the Women's Gu1ld. Former parishioner. may 'purchase them by contactlni Mrs. Edward Boardman or Mm. Wright TUl;ner. Co-chairmen of the ways and ·means committee.
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ST. lUARY'S, NANTUCKET Probate, Court Judge Beatrice, Hancock Mullaney will be gliest speaker at the fourth annual Communion breakfast of St. Mary's Guild in Father Joseph M. Griffin Hall following the 7' o'clock Mass Sunday morning. Mrs. Francis M. Garvey and Mrs. John Keating are in charge.
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ATTLEBORO, MASS. Daily Masses: 6:30, :7, S A.M.
'
Confessions, DaiOy: 6:30·A.M.
'0 9:00 /P.M.
Devotions on SUN/IllAYS begin year roundl~ cit 3:00 P.M.
Perpetual Novena to CUDII' Lady of lLa50lette evell''!!
. evenor.ig at 7:30 IP'.M.
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Oll'gcmizell's of PnRglI'imagel IPnell1lsa Contad:
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Praises Labor
For Aiding ·in
Senate Probe
THE ANCHOR
Thurs.,
April
25, 1957
13
World Future
MILWAUKEE (NC)--The Lies in East
NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The corruption unveiled In the future Hes In. the East, Auxiliary Jabor movement by the Sen Bishop Fulton J. Sheen 0 f New ate hearings may be can York, declared here. He spoke cerO'JS unless strong preventive
measures a·re adopted, a priest
6peciallst on social problems 68ld
here.
The current "crisis" In labor
was discussed by Father John F.
Cronin, S.S., assistant director
of the Soclal Action Department.
National Catholic Welfare Con
ference, In an address entitled
"Prospects for Labor Peace."
Father Cronin called for the estabHshment of special courts to which workers could go wlth complaints about their unions. He said there should be a court where any union can go for re dress In such cases as misappro priation of union funds by offi cials. Although Father Cronin warned
that corruption among labor of
ficials constitutes a grave dan
ger to the labor movement, he
eaid he beHeves the Senate hear
ings will Ultimately "lead to a
~tronger and cleaner labor move
ment."
''It Is painful to organized ]a: bor to have Its dirty Hnen spread over the headHnes as It has been in recent months," Father Cro nin stated. "Unthinking perSOIl8 are likelY to condemn the entire labor movement for the faults . of a minority,"
for the 15th consecutive year In the Forum of Loyola University of the South. "Western civlllzatlon," he said, "owes its origin and principles to two great events - the defeat of the Pe'rslans by Alexander the Great and Christianity, and I believe weare coming. to the moment in history when Alex ander's victory will be reversed. Suez troubles are not just In Egypt, or even just the Arab world, for the whole Moslem world is stirring, as was evi denced by Indonesia's repudia tion of debts to Holland one day after the Suez crisis erupted. "America's greatest glory Is that she Is feeding the world. But we haven't been able to bring an ideology to the East. The only philosophy we bring is that of democracy, but the East wants more than that. "The clvlllzed world is con fronted with a dual attitude; on one hand the communists are ruthlessly persecuting and on the other hand they use it to extend their dominance, especially In the Near East," Bishop Sheen said that the luffering of Christians under communism Is the world's great hope. Where religion begins com munism begins to decay, and be cause of the suffering In China, that country is brought much nearer to God, he said.
DISTRIBUTION OF HOLY OILS: Priests from' all over the Diocese come to the Cathedral on Holy Thursday afternoon to bring back the Holy Oils that will be used in the parishes throughout the year. Reverend Joseph L. Powers of st. Joseph's ChurCh, Taunton, receives the Sacred Chrism, used in Baptism and C~nfirmat1on, from the Reverend Alfred Ge:p.dreau of the Cathedral staff.
U. S. Women Start German Units
MuNICH, Germany (NC)Leaders Cooperate "On the other hand," he con S Na t·lona I CounCI'1 0 f Th e U '.. tinued, "the corruption uncov Catholic Women has established ered by the Senate hearings can five area councils for American be compared with a cancer. If women's groups' associated with there is no radical surgery, then First Ghanaian Bishop Americlln mllltary units in the cancer might grow and ulti Is Named by Pope Germany. mately klll the patient." ELMINA, a han a (NC) "The enormous economic pow Mary Donohoe, of Washington, er of the Teamsters, coupled with Bishop-designate John Amissah, organization secretary of the corruption among its officials. first nati~e of Ghana to be NCCW, said here that all of the collusion with some employers . named a Bishop, was born and new councils will become part of and shakedowns of others • • • raised in this city where the the Military Council of Catholio constitute a grave danger both first Mass on Ghana soU was Women in Europe, which wlllln to the labor movement and to saId on January 20, 1482, 10 clude representatives of Ameri the polltlcal and economic secur years before Columbus discovered can Catholic women's groups in ity of thIs nation. America. Germany, France, Italy and the "Sooner or later this danger That same year the first United Kingdom, and wlllin turn had to be faced. We are all for church of Ghana was built here be affillated with the NCCW in tunate that it is being faced to by the Portuguese and dedicated the United States. day In a responsible fashion, both to St. George. At the request of Organization of the German by the Senate committee and by Portugal's ruler, Prince Henry area councils -:... for Frankfurt. .the top leaders of the unified la the Navigator, a votive Mass in Kaiserslautern, Stuttgart, Mu bor .movement," honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary nich and Heidelberg and Berlin Father Cronin praised the la was to be offered in the church Bremerhaven-Kassel - ' was ac bor movement for cooperatIng every Saturday in perpetuity. compllshed through actions ta more fully with the Senate com Bishop-designate Amlssah wlll ken by various groups at 21 dif mittee 'than have certain busi serve as Auxlllary to Archbishop ferent meetings. ness groups that have been vic Miss Donohoe, who saiel. the WilUam T. Porter, S.M.A., of tlmized by Teamster tactics." Cape Coast. Archbishop Porter officers of the new councils plan He pointed out that one of the administered the Sacrament of to meet in Heidelberg on May 8. difficulties faclng the Senate Confirmation in many parishell stressed that the NCCW units committee is the reluctance of . of this diocese In 1949 while a wlll work closely with German witnesses to testify. "While thIs guest of the late Bishop Cassidy. Catholic women's groups. reluctance of busInessman Is un derstandable," he concluded, "the f~ct that labor has taken the lead in offering evidence is a point that ~hould not be over looked."
Hospital ·Heads . p'lan Session ST. LOUIS (NC) - About 11,000 reHgious and lay personnel who operate the nation's Catho Jlc hospitals will attend the 42nd annual convention of the Catho lic Hospital Association of the U. S. and Canada in Cleveland from May 27 to 30. The convention theme will be "Self-Appraisal: Keynote to Pro aress," Featured speakers will be two priest-professors of moral and pastoral theology from Weston (Mass.> College. They are Jesuit Fathers John J. Lynch and John C. Ford. Father Lynch, consult ant to the association on medico moral problems, will speak on "The Patient's Moral Right to Privacy." Father Ford has lee t u red throughout the U. S. on alcohol ism and medico-moral problems. Last year he was awarded the Cardinal Spellman Medal for contributions to theology. He will discuss the role of the general 'hospltal In the treatment of alcohoHcs.
Bishop Stresses Need Priest and Parents Of Catholic Schools Mark Anniversaries WREXHAM, Wales (NC) There is an area of more than 8,000 square miles in Wales with out a single Catholic school, wrote Bishop John Petit of Me nevia, in an appeal to CathoHcs of Great Britain for financial support of his diocese In Wales. Menevia, one of the largest lees In the,British Isles, includes all of Wales, except the south eastern industrial zone around Cardiff. Bishop Petit pointed out that Catholics in British East and West Africa. a still largely undeveloped area, number one out of 15, whereas Menavla counts one Catholic out of every .5 people. .
HASTINGS (NC)-A priest edI'tor will mark the silver jU~ile':' 'u '" of his ordination on the same day that his parents celebrate their golden wedding day. Msgr. Maurice W. HeImann. editor of the Southern Nebraska. Register, newspaper of the Lin coin diocese, on Hie 25th anni versary of his prIesthood, wlll offer a solemn Mass of Thanks giving in st. Cecilia's Church here on May 7 at which his par ents, Mr. and Mrs, George V. HeImann, Sr., of Hastings, wlll renew the marriage vows they pronounced on their wedding day 60 years ago. _
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Books of the Hour
Two Sociologists Discuss Mixed Marriage Problem
114
THI ANCHOR-I
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BOOK BRIEFS
',. G R A V EN IMAGES' SUBSTI TUTES FOR MORALITY b,. Diet rloh von Hildebrand with Allee Jourdain. New York: McKay. $U.50. By Rev. D. Bernard Theall; O.S.B. A disentanglement of morality from mores. A problem that recurs constantly in the, modern world bTANG,F~r,s AND THEIR MISSION J'ean Da.nlelou. S. J. translated is that the marriage betw.een persons, of different faiths, Md.: by Da"ld Heimann. Westmlnste,·. Newman. $2.76. Learned )'et usually-at least in Catholicism-referred to as the "mixed angels readable treatment of mission or In the economy of salvation. marriage." Others prefer tJ1e term "interfaith marriage." PRACTICAL CATHOLIC mc. TIONARY by. J e s s I e Corrigan W 1·th·In recen t 'yeaI'S minPegls. New York: Doubleda'y. '$2,95. isters of several Protestant until a friend of both parties Words and phrases explained. b,.ier biographies of most popular saints. churches have spoken out tactfully intervenes." So begins table of ·Popes. dates of reign. llIost the first essay, "The Soeptic as a famous encyclicals of la,st centu,.y. against such marriag'es, and Critic," in O. K. Chesterton's THE KING'S ACHIEVEMEN'l' by ' s' have of course always Robert Hugh Benson, edited hv ,Cathollc , , The Thing (Sheed and Ward, $3) Fra.ncis A. Connolly. New Yorlt; been, warned of their special. the latest of volumes resurrected Kenedy. $3.60. New edItion or his dangers and problems. Two pro torlcal novel about house diVided In the Thomas More Books to against Itself. . fessional, sociologists now sur BONN, J. I,. The Lively Arts or Live Series. vey the matter in One Marriage: Those opening sentences could Sister Gervalss. (Kenedy. $:I,fiO). Two Faiths, by James H. Bos A novel or a Nun with "progres have been written by no one else, shie" Ideas. '
sard and Eleanor S. Boll (Ron and the Chestert9n fan will go on BRODERICK. R. C. The Catlwllo
aid, $3.50). enthusiastically through the rest Layman's Book of Etiquette. (Cat.
"0 'd echetleal Guild. 60c. Paper). A h i b 00 k SUb - t Itling tel' Ul -' of this collection. The non-Ches- serle,S or short chapters on pious ance on Interfaith Marriage," tertonian may find a bit of dif-, .practlces, sacraments, the Church the authors do calendar, etc. ficulty in appreciating the essays ,The Cathollo Bookllst. 1957. not t a k e a· dealing with people no longer In (Rosary College Department· of stand for 0 r the news _ such a's Angll'can LlbrRry Science, RIver Forest.MaIll. 76c. Paper). Edited by Sister 1'1' against s u c h Bishop Barnes and his religious Luella; annotated and classified unions. The y confrere, "Oloomy' Dean", inge. list of recommendsd rsadlng. "'I'e concel'ned DANIEL-ROPS. HENRI. Cathe'" At 'the same time, the old dral And Crusade. (Dutton., $10). 'only to point
Studies of the Medieval Church, causes have a way Of reviving, 1050-1350. , DANIELOU,. JEAN. The Angels ou t th a t th ese so that the essay on Clarence are constantly Darrow ("The Optimist as Sui ,-,nd Their MissIon. (Newman. on the numeri $2.76). A semI-popular theological cide") may come as somethini stUdy. cal increase in of a 'shock to those who have GUl\18LI<JY, WAL'l'ER. Unusual Baptismal Names. (Catholic Dlstrl the Un i ted
been admiring the central char butors. Washington 17, D. C. $1. States and pre te f h I Paper). GREGORIAN INS'l'ITUTE OF ac r o t e popu ar play "In.. 15 e n t peculiar
herit the Wind." The essays on AMKRICA. The Music or HolY problems not present in mar Mencken will be seen to offer 'Week. (Gregorian Institute of l'iages between partners of the America, 2132 Jetterson Avenue. much the saine verdict as mod Toledo, Ohio. $2). A ChoIr Book In same faith. ein thinkers arrived at when es' '\tccord with the newly Restored Holy Week Liturgy. Case Histories HEH'I'LING. LUDWIG. A History tllnating' that writer's place and ' of the Cathollo Church. (Newman. After a brief survey 0 f mo d ern .i n fl uence in, American after his $7.60). A text sulte<l!0" lay ""at!"Marriage in America" from the recent death. Again, modern Ing. 0 ' HII,DER8RAND, D. von.AGra,'en sociological point 0 f view, t h e d rama f ocuses our attention Images. (McKa.y. $3.60). study authors devote a chapter to a often on' St. Joan of Arc, and (If "Substitutes tor True Morallty . 0 f case hi s t or i I ving Ch es te ron's t In HOPE, the Modern World." senes es invo 0 b serva t ions a b out WINGFIELD. Other various interfaith combinations, her place in the scheme of sanc People. (Sheed & Ward. $3). In most of which do not seem to be tity have value. tended as a supplement to TAre Toget.heJ'. A helpful introductory essay working oot well. Next are ex HOW.Rr.,I,. CLIFFORD. Preparamined .the peculiar difficulties by Masie Ward dealS quite effeo Ing For Easter. (Liturgical P,·ess. 65c. Paper). A newly revised ana Of such marriages. with empha tively with charges based on oth lysis of the spirit and dlrectl"es sis on the national and cultural er single essays that this value of the Restored Holy Week een' differences that such marriages is of enhemeral value. The whole ICjSEBB, ELEANOR and RI<:GT. I ve, an d with some bo 0 k Ii'as th e e ff ec t which Fran k NALD. The Man. (Newman. o ft en mvo $8.26). Belloo A study'largel,. psrsonal. reference to differences in 'Btti Sheed claims for Orthodoxy-it by the daughter and son-In-la w tude toward the role of sex in helps a. great deal in toning' up of JTI~(g:A~tJ~°J: A. The Sacrifice marriage. the mind. Of The Church. (Liturgical Press; Although the authors recognize 60c. Paper). The Meaning of the Mass Interpreted as a community that "each interfaith marriage is sa.crlflce. unique" (as is even the marri McCARTHY. ,Tohn. Problems In "'ge between two of the same ',l'heolog'y. (Newman. $8.75). A . series of questions and a.nswers .. faith). they feel that certain Iln' the, Moral Theology or, the' problems can be foreseen for the f3ai[E'fJifJ~lD'EZ Sister JOSEF A. I d Th '11 The 'Yay of blvlne' Love or the pel's n ' o S mvo ve. ese WI cen Message of the Saored Hea.rt to the World. (Newman. $1.95. Paper). ter, for example, about the rela tions of each to the friends of.the . . A. reprint. edition. NOYES, ALFRED. A Letter -To NEW YORK (NC) -. Th0 N a LucIan and Other Poems. (Llppln other. and most especially will there be problems for the chll tional Council of Catholic Wom;;' cotto $3). A collection whIch sup plements the 1947 Collec,ted Poems. dren of mixed unions. Here again en has been awarded a major OWT1NS. JOSEPH. St. Thomas the case history approach is used, Amel:ican Herita.geFoundation' l}nd the 'Future of M~taPhYS$'~S). "'nd letters~a.l·e quoted at le'ngth (Marquette University ress. . The 1957 AquInas Lecture. '" A d f t t di bli PEGIS. J. C. A Practical Cathollo from those 'who, as children, war or ou s an ng pu 0 (were. much disturbed' by I'eligi service in the 1956 National Dictionary. (Hanover House. $2.95). Int.ended for "ordinary needs." Non-par ti san R eg is t er, I norm f ous differences. PIEPER, JOSEF. Ths Silence of Yourself and Vote Program. It lit. 'I'homas.. (Pantheon. $2.75>. More of Ii. Risk was announced here. by the Three essays. POETA SAXO. The Saxon Poet', ill b d' Catholl' r de C ea rs w e IS awards committee of the Amerl LIfe of Charles the Grea.t. (Pageant tressed by occasional references can Heritage Foundation. Press. $2.60). A translation by which result from the fact that The Council was selected from M'¥DR~m~i:KIA~lY. The First the authors are non-Catholics. a field of 7,000 participants In fesult.. (Newman. $5). An IIlustra For example, they speak of the ed biography of Elt. Ignatius "j t II the program. ovola. n e igence" of an _ agreement The award was presented by SCHIJTTZER, ALBERT. Redemp between a Catholic husband d t1ve Incarnation. (University of an Mrs. Helen McCarthy, of tho Notre Dame. $3.50). A text dealing a, non-Catholic wife to practice American Heritage Foundation with the sources and their theolo contraception. They accep.t, as to Mrs. Robert H. Mahoney of ~Ica.l development In the studY of hJb'jd'NURER, GUSTAV. Church a good example of marital com and Cui ture In the Middle ARes. promise. agreements that half Hartford, president of the, Na the chlldren shall be raised Cath tional Council of Catholic ,Wom ~St, Anthony Guild. 17.50). The ollc.' the other half non-Catholic. en. The award is a ,reproduction Ir.f.6ot. t~r.e~.v~~':t,;e&t The Dove. (Kened,·. $2.95). A biographical B of the illustration "Oeorge Wash ut there ,are few such excep ington the Soldier" and carries story f6r children of ages 9 to H', tlonal references, and these could .a citation of a'ppreciation. . of Saint CatherIne Laboure and be excluded only in a book writ -:;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;;;;t;;;1I;;e;;;1\;;I1;;;;r;;;;R;;;;CU;;;;I;;;;O;;;;us;::;lI;;;;le;;;;d;;;;a;;;;l.;::;;::;;::;;::;;;; ten by Catholics for Catholics. r In' the main, though the au thors do not say so explicitly, the "mixed" marriage is presented as offering more of a risk from every point of view than the marriage between persons -of the same religion. That it is not impossible to make mixed marriages work all know who have had the care of UP TO 36 MONTHS'TO RIE,.AY LOAN Bouls, or who have known of such marriage at first or second-hand Thr•• Conv.nl~nt 'OffIces to SellV. You ,-but the difficulties are great ly increased. This book offel's a NOItfI Bllllk South Bank . hard, realistic look at them, in a 1499 1 Rodney way that ought to earn the grat Acahn<lt ' ...nch Blvd. . Aye, itude of those who m'ust counsel in. these matters. OF NEW BEllllFOlR])' Tones Up Mind "It takes three to make a quar MAIN BANK - PIUlRCIHASIE AND, WUlLILOAM SIREIE1'S rel. There is needed a peace maker. The full potentialities of Men.:ber Federal Deposit Insuranc6 Corporation human fury cannot be reached v'
Women Recel've Publl'c SerVl'ce " Award Honor
FIX' UP YOUR HOME N'OW
Problem Children Few, Parents Are Blamed BUTLER (NC)-"There Is no such thing as a del1n quent. Every boy and girl wants to be good." Father William Crenner, S.M.; chaplain, of, North Cathol1c High School, Pittsburgh, made this st!ltement at a meeting 'of Pennsylvania iOod example. Children look to Catnolic women hE:Ie. "Ninety-seven per cent of parents for discipline and re spect their parents more when young people have given no such discipline is shown.
trouble," he continued. "It 11'1 the three per cent who give us trou ble and these are the ones we are constantly hearing about." Father Crenner charged that the fundamental problem lies in homes lacking in love. Too few parents prepare themselves for successful marriage and realize . their day to day obligations to each other and their children, he said. NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Con-_ He said that parents are fail flicting ambitions for an educa ing their children hi three ways: tion and for marriage make for 1) On the moral level, by sub a "real struggle" in the minds of jecting ,youth to temptations in, college girls, Sister Mary Louise. available literature. TV programs president of St. Mary's Domini and dress. 'can College, said 'at a session 2) 'By degrading their person for parents here. alities. Women are falllng to Discussing the subject, "Prob dress, act and speak as women. lems of College Women," Sister Men are falllng to accept respon Louise disclosed 40 per cent of sibilities as head of the family. the senior class at her college will 3) By lal?k of leadership and be married in June. Cedar chests. diamonds and wedding plans are competing for attention with Peace Prayers lectures, comprehensives a n c1 MEXICO CITY (NC)'-A Na final examinations. Sister said. tional Day of Children's Prayers for Peace has been planned by M~xican Catholio Action groups :~~ .. ·.·Fra~ci·s E:' for next Sunday. The intentions of the prayers will include. chil dren living in countries where . bl~u~rt;tIt:t' Se!'1'it'(? .- • R.'aJ J~Jlf11e tho Church is being persecuted.. 1111 So. Main ,~t., ,Fall Rifer, Mass, All of Mexico's schools, cateche . ,.,',OSborne' 9-6411 " tical centers, colleges and chil dren's organizations will take part in the off!!ring of the day of pra.yer.
Real Struggle Facing Senior College Girls
'SULLIVAN
THREE POPULAR PILGRIMAGES 'with the ASSUMPTIONIST FATHERS • FRANCISCAN MISSIONS OF CALIFORNIA Chicago, Loa Angeles. San 'ran~lsco, Portland'. 0 ....
I~ne 11 to luly 6 (LImited reterntionl
• MARTYRS' SHRINE Of OLD FORT STE. MARIE MIDLAND, ONTARIO, CANADA Lackawanna. Niagara 'all•• Toronto, O"awa lune 28 to July 6
• SHRINES Of PROVINCE OF QUEBEC, CANADA St.
Joseph', Montreal; St. Anne de Beaupre; Cap de la Madeleine, Beauyolr. Sherbrooke. I!nfield, N.H•. July 16,to 13 ,For Information wrltB to:
ASSOCIATION 0' OUR LADY 0' SALVATiON 670 West Boylston St. Worce"" 6. Mats.
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THE ANCHOR Thul'l., April 25, 1957
Brooklyn Diocese Split, Two BishoDs Assigned
Appeal
WASHINGTON (NC)-The Diocese of Brooklyn has been divided so as to have two dioceses on Long Island In the State of New York. In the future, the Counties of Kings and 'Queens will will form the new Diocese of Brooklyn, while the Coun of America here since JJhe 1953. ties of Nassau and Suffolk He came here after serving as will form the new Diocese of Bishop cif Ogdensburg for 10 Rockville Centre. Most Rev. Bryan J. McEnte ,art. rector of the Catholic Uni versity of America In this city, has been named Bishop of Brooklyn. Most Rev. Walter p. Kellen berg" Bishop of Ogdensburg. N. Y., has been transferred to the Diocese of Rockville Centre. The Diocese of Brooklyn will hereafter embrace a total of 179 Ilquare miles, with a total popu lation of 4,457.l75 and a Cath olic population of 1,429.174. There are within this area a to tal of 216 parishes served by 1.039 priests. The Diocese of Rockville Cen tre embraces 1",194 square miles, .nd has a general population of 1,346,4U and a Catholic popu~ latlon of 482.716. It has a total of 111 parishes served by 354 priests. St. Agnes' Church. Rockville Centre, Nassau Coun~ ty. has been named the Cathe~ dral of the new diocese. Bishop McEntegart has been rector of the Catholic University
years. He was' distinguished as an educator and administrator and an authority In the field 'of charitable and social work be fore his elevation to the hlerar~ chy. Bishop Kellenberg, who was appointed Bishop of Ogdensburg In 1954, was an Auxiliary to His Em1nence Francis Cardinal Spell man, Archbishop of New York, from October 15, 1953 until Jan uary 19, 1954. Bishop Kellen berg was chancellor of the Arch diocese of New York at the time he was elevated to the hlerachy.
the same. Great Britain called this "blatant but clever" propa ganda. and pointed out that So viet Russia .just concluded a ser ie.s of nuclear tests on March 8. The British saw the Russian de claration as a possible move to get Great Britain to call of! the tests-her first that she had scheduled for the Christmas Is lands 1n the Pacific for this spring. London said it would go ahead with the tests. The proposed Pacific OCean tests are a matter of some con cern to the Japanese and others Continued From Page One in the Pacific. Minister Matsu~ of nuclear weapon experiments, • ahlta visited London before go renunciation of their use M such, 1ng to Rome and tried unsucess fully to get Prime Minister Mac and a general control of arma millan's government to call off rnents. In the second.' His Holi ness said it was only within the the Christmas Island tests. All of this negotiation was un ambit of the United Nations that derscored by the report from the promises of indiVidual na tions regarding armaments could Sydney, AU$tralla, that a French be mutually exchanged under the scientist had told an audience .trlct obligations of international there of seeing natives of the Maquls Islands, Marshall Islands law. and Tahiti who were suffering American Proposal from "ten-ible diseases" as the The Holy Father's special au result of eating fish m~de radio dience for Dr. Masatoshl Matsu abita, a special Japanese envoy active by the bomb tests con ducted by the U. S. In the Pacific Visiting the heads of govern ments In the Interest of ending last year. He 1s reported to have said "there °ls no treatment for nuclear weapons test.~, drew pub lic attention dramJl,tlcally to this the disease," which manifests 1t-, self with SKin that "breaks open issue. Just prior to this audience, the 1nto painful lumps and 'crevices." German Controversy United States gave Impetus to thought about this problem by At the same time, a Japanese proposing that, beginning April scientist has been quoted as say I, 1958, Russia and the West 1ni his country does not possess limit all production of fissionable' equipment sensitive enough to rnaterlals to non-weapon use. detect all of the nuclear tests Harold Stassen, spokesman for conducted by Soviet Russia. the U.S., made this proposal to The U.S. Is planning a new the UN Disarmament Sub-com aeries of atomic tests, beginning mittee at Its meeting 1n London. about May 15. on the Nevada Mr. Stassen said the limitation eould start nex~ year If a plan of Inspection Is worked out by that time. He 1s said to have proposed that the Inspection be can-led out by placing Inspectors In plants making fissionable mlj, terlals. He said the U.S. was not prepared at this time to enter lnto an agreement on the elimi nation of neclear weapons, be cause such an agreement could not be effectively enforced. Presumably. It is envisaged that countries 'could make wea pons from stocks built up before the agreement, and that hydro ,en bomb tests would continue until the supply is exhausted. Concern To Japs Moscow has said that Soviet Russia would halt nuclear wea pons tests immediately If Great lJrltaln and the U.S. would do
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CONGRATULATED ON HONOR: His Excellency ArChbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognanl, Apostolic Dele gate to the United States, talks with Rep. John W. Mc Cormack of Massachusetts (right) and Rep. John J; Rooney of New York, after investing them as Knights Com mander of the Order of st. Gregory the Great with Star. proving grounds. The tests ar8 expected to deal with new tacti cal weapons, and to be of relative low force. Meanwhile, the proposal to arm the new West German army With nuclear weapons has pro duced' a controversy In that country. Eighteen topflight nu clear physicists In West Germany have said they would refuse to cooperate 1n the making, testlnlr or use of atom1c weapons. Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer proposed to proceed with the plans for 1s suing such weapons, saying West Germany cannot be more poorly equipped than Its neighbors. With more proposals and more tests 1n the offing ,the question of nuclear weapons will be very much to the fore.
a Passlonist August 111, 1950 Il.t st. Paul's Monastery, Pittsburgh, motherhouse of the Passlonlsts In ,America., Subsequently. he studied at Passlonlst monasteries in Scranton, Baltimore and st. Michael's here. He Is a brother of Confrater Fergus McInnis, C.P., a novice at the Passlonlst monastery in Pittsburgh; John Robert McInrils and Mrs. Oliver H. Peri'Y, both of North Dighton and Mrs. Brant Haworth of Taunton.
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Continued From Page One Gabriel'~ Passionlst Monastery, Brighton. A reception will be held at St. Joseph's parish hall from 8 to 5 Sunday afternoon. Born May 16, 1926 in North Dighton, Father McInnis was graduated In 1944 from Dighton High School, following which he spent 2J) months in the Army Air Force as a sergeant crew-chief and flight engineer with the 2nd Emergency Rescue Squadron at -Clark Field In the Philippines. . In November 1947, he entered Holy Cross Passionlst, Seminary, Dunkirk, N.Y., and was professed
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Sena Club and Knights of Co. lumbus. Mrs. McGowan Is a past presi-' . dent of the Catholic Women's Club of North Attleboro and Is a vice president of the AttleborO' District of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women. Replying to Bishop Connol1y', invitation to act as Diocesan Lay Chairman. Mr. McGowan said: "It 1s With mixed feelings of deep appreciation to His Ex cellency Bishop Connolly for the honor and true humility as a participant that I approach the respolilsibllity of Diocesan Lay Chairman of the sixteenth Cath ,ollc Charities Appeal. "The history or the Appeal through those 16 years has been a history of Charity in Its flI~st expression. The funds have been solicited by a great number of men and women who have given freely of their time and effort I donated generously by business and by Individuals 1n the con fines of the diocese and have been administered In a dedicated manner by the priests and reli giouS with a bare minimum of expense. "Let us In gratitude for our many blessings give generously' to this year's Catholic Charities Appeal. Let us give. not only for , the tangible benefits om' contrl- , butlons will provide for the orphans, the sick, the old and the homeless, but let our Charity, designated by Christ Himself as the greatest of all virtues, serve as a prayer of personal thanks.. giving to Almighty God."
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Art of Persuasion
.
'16 .
)
Reds Try to' Create Idea.
USSR Living Equates US ,
.
By Donald McDonald .
<.':
THI ANCHOR Thurs., April 25. 1957
K'. of C. Council Mothers' Day ·Mass P'lanned .Members of Fall Rivel' Council
Davenport Catholic Messenger
I have been looking through the last half dozen-or-so 86. Knights' of Columbus, will Issues of "USSR," the monthly Life-type,picture magazine .honor their mothers by receiving pl,lblished for American readers by the Soviet Union. This communion at the nine o'clock venture was worked out a year or two ago .between the mass in St. Mary's Cathedral on Mothers' Day, Sunday, May 12. United States and Russia the service, knights during the Geneva-spirit simply one of iuany "interesting" willFollowing be privileged to hear Paul facets, more or less vestigial or thaw in the cold war. In ex· Van K. Thomson. Ph.D., now on which "Life" choos change for "USSR" publish nostalgic, es to occasionally. report and lecturing in English Literature at
ing privileges in America, the Soviet Union' permits our nation to tell the Rus. sian . p e 0 pie ( about life in'
America
through I), simi
lar publication
in the Soviet.
Union. .
Obvious
I y, "USSR" is an expensive professional ex ercise in the art of persuasion. And I suppose its American counterpart in Russia has similar rhetorical ambitions, Chillingly Parallel The interesting and, in some respects, frightening thing about "USSR" is not the picture it chooses to present of itself to the American people, but that the "ton'e" and "spirit" of the Soviet philosophy of life is so chillingly parallel to the "tone" and the "spirit" of what we call "the American 'way of life." I think it is' highly probable that only a small minority of the Russian people are as prosperous, happy, contented. healthy and educated as are those whose in variably smiling faces are pic tured each month and on each . page in "USSSR." That is not the important point. The real s i g n i f i can c e of "USSR" is 1) its disclosure of what the Communist Part y thinks is "the good life;" and 2) .the striking similarity between the Soviet conception of "the good life" and the reality of American life as it is. t know the Soviet Union is trying to say, through "USSR," that "we are just as good as' you Americans are." What impresses me. after studying the Soviet propaganda, is that, in many important respects, American life is "just as bad as'" the' kind of life .for which the SOViet leaders are working. More Propaganda . Take, for example, the little slogans "USSR" has printed 'on its last four front covers. "The F u t u l' e Belongs.' to Youth." "Man Is Born to Be Happy." "Peace and Prosperity Is the Ooal." . "Building for the Well-B'elng of All the People." Take, more importantly, the 'contents of "USSR." An article on the ballet. An other on natural science films in Russia. Articles on solar electri fication, a mechanic and his family in Leningrad, tfie produce market in Riga, an original musi cal score by Tchaikovsky, the use of the atom in the battle against cancer, Siberian diamonds, So~ viet inheritance laws, hunting for mountain gaats, Russian hockey, Winter sports, university life.. Avoids Religion And all of this most attractive ly presented in well-written arti cles with a profusion of accom Pllnying pictures, many of them multi-colored. What, in this presentation. is essentially different from, say, the representation of American society and culture by "Life" magazine? Immediat~ly one is' .moved to say that "Life" has published, on occasion, articles on religion and various' faiths; whereas "USSR" ·tarefullY avoids all mention of religion. But is "religion," as "Life" depicts it, really the domi nant "tone" or guiding "spirit" 1n the American culture? 01: is it
....
which finds itself, more often than not, sandwiched between a "Life" report on burlesque shows and rock-and-roll riots? . Now "Museums" Even "USSR" can bring itself to publish pictures of Moscow cathedrals and churches which the Soviet Union has turned into "museums" and which "USSR" finds quite interesting from the standpoint of iconography, arch eology and architecture. The plain fact is that you can lay copies of alSSR" and "Life" 'side by .sideand interchange them without appreciably affect ing the essence of either. In deed, if "Life's'! occasional ex cursion into religion is a "mark" in its favor, "USSR's" refusal to publish the gamier sex material which "Life" never overlooks Is a mark in its favor. Good Life . I do' not want to leave the impression that I am concerned with a comparison of' a Soviet and an American pictorial pub lication. My concern is not with either of the .magazines. It iii with. the fact that what the So viet 'leaders think is "the good life" corresponds In too many details with .what Americans think,1s "the good life." There is one word which covers both concepts, a word not always used with precision but. never theless, the only accurate word to define those two concepts. The word is "seCularism." It is the removal of religion and God from the' center of life and relegatini it to the outskirts of human existence. There is a difference. of course, in the manner in which religion is pre-empted. in the Soviet Union and the U. S. In the for , mer, secularism· is systematically installed by the rulers. In the latter, it Is willingly accepted by the ·people. " But, in the final evaluation, if we are coilfronted by two thoroughly secular, materialistic, naturalistic societies. will it mjtke much difference whether th0s9 societies traveled over different routes? Parallel Materiaftsm America, is seems to me, has not yet arrived at the thorough going secularism Which the So viet rulers are aiming at for their nation, but we are going in that direction. And we need only look at the' gap between religion and life in America to realize that the parallel materialism of the Soviets and the U. S. is not a dream, though it can become a nightma~e.
Providence· College, who will. be principal speaker at a breakfast . to be served at White's- at the ·Narrows. Prof. Thomson. who graduated . from the Berkley Divinity School. received his Master's degree a' the General Theological Semina l'y, New York, in 1943. He wall rector of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Providence, and a mem ber of· the Diocesan Council of the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island. When he and his family became members of the Catholic . Church. Now at Providence In big demand as a speaker, Prof. Thomson was born in Wee haWken, N. J .. took his degree of Bachelor of Arts at Columbia University, was assistant at Orace Episcopal Church, Newark. N. J .. from 1941 to 1943. and chaplain to the First Marine Di vision in World War II. Majoring in English Literature and Poetry at Columbia.' the Providence College instructor won the Boar's Head Poetry prize, one of the university's tra ditional awards. Since his conversion to the Catholic ChUl'ch, Prof. Thomson has returned to the field of his initial choice and is lecturing in English Literature at Providence College. He rec~ived his Ph.D., In English from Browl1 University. Benevides Leader Ralph Benevides, C 0 u n c il Catholic Action co - chairman, who heads the corporate break fast committee, announced that Knights will march from KofC Home, 209 Franklin. Street, to St. Mary's and return. Police and Firefighter brothers will march in uniform.. . Benevides extended a cordial invitatiol). to all Catholic 'gentle men "to join us at the commun ion rail, and to enrich yourselves . by hearirig Prof. Thomson's ad dress." Atty. James A. Heaney, mem ber· of Council 86. be t~ toal?tmaster at the breakfast.
will
Fifteen Georgetown
Alumni In Congress
'< WASHINGTON (NC) - The . election of -Joseph M. Montoya of New Mexico to the U. S. House of Representatives has brought .to 15 the number of Georgetown University alumni now serving in Congress. Mr. Montoya, a former lieu tenant governbr of New Mexico, was the victor in a special elec- . tion for the House seat. He received his law degree from Georgetown 1Ii. 1939.
BONNER
BABY SITTER IN 'THE KNOW: Grandma Wu wastes no time while baby sitting with little Precious Flower. Instead, she listens attentively, shown above, while Sr. John Andree, a Maryknoll Sistel;, goes over Catholio doctrine with her outside the ~onvent at Taichung,·Taiwan" Formosa.. Sr. John Andree, a native of Fitchburg, Mass.• is a Sister of Sr. Mary Xavier of the Presentation Order. (NC Photos)' .
Imitation of Christ Is Best Way' To Achieve Christian Perfection WORCESTER (NC) - The imitation of Christ Is the most effective means to Christian per fection, Bishop John' J. Wright of Worcester told Knights of Columbus members on retreat here. He urged that this be accom plished "by a daily effort to identify ourselves ever more closely. with the thol.\ght and the life of the Church. for the Church is Christ still at work in the world." Bishop Wright 'said the most. perfect of those" who have "caught the spirit of the Church" are the saints, and' for this r eason imitation of the saints is "a sure means to Christian per fection." "Each of the saints tried to' live out in the practical circum s tances of his work and·Hmes the s pirit and example of Jesus. That Is 'why the Church encourages us to have patron saints, men and women who share our voca tions or problems. Imitating their c onduct and catching their spirit, we reproduce in our respective c allings something of what Christ
would have been had he' been born in our place. . "Thus we bring in to our times and places the spirit and thl! influence of the model of Chris tian perfection, Jesus Christ," Bishop Wright concluded.
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, THE ANCHOR~ Thurs., April 25, 1957
Spring On The Campus
Spotlighting Our Schools Club, started at Coyle only three months' ago, is proving Itself to "A Musical Whirl," annual be one of the most active extra concert of the Glee Club, wlll be curricular organizations at the presented at 8: 15 Sunday night in New Bedford High School school. A youth movement designed to auditorium. The chorus of 80 girls, directed bring today's teenager closer to by Edmond H. Deroslers, will be . God in his everyday activities,· Y.C.S. projects include encour assisted by an instrumental .en aging stUdents to make the First semble of 14 professional musi cians through the courtesy of Fridays, dally spiritual reading Adolph Colmba and Local 214, over the school's public address system and successful manage American Federation of Musl ment of the. Cathollc Bishops' ci~ns. Miss Joanne Craig will be Relief Fund campaign. Brother Joseph, C.S.C., and so~oist and Miss Doris LeBlanc, accompanist. Sister Vitalienne, Brothel' Albert" C.S.C., have charge of the two sections of the SS.CC. is the Glee Club's di club, one for seniors and juniors, rector. The program, composed of a the other for freshmen and wide range of musical selections, sophomores. will include numbers by the ST. MARY'S, "Whipperwills" and the "Mead TAUNTON owlarks," double quintets, and A group of girls w111 cooperate the "Guilette Eleven," whose RECEIVE COMMUNION AT ANNUAL RETREAT: specialty is barbershop harmony, with Monsignor Coy 1 e High School boys in the presentation Three C9yle High School pupils are receiving Holy Com SACRED HEART ACADEMY, of "Seventeen" at Coyle audi munion at the .annual retreat' for members of the Taunton torium next Monday and Tues FAI,L RIVER school.. They are, left to right, David A. Burton of Taun Seventeeners' Com 1)1 1 t tee, day nights.
A. Cardoza of Fall River (receiving) and' Wil ton, Paul . Speaking roles have been as
headed by Rosemary Kennedy, signed to 11, whlle 15 others will liam) E. Carter of Taunton. The retreat was conducted will present "Hearts and Flow ers," a semi-formal, at the Hotel have chorus parts. Other girls 'by Rev. Terrence J. Murphy, S.M., a LaSalette Father from Mellen, Fall River, Saturday w111 assist by' se111ng candy at Bloomfield, Conn. . the performances. ni[{ht. Sec 0 n d and third round nete Berube, Blessed Sacrament the Brains" contest presented at S.H.A. defeated Durfee High matches in the volleyball tourna School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. a workshop In music sk11ls at St. on the debat~ question: - Re solved, That the Constitution be ment will be played next month; Louis Berube, 654 Woodman Xavier Academy, Providence, Street; and Muriel Cote" Do with 400 Rellgi01,lS in attendance. Amended to Lower the Voting DOMINICAN ACADEMY, minican Academy, daughter of The winners, Including Frances Age to 18. Sheila Hochu and FALL RIVER Ml'. and Mrs: Leon Cote, 109 Moson, L1111an Marois, Elaine Catherine Cleare upheld the af Foul' full four-year scholar Rockland street. . Turcotte and Carol Adam, de firmative while Kalman Pollen and Wi11lam Rellly defended the ships and three partial awardS Honorable mention in this' feated the "G-Clefs," represented have been awarded by Domini . standanjized scholarship exam by . Margaret Griffin, Catherine nf'''ative. can· Academy on the basis of a ination was won by two stUdents Magl'iby, Carolyn Drewniak and 'J.'hree will take part in an ora torical contest Saturday at Suf": competitive examination taken from Blessed Sacramef1t School: Judith Pereira. .Scorers were folk University. They are Louise by eighth grade pupils of dio Lorraine Sirois, daughter of Mr. Louise Boulay and Patricia Ko Banks, Mary Louise Simcoe·'and cesan and publlc schools. and Mrs. Andre Sirois, 602 Hicks walczyk. The Alumnae Association Street; and Judith Mathias, Natalie Foster. Guest Day at the Academy at Participating in the exam scholarship was won by Yvette daughter 'of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph tracted 260 eighth grade girls daughter of Mr. and Saucier, sponsored by the Association for . Ma,thias, Jr., 99 Broad Street. who enjoyed a program of dra the Promotion of the Study of Mrs. Hector Saucier, 343 King matics, awards, dancing, games MT. ST. MARY AOADEMY Latin were 79 sophomore, junior Philip Street. This award Is giv and a tour of the school. FALL RIVER en annually to a DominIcan Aca and senior Latin students. HOLY FAMILY HIGH, demy elementary school gradU "Four Sharps," a group of Carol Regan received the high Freshmen· m e m b e r s of the NEW BEDFORD est score in the sophomore Latin ate. Paullne Cabeceiras of Somerset Mount Saint. Mary, Fall River. Two seniors have been awarded contest. Runners - up Included music class, won the "Battle ot college scholarships .on the basis Marianne Donovan, Beth Martlh Junior High School, Donna Ma rie Silvia of .MortonJunlor High, and Agnes O'Neill. and Diane Ross of St. Anne's IUS GR. COYLE HIGH, School also won full scholarships TAUNTON for four years. Parents of these Because of the large number stuct,ents are Mr. and Mrs Fran of applicants, admission to Mon cisco Cabecelras ot 108 Fourth algnor Coyle High School, Taun Street, Somerset; Attorney and ton, in September, will be based Mrs. Frank SUvia ot 306 French on the results of an entrance ex Street; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ross amination. Ot 222 boys who med of 202 Ollver street. applications for admission, 150 Partial scholarships tor four will be accepted. years were awarded to Made Applicants Included 80 from 1elne Pieri of St. Patrick's School, the Taunton area, '48 from Fall daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 001 River and 21 from Attleboro. elle Pieri, 412 Dwelly Street; AnPresent enrollment Is 494, In cluding 85 seniors, Taunton leads with 243. ANNUAL Coyle High StUdent Theatre, under the direction of Brothel' Richard, C.S.C., will present "Seventeen," a three-act musi APPEAL cal, in the school aUditorium at 8 next Monday and Tuesday A MOST WORTHY CAUSE nights. GIVE IT YOUR
Proceeds wlll· go to the educa tional fund of the Brothers of FUllEST SUPPORT
the Holy Cross. Feminine roles will be played by the girls of St. Mary's High School. of Attleboro and South Attleboro Young Christian StUdents'
SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY, }'JURHAVEN
17
of College Entrance Board or competitive examination results. Miss Margaret' Tomlinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tomlinson, has been offered a partial scholarship by the College: ot Our Lady ot. Good Counsel, New York, and a full tuition scholarship by Misericordia Col lege, Dallas, Pa. Miss Margaret Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Moore, . has been awarded a full tuition scholarship by Salve Regina Col lege In Newport. She is editor in-chief of, the school yearbook, The.Maria. Robert O'Brien, son of Mr. and . Mrs. Leonard O'Brien, a Lock heed Aircraft Scholarship win ner in 1953, will continue his studies for a Master of Science degree -following his graduation from Carnegie Institute of Tech nology in June. . A consistent Dean's List stu dent in his college work. he has been permitted to take courses carrying master',s degree credit, which he expects to complete in September when he wi1laffiliate with Lockheed.
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'1he Yardstick
,
/
•~eed Labor Relations Act
:For F~deral Employees '
By Msg~. George G. ~'
Higg~
The AFL~CIO Government Employees Council-rep
,fese~ting a number of Federal employee unfons with a
:~ember~hip of approximately 600,000 government work- ,
,~is"",:,wi11 sponsor an important legislative rall.y in Wash
ington, May 14 and 13., "
'Aft~r a briefing session at ment's brief I. that government
,a downtown auditorhun 'efficiency and economy (rather
: ~epreseritatives of thevari~, than s~ial Justice or the pre."
; '. '. ' : valling labor standards of pri.. ,~¥s white-collal bl,ue-collar and vate industry or the standards of
,postal employ,ee UnIons affiliated Federal labor legislation) muU
," I t h the be the' determining if not th,
.: ¢ouncil will only, norm' in estabiishing rates
,.pe nd a ,day. of pay and condition of work for
,and: - a - half 'government employees. '
1.9bb y,ing f 0,1' Red Herrln, laSSlfied and What does thi.s. mean in prao.
, 0 s t a I pay tlce? . In the language of the brief
, alses, annuity· *?creases for it means first of all that "th,
t~~lred Feder,basia rights of 'labor-the right
~1 ,w 0 l' k e~' s, to strike and the' right to bar and a" UnIon gain collectlvely-eannot be af recognItIon bill. 'forded Federal, employees con-
Whether by coincidence or by sistently with the Federal obU
4eslgn , this rally was announced gatlon to the ,taxpayer to opel'
,hortlY after the' Department of ,ate the Federal administration
,':. . economically 'a.nd· efflciently.'~ . ,ustice.,-m !l' brief filed ~1th th, This is obviously' a red herrtil,. PL~N MEMORIAL DAY FESTIVAL BALL: The committee of Our Lady of 'the V; S. CClUrt of Claims in Wash- For it ls'a well known fact that Ass,um.ption C,hurch, New..· Bedf.ord, arranging the Memorial Day Festival Ball comprises, fpgton-flatly 'took ,the p~ltiongOvernment e~ployees' union. ~hat government wOl'kers are, hi explicitly waive,thfrlght to strike left to right;, Allap Andrad,e, )?iane CeIite~o, Chairman frank Lopes and Ann Santos. ttfect, a Class apart, that they in their constitutions. . ' " . ~annot expect to be treated like , Secondly, ,th.~ "efficiency arid 'Y' :Dis,cussion Groups Stonehill Announces ~he employees' of private industry ,economy" philosophy of labor' reT M MdT· • fn the field of wages.. hours 'and ,latiolUl means, for exainple,'that ',0 ,eet on ay ultlon Increase W'orkingconditions. "if Congress desires that, insofar' Rev. Francis A. McCarthy,'DiOAn increase of $20 per semester cesan moderator of d~scussion in tuition at Stonehill College The Justice Department's brief as it is posslbl~, all workers in y,ras filed in answer to a test suit this country work only eight groups; wili be principal speaker was announced today by Rev. Qya group of postal clerks in the hours a day, nevertheless ConBROOKLYN '(NCl-"If in-', at im open meeting of National James J. Sheehan, CSC, presiCourt of Claims, seeking over- gress could, -in its concern for ' roads into th'e rise' of juvenile ' dent of the college. The increase, t~me payments for extra time Federal expenditures require and delinquency are to be '.made, an Council of Catholic' Women reli- effective, in September, will bring spent in studyini' postal Bortini' . ' gi01.lS discussion 'groups in the the' tuition rate to $240 per "schemes," ' .validly provide that Federal em- Immediate mobilization of com- Fall Rivei' and New Bedford semester or $480 per year. ployees work 10 hours a day.", munity resources to raise the areas next Monday night at 8 in In making the increase public. Fundamentally Unsound ' .> Thirdly, the' archaic laborre- .tandal:d.s of family Is neces-' St. Louis hall, Fall River. ' Father Sheehan pointed out that ,As the son of a postal super lations philosophY expressed in sary," ' A question and answer, period It is in, line with action which visor and the brother of a postal the Justice Department's brief Dr. Walter L.Wllligan, chairwlll follow Fr. McCarthy's talk has been necessary at other olerk, I would not care to ex means that "the economical ad- 011 the' importance of adult discolleges throughout the United press an opinion on the merits ministration of government pre- man of st, John's University cussion groups in the parishes. States, brought on by the in Qf-this particular case for fear of cludes the immediate and total graduate school's department Qf Miss. Ruth McArdle, district creases iii all expenses of the ,eeming to be prejudiced. On the adoption by Congress of schemel social studies made this state- chairman, of discussion groups, schools, He added that the new (>ther hand, regardless of how ,such as automatia cost of llvinf ment in a', lecture concluding a will preside. tuition rate was still one of the the case Is eventually decided by increases based on the consumer course on 'juvenile ,delinquency, . Purpose" of the meeting is to lowest in New England with the the Court of Claims, it must be price tndex." The COmnlunity Service Institute further "Catholic Action. The exception of state-operated col ~id-in all honesty and cleariy Dane-erous Fallacy' course, given' under Dr, Willi- number of Diocesan discussion leges. aside from partisan politics-that Ditto for ,all of the other pro- ian's direction. was held on the ',grOUps has increased to 70, Applications for enrollment in the labor relations philosophy gressive labor lital),dards adopted university's 'new Long, Island di- ,Chairman'Mrs. George P. Hurley the Fall have been running far expressed, in the Justice Depart recent yeara'by private indus- vision campus in 'Jainaica, announces; a.head of any previous 'year at Fent's brief is fundamentaJly· In try and/or e.~a:cted ,b~Federal ' . Hostesses will include members the college and 'With the' new unsound. . , legislation. According to' the Standards and Policies, ,of'St:Louis, St. Mary's Cathe-, classroom building, Holy Cross The director of the' AFL-CIO Justice'Department. in the case ~ "The efforts of parents should '\:iral, .St. Joseph's Immaculate ~all, now in use, the largest ~overnment Employees Councii, of Federal employees these' Im- be reinforced, not supplanted, by, Conception and Sacred Heart Freshman class in history' is 1homas G. Walters, was not provement8 (which are lumped organizations in the community," Guilds.' expected in the fall. ~xaggerating _when he curtly 'together in the brief under thl Dr. Willigansaid. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ dismissed the bl'lef, as "a throw- ' heading of the present-day-phlio"Parents must be made aware Ii ~ack to the horse-and-buggy sophy of labor law) "must either of the special' needs of their chil dl\Ys," Mr. Walters and several bow to or be balanced wlth' con-' dren. Full use of publicity point his associates in the Govern'" sideratiorui ot' economy and effi- ing out the dangers of delinquen ment' Employees Council have ciency in government." Oy should be used to encourage Since J~83 also made the point that the In our opinion, thts l8 a very ~parents to, learn ways to niel!t· Justice Department's brief dra dangerous fallacy .and 'one that the needs' of youngsters. ,Coun: . ~aticallY highlights the ,need for ought .,~... ,. Surgical Appliance Co• to be. publicly repudiated 'seHng and information service,for a compi'ehenslve labor-manage by the Administration' at the parents who wish advice,' ought ~ Pharmacy ~ent relations law in gOvel;n opportunity. It'means, in to be available. The promotion in.ent service: Their point is well , earliest , " . " Hearing Aid Co. the final analysis; that the Fed- of unified action is necessary ',on. taken. ' eral government l8 above the) the part ofsmaH groups of par~ . Arthur J. Shea, Prop. , .. The gist of the Justice Depart moral law and is not bound by ants in setting standaTds and es the rules of Justice and equity in tablishing policies governing the 202 and 206 ROCK ST. TEL. OS 5-7829 R. A. WILCOX CO. the field of labor relations. social activities of their children. OFFICE' FURNITURE .The weaKness of this philo- LIkewise, it is important de ,In Stock For Immediate Delivel1Y sophy of labor relations' can be' , velop prog,rams to, pl'Qmote reo';'
• DESKS CHAIIlS' ~' readily UlustratedbY Ii f~w"sim::' reational and leisure tillle actl pIe 'examples. ,If' the' Federal vlties in the home."
FILING CABINETS governnient can, requIre ita em • FIRE FILES • SAflES ployees 00 work 10 hours a day, Prevention Urged
fOLDING TABLES why not 12 or 14 hours? Why not Dr. Willigan called on church
six days a week instead of five? groups "to seek to 'instlll" into
AND CHAIRS Moreover, if government economy youth a set of principles of right
l8 to be the principal, if not the and wrong, a conscience to go
only, Ilorm in establishIng labor with It and an appreciation of
22 BEDFORD sr. standard'! in 'the Federal servIce, . the ultimate' truths that give
'IV'ER 5 78'38 . why not reduce the wages of Fed- meaning to the apparent contra FALL R , - e r a l employees to the standards dictions of life,"
Which prevaLied, 25 or 50 years The course was designed to aid
'ago?" , . '\ penologists, social workers,par-
Maintenance SUPlPlies ,Obvious,.Answer , ents; teacher and youth counsel-
LAWN MOWIERS ' . In other words,1!the"effl- ors in recognizing arid preventing
cieI;lcy and economy" ,theory of spread of delinquency. A'sI>ecial.
SWEEPERS labor relations 'were to be car'- ,guest lecturer ,was Queens 'Dis
ried to -its.logical conclusion, the trict Attorney FrankD; O'Con':'
MILORGAN~1TE Federal government would 'com- nor" who urged college students
" .' ,. . . "pleteiy, destroy. 'thecmorale of its to. e~tel' such professioI;lal fi~ld~.
Fire Extinguosl!'nell'iS ,e~ployees'ianci.eventualiY, force,.as teaching, psychology;. soctaL
(0)' them out of goveriiment' serVice welfare, police and' probatioJ;l.
in dl'ove~.,What price economy, work: to help solve problems :of·" .
, ,'.. ",.' .... :. • , ltnd efficiency! And "what a way 'juvenile delinquency. These'arealV"
". " '1886 PURCIHIASE, S'l!'. ' to ' de.~tro'y '.the reputatIon ot the are . seriously 'undemanned,:;he ':: .. , , '.. ,
NEWIIEDIFORIlJ ,U:a.;Governmenta.cJasymbol of lIald,.and tl1e need f6r:iriwIlrgerit,';·'
'" ' , ' , ;\NY '3~378Ii'Ju8tiOO 'and a bulwatkof hmnan, lay, volt!nteer~.' isgre~t'er tlla'ri. : ,
.Q1/74.r<. i,vli;f/'"'EQ, ,$'~ :j i ." ~ . ';,.j!"'_"~'!';''',;,;,• •.",._,_'.;.;,........1.11 r'~ Im(t hum,an dignityl' ever, be~ore, 0' ' "'" ,
.
J
!
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ANC:HOR 'lFhIUS" April 25, 1957
Versatile Yankees Have
No League ParaUel By Jack Kineavy
It's going to be a short season in the American League. .After sitting in on the Yankee's awesome display of power against the Red Sox on Saturday, the prospects of con tending A. L. teams must be considered rather dim. In addition, a tremendous five . inning stint by diminutive phens. who had been victimized Bobby Shantz more than by "01 Sol" on Thursday, hit a offset the ineffective inning .harp line drive right at'Skow
ron. The Moose lost it at the and a hal! tenure of big Don last moment but the ball rico Larsen. Should Shantz even ap chetted off his upflung glove proach the form which made him over to second base man Billy a 20-game winner with the lowly Richardson who threw to Shan~ A's a few years ago. the Yanks 'Covering to nail the flying ..Ill waltz. Stephens by a whisker. It was certainly a frustrating afternoon One Out Away Ike Delock. In relief of Bob for our heroes. Portersfield, was only one strike (Ed. Note-Our Jack .hould away from victory In the ninth have been at Fenway Park Sun when Gil McDougald drilled a day..) Stars of Past &rass cutter through the middle With another crop of heralded to score Billy Martin ,with the tying run. Ike had McDougald rookies ready and eager to make 0-2. too. Somehow the Yank•• their way In baseball, little If any Just seem to rise to the occasion. fandom attention Is focused on Martin. for example, had done the great stars oCthe game who nothing \Intll the ninth when he have suited up for the last time. What a ball club this year's opened with a double. Subse quently, he singled In the 11th In'oup of retired players would and doubled In the 12th to put have made as late as five years continuous pressure on Delock. ago! The Infield nucleus Includes And who but the Yankees Al Rosen, Phil Rizzuto and would have a hitter with the Jackie Robinson; the· outfield natural power of Elston Howard Dale Mitchell and' Hoot Evers. batting In seventh position In the Behind the "plate" Walker Coop order? Most Impressive In the er, Andy Simlnlck and Clyde McCullough. The roster boasts New York hitting array WI\8 "Moose" Skowron. He had two four former most valuable play home runs. the second of which ers, one batting champion, plus cleared the "works" In dead p'itchlng leaders and World's Series luminaries. centerfield, a feat heretofore ac complished only by such gunners as Hank ·Greenberg and Jimmy Friars Plan Tribute Foxx. The Moose hit two other To Late Paul Regan drives which appeared ticketed. .During the present baseball but fine defensive plays by Pler llall and WlIllams saved the day. aeason Providence College will Williams' catch was nothing play a unique tribute to Paul ahort of phenomenal. Racing far Regan. a member of its baseball jnto left center, Ted leaped ,quad for the past three years, against the wall at the end of On March 8th. after a brief Illness Paul, who would have the scoreboard to glove Skow ron's bid for an extra base hit. been a Senior member of the The versatility of Stengel', Varsity squad, died of cancer. In his memory the 1957 Friars· employees has no parallel In at each of their home games will major league circles. Shortly be fore game time, the Yanks take up a collection. The proceeds learned that Andy Carey had will -be given to the Rhode Island • pralned his ankle and would be C~ncer Society. unavailable for third base duty for a few days. No problem. Catholic Relief Aid Casey simply moved Martin over For Philippines to third and Inserted steady CATBALOGAN (NC) - One Gel'l'Y Coleman In the pivot slot, thousand sacks of California rice Skowron, who Is ~urrently play came to this town as part of a jng first, can also play third If newly established program of need be. In such a case, Stengel American Catholic relief work in tan call upon Joe Collins for the Phllippines. gateway duty. Both Collins and Catbalogen In recent weeks ex Skowron have seen action In the perienced a mult-million peso outfitHd. Howard, the left fi'l!lder. fire that left hundreds of fami originally came up as a catcher. lies homeless. Lee' Sanborn. di while the Incomparable Yogi re rector of the Manila mission of ported as an outfield candidate. Catholic Relief Services - Na How can they miss? tional Catholic Welfare Confer Ted Ribs Yogi ence - had the rice distributed Williams and Berra Indulied in through the Soc I a I Welfare • bit of horseplay whlle the Red Administration. Box were taking pre-game bat This rice Is part of a shipment ting practice. Yogi, who Is uni of 67,200 sacks donated by the versally noted as a conversation people of America tQ the needy alist, visited about the batting of the Philippines through CRS cage. Ted laughingly sought to NCWC. cain the attention of one of the umpires sitting In the stands, bldicatlng that Yogi should be thrown out for fraterniZing. The major leagues have a non-fra ternization rule which precludes AND SON
players on opposing teams frolp eettlng together on the field. NEW BEDFORD
The umpires pre-game duties Anthracite & Bituminous
.....hlch. Incidentally. most detest - cast them In'a modified Ges tapo role, for It Is up to them to enforce the provisions of rule 3.11. For reported infractions; a Automatic Coal Stokers
rare occurence, the League Presi Bag Cool - Wood
dent Is authorized to impose a Charcoal
fine. Bright spot for the Sox was the work of rookie Frank Mal :rone at third base. He played flawlessly afield and had three doubles in seven trips to the plate. Ted was the only other EOBtonlan to come up' with three O~L ·bingles. Williams IlJ)pears to be in 8Teat shape. The sun nearly 640PI.EASAINIT Sf. proved the Yanks' undoing, In .. the eighth. With men on first· \MY 6·,s211-·2-3 and I'lccond, two OU1i, Gcne ste
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fHlcRy Name to Install CMficers on May 12 Chor-Blshop Joseph Eid, pas tor of St. Anthony of the Desert Church. Fall River,. will install officers and induct members of the parish Holy Name. Society Sunday night, May 12. Rev. Henry Canuel; diocesan director of the Holy Name So ciety has been invited to assist Chor-Bishop Eid. Officers are Edward Khoury. president; William Tucker, vice president; Louis Latalf. Jr., sec retary and Fageem J. Assad. treasurer. Purposes of the Holy Name Society and' Indulgences to be gained by active members were explained by Father Canuel at the re-organization meeting. The a-roup which will be an affiliate of the Universal Holy Name So ciety. has received an official charter.
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Officers Are Elected By Vineyard CYO David Healy heads the newly organized Catholic Youth Organ Ization on Martha's Vineyard. Other officers are Jackie Lopes, vice president: .Sandra Fisher, secretary and Jean
RADIO NEWS COVERAGE PRAISED: His Eminence Samuel Cardinal Stritch, Archbishop ot Chicago, talks with Judith Buonaccorsi and Gen. Alfred M, Gruenther, at theo Convention of the National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters. Miss Buonaccorsi, a student at Bishop O'Down School, San Leandro, Calif., was a co winner of the Voice of Democracy contest, of which· the NARTB is a co-sponsor, emblem contest, poster displays during Lent. and corporate Com munion Sunday, in which 113 members participated. A semi~formal dance May 29 will conclude social activities for the season.
Brown, treasurer. Rev. Gerald Shovelton, organized the Island CYO. Bi-weekly meetings are held at Sacred Heart HalI, Oak Bluffs, where recreational facilities have been set up, Activities Include an
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Of
THE FOLLOWING COUNCILS
Extend To HIS EXCELLENCY
Most Reverend James L. Connolly and Pledge Their Loyal Support to
THE ANf;HOR McMAHON COUNCIL NO. 151
T. J. McGEE COUNCIL NO. 2612
NEW BEDFORD R. J. LABARGE G. K.
NANTUCKET E. J. BOWEN G. K.
FALMOUTH COUNCIL NO. 813
ST. JOHN'S COUNCIL NO. 404
WOODS HOLE
ATTLEBORO
J. P. DOYLE G. K.
P. BELLAVANCE G. K.
DAVID DUFF
COAL
DAMIEN COUNCIL NO. 4190 MATTAPOISETT
HEAl'ING OILS
A. A. DUCHESNEAU G. K.
DA.DSON
BlIjRNERS
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~,. \ttt~·y~'{··w
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JAMES MURPHY A.~TIHlnJ)1Il TRUNDY
JAMES SUlI,UVAN FRANK f~A\IHlER
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THE ANCHOR Thurs.• April 25. 1957
STONEHILL COLLEGE
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"NORTH' EASTON, MASSAC~VSETIS
.,The Only Catholic College I~ T~e
Diocese 01 Fall River ... .
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1957' .1
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WHAT WE DID
. STONEHILL COLLEGE .
WHAT WE HOPE TO' DO -IN
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'N 1956
CROSS ~Ai.L
CAFETERIA 'and' STUDENT . CENTER r.l